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Dive into the research topics where Tianyu Zhu is active.

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Featured researches published by Tianyu Zhu.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Thermally Activated Delayed Fluorescence Materials Based on Homoconjugation Effect of Donor-Acceptor Triptycenes.

Katsuaki Kawasumi; Tony Wu; Tianyu Zhu; Hyun Sik Chae; Troy Van Voorhis; Marc A. Baldo; Timothy M. Swager

Donor-acceptor triptycences, TPA-QNX(CN)2 and TPA-PRZ(CN)2, were synthesized and their emissive properties were studied. They exhibited a blue-green fluorescence with emission lifetimes on the order of a microsecond in cyclohexane at room temperature. The long lifetime emission is quenched by O2 and is attributed to thermally activated delayed florescence (TADF). Unimolecular TADF is made possible by the separation and weak coupling due to homoconjugation of the HOMO and LUMO on different arms of the three-dimensional donor-acceptor triptycene. Organic light emitting devices (OLEDs) were fabricated using TPA-QNX(CN)2 and TPA-PRZ(CN)2 as emitters which displayed electroluminescence with efficiencies as high as 9.4% EQE.


Nature Chemistry | 2016

π-Clamp-mediated cysteine conjugation

Chi Zhang; Matthew Welborn; Tianyu Zhu; Nicole J. Yang; Michael S. Santos; Troy Van Voorhis; Bradley L. Pentelute

Site-selective functionalization of complex molecules is one of the most significant challenges in chemistry. Typically, protecting groups or catalysts must be used to enable the selective modification of one site among many that are similarly reactive, and general strategies that selectively tune the local chemical environment around a target site are rare. Here, we show a four-amino-acid sequence (Phe-Cys-Pro-Phe), which we call the ‘π-clamp’, that tunes the reactivity of its cysteine thiol for site-selective conjugation with perfluoroaromatic reagents. We use the π-clamp to selectively modify one cysteine site in proteins containing multiple endogenous cysteine residues. These examples include antibodies and cysteine-based enzymes that would be difficult to modify selectively using standard cysteine-based methods. Antibodies modified using the π-clamp retained binding affinity to their targets, enabling the synthesis of site-specific antibody–drug conjugates for selective killing of HER2-positive breast cancer cells. The π-clamp is an unexpected approach to mediate site-selective chemistry and provides new avenues to modify biomolecules for research and therapeutics. Incorporation of a π-clamp—a four-residue sequence (Phe-Cys-Pro-Phe)—into a protein enables the site-specific modification of the π-clamp cysteine side-chain. The π-clamp can be genetically encoded and does not require protecting-groups or catalysts to provide selective conjugation.


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2016

Prediction of Excited-State Energies and Singlet–Triplet Gaps of Charge-Transfer States Using a Restricted Open-Shell Kohn–Sham Approach

Diptarka Hait; Tianyu Zhu; David Paul McMahon; Troy Van Voorhis

Organic molecules with charge-transfer (CT) excited states are widely used in industry and are especially attractive as candidates for fabrication of energy efficient OLEDs, as they can harvest energy from nonradiative triplets by means of thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF). It is therefore useful to have computational protocols for accurate estimation of their electronic spectra in order to screen candidate molecules for OLED applications. However, it is difficult to predict the photophysical properties of TADF molecules with LR-TDDFT, as semilocal LR-TDDFT is incapable of accurately modeling CT states. Herein, we study absorption energies, emission energies, zero-zero transition energies, and singlet-triplet gaps of TADF molecules using a restricted open-shell Kohn-Sham (ROKS) approach instead and discover that ROKS calculations with semilocal hybrid functionals are in good agreement with experiments-unlike TDDFT, which significantly underestimates energy gaps. We also propose a cheap computational protocol for studying excited states with large CT character that is found to give good agreement with experimental results without having to perform any excited-state geometry optimizations.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2017

Long-range interactions from the many-pair expansion: A different avenue to dispersion in DFT

Piotr de Silva; Tianyu Zhu; Troy Van Voorhis

One of the several problems that plague majority of density functional theory calculations is their inability to properly account for long-range correlations giving rise to dispersion forces. The recently proposed many-pair expansion (MPE) [T. Zhu et al., Phys. Rev. B 93, 201108(R) (2016)] is a hierarchy of approximations that systematically corrects any deficiencies of an approximate functional to finally converge to the exact energy. This is achieved by decomposing the total density into a sum of two-electron densities and accounting for successive two-, four-, six-,… electron interactions. Here, we show that already low orders of MPE expansion recover the dispersion energy accurately. To this end, we employ the Pariser-Parr-Pople Hamiltonian and study the behavior of long-range interactions in trans-polyacetylene as well as stacks of ethylene and benzene molecules. We also show how convergence of the expansion is affected by electron conjugation and the choice of the density partitioning.


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2018

Self-Attractive Hartree Decomposition: Partitioning Electron Density into Smooth Localized Fragments

Tianyu Zhu; Piotr de Silva; Troy Van Voorhis

Chemical bonding plays a central role in the description and understanding of chemistry. Many methods have been proposed to extract information about bonding from quantum chemical calculations, the majority of them resorting to molecular orbitals as basic descriptors. Here, we present a method called self-attractive Hartree (SAH) decomposition to unravel pairs of electrons directly from the electron density, which unlike molecular orbitals is a well-defined observable that can be accessed experimentally. The key idea is to partition the density into a sum of one-electron fragments that simultaneously maximize the self-repulsion and maintain regular shapes. This leads to a set of rather unusual equations in which every electron experiences self-attractive Hartree potential in addition to an external potential common for all the electrons. The resulting symmetry breaking and localization are surprisingly consistent with chemical intuition. SAH decomposition is also shown to be effective in visualization of single/multiple bonds, lone pairs, and unusual bonds due to the smooth nature of fragment densities. Furthermore, we demonstrate that it can be used to identify specific chemical bonds in molecular complexes and provides a simple and accurate electrostatic model of hydrogen bonding.


Scientific Reports | 2017

A structural and mechanistic study of π-clamp-mediated cysteine perfluoroarylation

Peng Dai; Jonathan K. Williams; Chi Zhang; Matthew Welborn; James J. Shepherd; Tianyu Zhu; Troy Van Voorhis; Mei Hong; Bradley L. Pentelute

Natural enzymes use local environments to tune the reactivity of amino acid side chains. In searching for small peptides with similar properties, we discovered a four-residue π-clamp motif (Phe-Cys-Pro-Phe) for regio- and chemoselective arylation of cysteine in ribosomally produced proteins. Here we report mutational, computational, and structural findings directed toward elucidating the molecular factors that drive π-clamp-mediated arylation. We show the significance of a trans conformation prolyl amide bond for the π-clamp reactivity. The π-clamp cysteine arylation reaction enthalpy of activation (ΔH‡) is significantly lower than a non-π-clamp cysteine. Solid-state NMR chemical shifts indicate the prolyl amide bond in the π-clamp motif adopts a 1:1 ratio of the cis and trans conformation, while in the reaction product Pro3 was exclusively in trans. In two structural models of the perfluoroarylated product, distinct interactions at 4.7 Å between Phe1 side chain and perfluoroaryl electrophile moiety are observed. Further, solution 19F NMR and isothermal titration calorimetry measurements suggest interactions between hydrophobic side chains in a π-clamp mutant and the perfluoroaryl probe. These studies led us to design a π-clamp mutant with an 85-fold rate enhancement. These findings will guide us toward the discovery of small reactive peptides to facilitate abiotic chemistry in water.


ACS central science | 2016

Salt Effect Accelerates Site-Selective Cysteine Bioconjugation

Peng Dai; Chi Zhang; Matthew Gregory Welborn; James J. Shepherd; Tianyu Zhu; Troy Van Voorhis; Bradley L. Pentelute


Chemistry of Materials | 2018

Molecular Design of Deep Blue Thermally Activated Delayed Fluorescence Materials Employing a Homoconjugative Triptycene Scaffold and Dihedral Angle Tuning

Wenliang Huang; Markus Einzinger; Tianyu Zhu; Hyun Sik Chae; Soonok Jeon; Soo-Ghang Ihn; Myungsun Sim; Sunghan Kim; Mingjuan Su; Georgiy Teverovskiy; Tony Wu; Troy Van Voorhis; Timothy M. Swager; Marc A. Baldo; Stephen L. Buchwald


Archive | 2018

Charge Transfer in Molecular Materials

Tianyu Zhu; Troy Van Voorhis; Piotr de Silva


Prof. Van Voorhis via Erja Kajosalo | 2017

Shorter Exciton Lifetimes via an External Heavy-Atom Effect: Alleviating the Effects of Bimolecular Processes in Organic Light-Emitting Diodes

Markus Einzinger; Tianyu Zhu; Piotr de Silva; Christian Belger; Timothy M. Swager; Troy Van Voorhis; Marc A. Baldo

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Troy Van Voorhis

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Piotr de Silva

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Bradley L. Pentelute

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Chi Zhang

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Marc A. Baldo

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Timothy M. Swager

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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James J. Shepherd

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Markus Einzinger

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Matthew Welborn

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Peng Dai

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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