Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Shay Shomer is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Shay Shomer.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015

How Fast Can a Proton-Transfer Reaction Be beyond the Solvent-Control Limit?

Ron Simkovitch; Shay Shomer; Rinat Gepshtein; Dan Huppert

In this article, we review the field of photoacids. The rate of excited-state proton transfer (ESPT) to solvent spans a wide range of time scales, from tens of nanoseconds for the weakest photoacids to short time scales of about 100 fs for the strongest photoacids synthesized so far. We divide the photoacid strength into four regimes. Regime I includes the weak photoacids 0 < pKa* < 3. These photoacids can transfer a proton only to water or directly to a mild-base molecule in solution. The ESPT rate to other protic solvents, like methanol or ethanol, is too small in comparison with the radiative rate. The second regime includes stronger photoacids whose pKa*s range from -4 to 0. They are capable of transferring a proton to other protic solvents and not only to water. The third regime includes even stronger photoacids. Their pKa* is ∼ -6, and the ESPT rate constant, kPT, is limited by the orientational time of the solvent which is characterized by the average solvation correlation function ⟨S(t)⟩. The fourth regime sets a new time limit for the ESPT rate of the strongest photoacids synthesized so far. The kPT value of such photoacids is 10(13) s(-1), and τPT = 100 fs. We attribute this new time limit (beyond the solvent control) to intermolecular vibration between the two heavy atoms of the proton donor and the proton acceptor, which assist the ESPT by lowering the height and width of the potential barrier, thus enhancing the ESPT rate.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2013

Ultrafast excited-state proton transfer to the solvent occurs on a hundred-femtosecond time-scale.

Ron Simkovitch; Naama Karton-Lifshin; Shay Shomer; Doron Shabat; Dan Huppert

Steady-state and ultrafast time-resolved techniques were used to study a newly synthesized photoacid, phenol-carboxyether dipicolinium cyanine dye, QCy9. We found that the excited-state proton transfer (ESPT) to water occurs at the remarkably short time of about 100 fs, k(PT) ≈ 1 × 10(13) s(-1), the fastest rate reported up to now. On the basis of the Förster-cycle, the pK(a)* value is estimated to be -8.5 ± 0.4. In previous studies, we reported the photoacidity of another superphotoacid, the QCy7 for which we found an ESPT rate constant of ~1.25 × 10(12) s(-1), one-eighth that of the QCy9 compound. We found a kinetic isotope effect of the ESPT of about two.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2014

Effect of acid on the ultraviolet-visible absorption and emission properties of curcumin.

Yuval Erez; Ron Simkovitch; Shay Shomer; Rinat Gepshtein; Dan Huppert

Steady-state and time-resolved emission techniques were employed to study the acid-base effects on the UV-vis spectrum of curcumin in several organic solvents. The fluorescence-decay rate of curcumin increases with increasing acid concentration in all of the solvents studied. In methanol and ethanol solutions containing about 1 M HCl, the short-wavelength fluorescence (λ < 560 nm) decreases by more than an order of magnitude. (The peak fluorescence intensity of curcumin in these solvents is at 540 nm.) At longer wavelengths (λ ≥ 560 nm) the fluorescence quenching is smaller by a factor of ∼3. A new fluorescence band with a peak at about 620 nm appears at an acid concentration of about 0.2 M in both methanol and ethanol. The 620 nm/530 nm band intensity ratio increases with an increase in the acid concentration. In trifluoroethanol and also in acetic acid in the presence of formic acid, the steady-state emission of curcumin shows an emission band at 620 nm. We attribute this new emission band in hydrogen-bond-donating solvents to a protonated curcumin ROH2(+) form. At high acid concentrations in acetic acid and in trifluoroethanol, the ground state of curcumin is also transformed to ROH2(+) which absorbs at longer wavelengths with a band peak at ∼530 nm compared to 420 nm in neutral-pH samples or 480 nm in basic solutions. In hydrogen-bond-accepting solvents such as dimethyl sulfoxide and also in methanol and ethanol, curcumin does not accept a proton to form the ground-state ROH2(+)


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2014

Comprehensive study of ultrafast excited-state proton transfer in water and D2O providing the missing RO(-)···H(+) ion-pair fingerprint.

Ron Simkovitch; Katherine Akulov; Shay Shomer; Michal E. Roth; Doron Shabat; Tal Schwartz; Dan Huppert

Steady-state and time-resolved optical techniques were employed to study the photoprotolytic mechanism of a general photoacid. Previously, a general scheme was suggested that includes an intermediate product that, up until now, had not been clearly observed experimentally. For our study, we used quinone cyanine 7 (QCy7) and QCy9, the strongest photoacids synthesized so far, to look for the missing intermediate product of an excited-state proton transfer to the solvent. Low-temperature steady-state emission spectra of both QCy7 and QCy9 clearly show an emission band at T < 165 K in H2O ice that could be assigned to ion-pair RO(-)*···H3O(+), the missing intermediate. Room-temperature femtosecond pump-probe spectroscopy transient spectra at short times (t < 4 ps) also shows the existence of transient absorption and emission bands that we assigned to the RO(-)*···H3O(+) ion pair. The intermediate dissociates on a time scale of 1 ps and about 1.5 ps in H2O and D2O samples, respectively.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2014

Excited-state proton transfer from quinone-cyanine 9 to protic polar-solvent mixtures.

Ron Simkovitch; Shay Shomer; Rinat Gepshtein; Doron Shabat; Dan Huppert

Steady-state and time-resolved emission techniques were used to study the excited-state proton-transfer (ESPT) process of quinone cyanine 9 (QCy9) in solvent mixtures. We found that the ESPT rate from QCy9 in water/methanol mixtures is independent of the mixture composition and the rate constant is k(PT) ∼ 10(13) s(-1). In ethanol/trifluoroethanol (TFE) mixtures the ESPT rate strongly depends on the solvent-mixture composition. We observe two ESPT rates rather than one over a wide range of solvent-mixture compositions. The average ESPT rate decreases as the mole fraction of TFE increases.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2013

Temperature dependence of the excited-state proton-transfer reaction of quinone-cyanine-7.

Ron Simkovitch; Shay Shomer; Rinat Gepshtein; Doron Shabat; Dan Huppert

Steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence techniques were used to study the temperature dependence of the photoprotolytic process of quinone-cyanine-7 (QCy7), a very strong photoacid, in H2O and D2O ice, over a wide temperature range, 85-270 K. We found that the excited-state proton-transfer (ESPT) rate to the solvent decreases as the temperature is lowered with a very low activation energy of 10.5 ± 1 kJ/mol. The low activation energy is in accord with free-energy-correlation theories that predict correlation between ΔG of reaction and the activation energy. At very low temperatures (T < 150 K), we find that the emission band of the RO(-)*, the deprotonated form of QCy7, is blue-shifted by ~1000 cm(-1). We attributed this band to the RO(-)*···H3O(+) ion pair that was suggested to be an intermediate in the photoprotolytic process but has not yet been identified spectroscopically.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014

Solvent dependence of excited-state proton transfer from pyranine-derived photoacids

Christian Spies; Shay Shomer; Björn Finkler; Dina Pines; Ehud Pines; Gregor Jung; Dan Huppert


Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology A-chemistry | 2014

Comparison of the rate of excited-state proton transfer from photoacids to alcohols and water

Ron Simkovitch; Shay Shomer; Rinat Gepshtein; Michal E. Roth; Doron Shabat; Dan Huppert


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2013

Excited-State Proton Transfer and Proton Diffusion near Hydrophilic Surfaces

Hagit Peretz Soroka; Ron Simkovitch; Alon Kosloff; Shay Shomer; Alexander Pevzner; Omer Tzang; Reuven Tirosh; Fernando Patolsky; Dan Huppert


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014

Insight into the structure and the mechanism of the slow proton transfer in the GFP double mutant T203V/S205A

Vered Wineman-Fisher; Ron Simkovitch; Shay Shomer; Rinat Gepshtein; Dan Huppert; Mari Saif; Karen Kallio; S. James Remington; Yifat Miller

Collaboration


Dive into the Shay Shomer's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dina Pines

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ehud Pines

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge