Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Sergey A. Denisov is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Sergey A. Denisov.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2014

Direct observation of reversible electronic energy transfer involving an iridium center.

Sergey A. Denisov; Yanouk Cudré; Peter Verwilst; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Marta Marín-Suárez; Jorge F. Fernández-Sánchez; Etienne Baranoff; Nathan D. McClenaghan

A cyclometalated iridium complex is reported where the core complex comprises naphthylpyridine as the main ligand and the ancillary 2,2′-bipyridine ligand is attached to a pyrene unit by a short alkyl bridge. To obtain the complex with satisfactory purity, it was necessary to modify the standard synthesis (direct reaction of the ancillary ligand with the chloro-bridged iridium dimer) to a method harnessing an intermediate tetramethylheptanolate-based complex, which was subjected to acid-promoted removal of the ancillary ligand and subsequent complexation. The photophysical behavior of the bichromophoric complex and a model complex without the pendant pyrene were studied using steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopies. Reversible electronic energy transfer (REET) is demonstrated, uniquely with an emissive cyclometalated iridium center and an adjacent organic chromophore. After excited-state equilibration is established (5 ns) as a result of REET, extremely long luminescence lifetimes of up to 225 μs result, compared to 8.3 μs for the model complex, without diminishing the emission quantum yield. As a result, remarkably high oxygen sensitivity is observed in both solution and polymeric matrices.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2013

Impact of water on the cis-trans photoisomerization of hydroxychalcones.

Yoann Leydet; Pinar Batat; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Sergey A. Denisov; João C. Lima; A. Jorge Parola; Nathan D. McClenaghan; Fernando Pina

The photochromism of a 2-hydroxychalcone has been studied in CH3CN and H2O/CH3OH (1/1, v/v), as well as in analogous deuterated solvents using steady-state (UV-vis absorption, (1)H and (13)C NMR) and time-resolved (ultrafast transient absorption and nanosecond flow flash photolysis) spectroscopies. Whereas the irradiation of trans-chalcone (Ct) under neutral pH conditions leads to the formation of the same final chromene derivative (B) in both media, two distinct photochemical mechanisms are proposed in agreement with thermodynamic and kinetic properties of the chemical reaction network at the ground state. Following light excitation, the first steps are identical in acetonitrile and aqueous solution: the Franck-Condon excited state rapidly populates the trans-chalcone singlet excited state (1)Ct* (LE), which evolves into a twisted state (1)P*. This excited state is directly responsible for the photochemistry in acetonitrile in the nanosecond time scale (16 ns) leading to the formation of cis-chalcone (Cc) through a simple isomerization process. The resulting cis-chalcone evolves into the chromene B through a tautomerization process in the ground state (τ = 10 ms). Unlike in acetonitrile, in H2O/CH3OH (1/1, v/v), the P* state becomes unstable and evolves into a new state attributed to the tautomer (1)Q*. This state directly evolves into B in one photochemical step through a consecutive ultrafast tautomerization process followed by electrocyclization. This last case represents a new hypothesis in the photochromism of 2-hydroxychalcone derivatives.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Electronic Energy Transfer Modulation in a Dynamic Foldaxane: Proof-of-Principle of a Lifetime-Based Conformation Probe.

Sergey A. Denisov; Quan Gan; Xiang Wang; Luca Scarpantonio; Yann Ferrand; Brice Kauffmann; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Ivan Huc; Nathan D. McClenaghan

Abiotic aromatic oligoamide foldamers are shown to self-assemble in solution to form a double helix, which can accommodate a bichromophoric thread in its central void. While in solution reversible electronic energy transfer is instilled between chromophoric termini of the free, flexible thread as evidenced through delayed luminescence, upon rigidification of the rod the chromophores are mutually distanced and effectively decoupled. Consequently, the chromophores display their individual photophysical characteristics. The observed conformation-dependent changes of dynamic luminescence properties, which are particularly sensitive to distance, offers a new strategy for lifetime-based detection of geometry on the molecular scale as demonstrated through real-time luminescence detection of molecular complexation leading to foldaxane formation.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

Terpy(Pt–salphen)2 Switchable Luminescent Molecular Tweezers†

Benjamin Doistau; Arnaud Tron; Sergey A. Denisov; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Nathan D. McClenaghan; Geoffrey Gontard; Valérie Marvaud; Bernold Hasenknopf; Guillaume Vives

The design and synthesis of switchable molecular tweezers based on a luminescent terpy(Pt-salphen)2 (1; terpy=terpyridine) complex is reported. Upon metal coordination, the tweezers can switch from an open W-shaped conformation to a closed U-shaped form that is adapted for selective recognition of cations. Closing of the tweezers by metal coordination (M=Zn(2+), Cu(2+), Pb(2+), Fe(2+), Hg(2+)) was monitored by (1)Hu2005NMR and/or UV/Vis titrations. During the titration, exclusive formation of the 1:1 complex [M(1)] was observed, without appearance of an intermediate 1:2 complex [M(1)2]. The crystallographic structure of the 1:1 complex was obtained with Pb(2+) and showed a distorted helical structure. Selective intercalation of Hg(2+) cations by the closed U form was observed. The tweezers were reopened by selective metal decoordination of the terpyridine ligand by using tris(2-aminoethyl)amine (tren) as a competitive ligand without modification of the Pt-salphen complex. Detailed photophysical studies were performed on the open and closed tweezers. Structured emission was observed in the open form from the Pt-salphen moieties, with a high quantum yield and a long lifetime. The emission is slightly modified upon closing with 1u2005equivalent of Zn(2+) or Hg(2+), whereas a dramatic quenching was obtained upon intercalation of additional Hg(2+).


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Photoinduced Electron Transfer and Hole Migration in Nanosized Helical Aromatic Oligoamide Foldamers

Xuesong Li; Nagula Markandeya; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Nathan D. McClenaghan; Victor Maurizot; Sergey A. Denisov; Ivan Huc

A series of photoactive triads have been synthesized and investigated in order to elucidate photoinduced electron transfer and hole migration mechanism across nanosized, rigid helical foldamers. The triads are comprised of a central helical oligoamide foldamer bridge with 9, 14, 18, 19, or 34 8-amino-2-quinolinecarboxylic acid repeat units, and of two chromophores, an N-terminal oligo(para-phenylenevinylene) electron donor and a C-terminal perylene bis-imide electron acceptor. Time-resolved fluorescence and transient absorption spectroscopic studies showed that, following photoexcitation of the electron acceptor, fast electron transfer occurs initially from the oligoquinoline bridge to the acceptor chromophore on the picosecond time scale. The oligo(para-phenylenevinylene) electron donor is oxidized after a time delay during which the hole migrates across the foldamer from the acceptor to the donor. The charge separated state that is finally generated was found to be remarkably long-lived (>80 μs). While the initial charge injection rate is largely invariant for all foldamer lengths (ca. 60 ps), the subsequent hole transfer to the donor varies from 1 × 109 s-1 for the longest sequence to 17 × 109 s-1 for the shortest. In all cases, charge transfer is very fast considering the foldamer length. Detailed analysis of the process in different media and at varying temperatures is consistent with a hopping mechanism of hole transport through the foldamer helix, with individual hops occurring on the subpicosecond time scale (kET = 2.5 × 1012 s-1 in CH2Cl2). This work demonstrates the possibility of fast long-range hole transfer over 300 Å (through bonds) across a synthetic modular bridge, an achievement that had been previously observed principally with DNA structures.


New Journal of Chemistry | 2016

Water-soluble naphthalimide-based ‘Pourbaix sensors’: pH and redox-activated fluorescent AND logic gates based on photoinduced electron transfer

Alex D. Johnson; Kyle A. Paterson; Jake C. Spiteri; Sergey A. Denisov; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Arnaud Tron; Nathan D. McClenaghan; David C. Magri

Two novel naphthalimide-based ‘Pourbaix sensors’ for redox potential and pH were designed based on a ‘fluorophore–spacer1–receptor–spacer2–electron-donor’ configuration. The synthesised molecular logic gates consist of an alkylated 1,8-naphthalimide fluorophore connected to a tertiary amine by a flexible ethylene spacer to a ferrocene moiety via a methylene spacer. The UV-visible absorption and steady state fluorescent properties were examined in methanol and 1u2006:u20061 (v/v) methanol/water. The spectroscopic properties are modulated by internal charge transfer (ICT) and photoinduced electron transfer (PET) mechanisms. A logu2006βH+ of 9.2 and 8.7 were determined in 1u2006:u20061 (v/v) methanol/water for the methylated 1 and butylated 2 compounds, respectively. An apparent logu2006βFe3+ of 4.2 was determined in 1u2006:u20061 (v/v) methanol/water at pH 4. Time-resolved spectroscopic studies elucidated the stimulus-modulated photoinduced electron transfer pathways. In the oxidised and protonated state, 1 exhibits a single fluorescence lifetime of 8.5 ns, while an efficient photoinduced electron transfer characterised by a time constant of 20 ps is revealed by femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy in the absence of a perturbing stimulus.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Lanthanide Luminescence Modulation by Cation–π Interaction in a Bioinspired Scaffold: Selective Detection of Copper(I)

Manon Isaac; Sergey A. Denisov; Amandine Roux; Daniel Imbert; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Nathan D. McClenaghan; Olivier Sénèque

A prototype luminescent turn-on probe for Cu(+) (and Ag(+)) is described, harnessing a selective binding site (logu2009Kass = 9.4 and 7.3 for Cu(+) and Ag(+), respectively) based on the coordinating environment of the bacterial metallo-chaperone CusF, integrated with a terbium-ion-signaling moiety. Cation-π interactions were shown to enhance tryptophan triplet population, which subsequently sensitized, on the microsecond timescale, the long-lived terbium emission, offering a novel approach in bioinspired chemosensor design.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

Sunlight-Driven Copper-Catalyst Activation Applied to Photolatent Click Chemistry

Redouane Beniazza; Romain Lambert; Lydie Harmand; Florian Molton; Carole Duboc; Sergey A. Denisov; Gedeminas Jonusauskas; Nathan D. McClenaghan; Dominique Lastécouères; Jean-Marc Vincent

The synthesis, full characterization, photoreduction properties, and catalytic activity for the copper(I)-catalyzed alkyne-azide cycloaddition (CuAAC) reaction of a copper(II)-DMEDA (N,N-dimethylethylendiamine) complex is reported. Spectroscopic studies (UV/Vis, EPR) demonstrated that under daylight illumination highly effective copper(II) to copper(I) reduction occurs in this complex. These findings are in agreement with a high photoreduction quantum yield value of 0.22 in MeOH, and a value approaching unity as determined in THF. The reduction process, which can also be conducted by irradiation at 365u2005nm by using a standard TLC (thin layer chromatography) lamp, is ascribed to a highly efficient photoinduced electron transfer (PET) process mediated by the benzophenone photosensitizer present in the carboxylate counterion. Having deaerated the reaction mixture, the photogenerated copper(I) species proved to be highly active for the CuAAC reaction, demonstrated by reactions conducted with low catalyst loading (0.5u2005molu2009%) on a range of clickable protected and non-protected mono- and disaccharides. Once initiated, the reaction can be stopped at any time on introducing air into the reaction medium. Deoxygenation followed by irradiation restores the activity, making the copper(II)-DMEDA complex a switchable catalyst of practical value.


Angewandte Chemie | 2018

Designed long lived emission from CdSe quantum dots by reversible electronic energy transfer with a surface bound chromophore

Marcello La Rosa; Sergey A. Denisov; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Nathan D. McClenaghan; Alberto Credi

Abstract The size‐tunable emission of luminescent quantum dots (QDs) makes them highly interesting for applications that range from bioimaging to optoelectronics. For the same applications, engineering their luminescence lifetime, in particular, making it longer, would be as important; however, no rational approach to reach this goal is available to date. We describe a strategy to prolong the emission lifetime of QDs through electronic energy shuttling to the triplet excited state of a surface‐bound molecular chromophore. To implement this idea, we made CdSe QDs of different sizes and carried out self‐assembly with a pyrene derivative. We observed that the conjugates exhibit delayed luminescence, with emission decays that are prolonged by more than 3 orders of magnitude (lifetimes up to 330u2005μs) compared to the parent CdSe QDs. The mechanism invokes unprecedented reversible quantum dot to organic chromophore electronic energy transfer.


ChemPhysChem | 2016

Harnessing Reversible Electronic Energy Transfer : From Molecular Dyads to Molecular Machines

Sergey A. Denisov; Shinlin Yu; Jean-Luc Pozzo; Gediminas Jonusauskas; Nathan D. McClenaghan

Reversible electronic energy transfer (REET) may be instilled in bi-/multichromophoric molecule-based systems, following photoexcitation, upon judicious structural integration of matched chromophores. This leads to a new set of photophysical properties for the ensemble, which can be fully characterized by steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopic methods. Herein, we take a comprehensive look at progress in the development of this type of supermolecule in the last five years, which has seen systems evolve from covalently tethered dyads to synthetic molecular machines, exemplified by two different pseudorotaxanes. Indeed, REET holds promise in the control of movement in molecular machines, their assembly/disassembly, as well as in charge separation.

Collaboration


Dive into the Sergey A. Denisov's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Peter Verwilst

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Arnaud Tron

University of Bordeaux

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge