Tobias N. Hoheisel
ETH Zurich
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Featured researches published by Tobias N. Hoheisel.
Angewandte Chemie | 2010
Tobias N. Hoheisel; Stephen Schrettl; Ruth Szilluweit; Holger Frauenrath
Nanostructured carbonaceous materials, that is, carbon materials with a feature size on the nanometer scale and, in some cases, functionalized surfaces, already play an important role in a wide range of emerging fields, such as the search for novel energy sources, efficient energy storage, sustainable chemical technology, as well as organic electronic materials. Furthermore, such materials might offer solutions to the challenges associated with the on-going depletion of nonrenewable energy resources or climate change, and they may promote further breakthroughs in the field of microelectronics. However, novel methods for their preparation will be required that afford functional carbon materials with controlled surface chemistry, mesoscopic morphology, and microstructure. A highly promising approach for the synthesis of such materials is based on the use of well-defined molecular precursors.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2009
Eike Jahnke; Jan Weiss; Sonja Neuhaus; Tobias N. Hoheisel; Holger Frauenrath
A series of functional iodoacetylenes was prepared and converted into the corresponding diacetylene-substituted amino acids and peptides via Pd/Cu-promoted sp-sp carbon cross-coupling reactions. The unsymmetrically substituted diacetylenes can be incorporated into oligopeptides without a change in the oligopeptide strands directionality. Thus, a series of oligopeptide-based, amphiphilic diacetylene model compounds was synthesized, and their self-organization as well as their UV-induced topochemical polymerizability was investigated in comparison to related polymer-substituted macromonomers. Solution-phase IR spectroscopy, gelation experiments, and UV spectroscopy helped to confirm that a minimum of five N-H...O=C hydrogen-bonding sites was required in order to obtain reliable aggregation into stable beta-sheet-type secondary structures in organic solvents. Furthermore, the non-equidistant spacing of these hydrogen-bonding sites was proven to invariably lead to beta-sheets with a parallel beta-strand orientation, and the characteristic IR-spectroscopic signatures of the latter in organic solution was identified. Scanning force micrographs of the organogels revealed that compounds with six hydrogen-bonding sites gave rise to high aspect ratio nanoscopic fibrils with helical superstructures but, in contrast to the related macromonomers, did not lead to uniform supramolecular polymers. The UV-induced topochemical polymerization within the beta-sheet aggregates was successful, proving parallel beta-strand orientation and highlighting the effect of the number and pattern of N-H...O=C hydrogen-bonding sites as well as the hydrophobic residue in the molecular structure on the formation of higher structures and reactivity.
Organic Letters | 2008
Tobias N. Hoheisel; Holger Frauenrath
A convenient and efficient sp-sp carbon heterocoupling protocol based on the Negishi reaction was developed, in which the required zinc diacetylide was generated from 1,4-bis(trimethylsilyl)butadiyne in situ and reacted with a bromoacetylene in apolar solvent mixtures. The method has been applied to the synthesis of unsymmetric glycosylated and symmetric diglycosylated oligo(ethynylene)s up to the octa(ethynylene).
Nature Chemistry | 2013
Tobias N. Hoheisel; Stephen Schrettl; Roman Marty; Tanya Kumanova Todorova; Clémence Corminboeuf; Andrzej Sienkiewicz; Rosario Scopelliti; W. Bernd Schweizer; Holger Frauenrath
Packing constraints and precise placement of functional groups are the reason that organic molecules in the crystalline state often display unusual physical or chemical properties not observed in solution. Here we report a single-crystal-to-single-crystal dimerization of a bromodiacetylene that involves unusually large atom displacements as well as the cleavage and formation of several bonds. Density functional theory computations support a mechanism in which the dimerization is initiated by a [2 + 1] photocycloaddition favoured by the nature of carbon-carbon short contacts in the crystal structure. The reaction proceeded up to the theoretical degree of conversion without loss of crystallinity, and it was also performed on a preparative scale with good yield. Moreover, it represents the first synthetic pathway to (E)-1,2-dibromo-1,2-diethynylethenes, which could serve as synthetic intermediates for the preparation of molecular carbon scaffolds. Our findings both extend the scope of single-crystal-to-single-crystal reactions and highlight their potential as a synthetic tool for complex transformations.
Angewandte Chemie | 2010
Tobias N. Hoheisel; Stephen Schrettl; Ruth Szilluweit; Holger Frauenrath
Nano Letters | 2012
Ruth Szilluweit; Tobias N. Hoheisel; Martin Fritzsche; Bernt Ketterer; Anna Fontcuberta i Morral; Davide Demurtas; Vincent Laporte; Rene Verel; Sreenath Bolisetty; Raffaele Mezzenga; Holger Frauenrath
Chemical Science | 2015
Stephen Schrettl; Emmanuel Contal; Tobias N. Hoheisel; Martin Fritzsche; Sandor Balog; Ruth Szilluweit; Holger Frauenrath
International Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2015
Gordon Rinke; Stephan Rauschenbach; Stephen Schrettl; Tobias N. Hoheisel; Jonathan Blohm; Rico Gutzler; Federico Rosei; Holger Frauenrath; Klaus Kern
Chimia | 2009
Tobias N. Hoheisel; Holger Frauenrath
ChemInform | 2011
Tobias N. Hoheisel; Stephen Schrettl; Ruth Szilluweit; Holger Frauenrath