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Dive into the research topics where Valentin V. Novikov is active.

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Featured researches published by Valentin V. Novikov.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

A Trigonal Prismatic Mononuclear Cobalt(II) Complex Showing Single-Molecule Magnet Behavior.

Valentin V. Novikov; Alexander A. Pavlov; Yulia V. Nelyubina; Marie-Emmanuelle Boulon; Oleg A. Varzatskii; Yan Z. Voloshin; Richard E. P. Winpenny

Single-molecule magnets (SMMs) with one transition-metal ion often rely on unusual geometry as a source of magnetically anisotropic ground state. Here we report a cobalt(II) cage complex with a trigonal prism geometry showing single ion magnet behavior with very high Orbach relaxation barrier of 152 cm(-1). This, to our knowledge, is the largest reported relaxation barrier for a cobalt-based mononuclear SMM. The trigonal prismatic coordination provided by the macrocyclic ligand gives intrinsically more stable molecular species than previously reported SMMs, thus making this type of cage complexes more amendable to possible functionalization that will boost their magnetic anisotropy even further.


Russian Journal of Bioorganic Chemistry | 2009

About mechanism of chitosan cross-linking with glutaraldehyde

Natalia R. Kildeeva; Petr A. Perminov; L. V. Vladimirov; Valentin V. Novikov; S. N. Mikhailov

The regularities of the reaction of aminopolysaccharide chitosan with glutaraldehyde (GA) have been considered. The equilibrium forms of GA in water have been thoroughly studied by NMR spectroscopy. It has been established that at pH 5.6, the exchange of the protons of O=CHCH2 groups for deuterium occurs, indicating the presence of an anion, a product of the first stage of the aldol reaction; at pH > 7.2, the formation of the products of an aldol reaction and aldol condensation takes place. The kinetics of the reaction between the amino groups of chitosan and GA, the kinetics of gel formation in chitosan solutions in the presence of GA, and the kinetics of changes in the rigidity of gels formed have been studied by UV spectroscopy. IR spectra of cross-linked chitosan have been obtained. It has been shown that chitosan catalyzes the polymerization of GA to form irregular products; in this process, the length of oligomeric chains in modified or cross-linked chitosan and the concentration of conjugated bonds increase with the GA concentration and pH of the reaction medium.


Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry | 2013

Size matters, so does shape: Inhibition of transcription of T7 RNA polymerase by iron(II) clathrochelates.

Valentin V. Novikov; Oleg A. Varzatskii; Valentina V. Negrutska; Yurii N. Bubnov; Larisa G. Palchykovska; Igor Y. Dubey; Yan Z. Voloshin

Coordination and organoelement compounds are rarely proposed as the drug candidates despite their vast potential in the area owing to their strictly controlled geometry and rather extensive surface. This is the first example of the inhibition of transcription in the system of T7 RNA polymerase by cage metal complexes. Their IC50 values reach as low as the nanomolar range, placing them among the most potent metal-based transcription inhibitors.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2008

Interaction of dichloride iron(II) clathrochelate with dimercaptomaleodinitrile: synthesis of the precursor monoribbed-functionalized phthalocyaninoclathrochelates and the unexpected formation of a new thiophene-containing heterocyclic system in the ribbed chelate fragment of the clathrochelate framework.

Yan Z. Voloshin; Oleg A. Varzatskii; Alexander S. Belov; Z. A. Starikova; Kyrill Yu. Suponitsky; Valentin V. Novikov; Yurii N. Bubnov

Clathrochelate iron(II) FeBd 2(S2C2(CN)2Gm)(BF)2 tris-dioximate with a ribbed vic-dinitrile fragment was synthesized as a precursor of the monoribbed-functionalized hybrid phthalocyaninoclathrochelates by nucleophilic substitution of the vic-dichloride FeBd2(Cl2Gm)(BF)2 clathrochelate (1) with the potassium salt of dimercaptomaleodinitrile. Reaction of nitromethane with this salt was followed by the condensation of the reaction products with 1 to yield the clathrochelate with an annulated previously unknown thiazinothiophene heterocyclic system in the ribbed fragment. Both complexes were characterized on the basis of elemental analysis; MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry; IR, UV-vis, (57)Fe Mössbauer, and NMR spectroscopies; and X-ray crystallography.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014

Transition Ion Strikes Back: Large Magnetic Susceptibility Anisotropy in Cobalt(II) Clathrochelates

Valentin V. Novikov; Alexander A. Pavlov; Alexander S. Belov; Anna V. Vologzhanina; Anton Savitsky; Yan Z. Voloshin

Transition-metal complexes are rarely considered as paramagnetic tags for NMR spectroscopy due to them generally having relatively low magnetic anisotropy. Here we report cobalt(II) cage complexes with the largest (among the transition-metal complexes) axial anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility, reaching as high as 12.6 × 10(-32) m(3) at room temperature. This remarkable anisotropy, which results from an unusual trigonal prismatic geometry of the complexes and translates into large negative value of the zero-field splitting energy, is high enough to promote reliable paramagnetic pseudocontact shifts at the distance beyond 2 nm. Our finding paves the way toward the applications of cobalt(II) clathrochelates as future paramagnetic tags. Given the incredible stability and functionalization versatility of clathrochelates, the fine-tuning of the caging ligand may lead to new chemically stable mononuclear single-molecule magnets, for which magnetic anisotropy is of importance.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2012

Insight into the electronic structure, optical properties, and redox behavior of the hybrid phthalocyaninoclathrochelates from experimental and density functional theory approaches.

Jared R. Sabin; Oleg A. Varzatskii; Yan Z. Voloshin; Z. A. Starikova; Valentin V. Novikov; Victor N. Nemykin

An insight into the electronic structure of several hafnium(IV), zirconium(IV), and lutetium(III) phthalocyaninoclathrochelates has been discussed on the basis of experimental UV-vis, MCD, electro- and spectroelectrochemical data as well as density functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent DFT (TDDFT) calculations. On the basis of UV-vis and MCD spectroscopy as well as theoretical predictions, it was concluded that the electronic structure of the phthalocyninoclathrochelates can be described in the first approximation as a superposition of the weakly interacting phthalocyanine and clathrochelate substituents. Spectroelectrochemical data and DFT calculations clearly confirm that the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) in all tested complexes is localized on the phthalocyanine ligand. X-ray crystallography on zirconium(IV) and earlier reported hafnium(IV) phthalocyaninoclathrochelate complexes revealed a slightly distorted phthalocyanine conformation with seven-coordinated metal center positioned ∼1 Å above macrocyclic cavity. The geometry of the encapsulated iron(II) ion in the clathrochelate fragment was found to be between trigonal-prismatic and trigonal-antiprismatic.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2016

Polymorphism in a Cobalt-Based Single-Ion Magnet Tuning Its Barrier to Magnetization Relaxation

Alexander A. Pavlov; Yulia V. Nelyubina; Svitlana V. Kats; Larysa V. Penkova; N. N. Efimov; Artem O. Dmitrienko; Anna V. Vologzhanina; Alexander S. Belov; Yan Z. Voloshin; Valentin V. Novikov

A large barrier to magnetization reversal, a signature of a good single-molecule magnet (SMM), strongly depends on the structural environment of a paramagnetic metal ion. In a crystalline state, where SMM properties are usually measured, this environment is influenced by crystal packing, which may be different for the same chemical compound, as in polymorphs. Here we show that polymorphism can dramatically change the magnetic behavior of an SMM even with a very rigid coordination geometry. For a cobalt(II) clathrochelate, it results in an increase of the effective barrier from 109 to 180 cm-1, the latter value being the largest one reported to date for cobalt-based SMMs. Our finding thus highlights the importance of identifying possible polymorphic phases in search of new, even more efficient SMMs.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2015

Synthesis and Temperature-Induced Structural Phase and Spin Transitions in Hexadecylboron-Capped Cobalt(II) Hexachloroclathrochelate and Its Diamagnetic Iron(II)-Encapsulating Analogue.

Anna V. Vologzhanina; Alexander S. Belov; Valentin V. Novikov; Alexander V. Dolganov; G. V. Romanenko; Victor I. Ovcharenko; Alexander A. Korlyukov; M. I. Buzin; Yan Z. Voloshin

Template condensation of dichloroglyoxime with n-hexadecylboronic acid on the corresponding metal ion as a matrix under vigorous reaction conditions afforded n-hexadecylboron-capped iron and cobalt(II) hexachloroclathrochelates. The complexes obtained were characterized using elemental analysis, MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry, IR, UV-vis, (1)H and (13)C{(1)H} NMR, (57)Fe Mössbauer spectroscopies, SQUID magnetometry, electron paramagnetic resonance, and cyclic voltammetry (CV) and by X-ray crystallography. The multitemperature single-crystal X-ray diffraction, SQUID magnetometry, and differential scanning calorimetry experiments were performed to study the temperature-induced spin-crossover [for the paramagnetic cobalt(II) complex] and the crystal-to-crystal phase transitions (for both of these clathrochelates) in the solid state. Analysis of their crystal packing using the molecular Voronoi polyhedra and the Hirshfeld surfaces reveals the structural rearrangements of the apical long-chain alkyl substituents resulting from such phase transitions being more pronounced for a macrobicyclic cobalt(II) complex. Its fine-crystalline sample undergoes the gradual and fully reversible spin transition centered at approximately 225 K. The density functional theory calculated parameters for an isolated molecule of this cobalt(II) hexachloroclathrochelate in its low- and high-spin states were found to be in excellent agreement with the experimental data and allowed to localize the spin density within a macrobicyclic framework. CV of the cobalt(II) complex in the cathodic range contains one reversible wave assigned to the Co(2+/+) redox couple with the reduced anionic cobalt(I)-containing species stabilized by the electronic effect of six strong electron-withdrawing chlorine substituents. The quasireversible character of the Fe(2+/+) wave suggests that the anionic iron(I)-containing macrobicyclic species undergo substantial structural changes and side chemical reactions after such metal-centered reduction.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

Transfer Hydrogenation of Ketones Catalyzed by Surface-Active Ruthenium and Rhodium Complexes in Water

Alexander M. Kalsin; Tat'yana A. Peganova; Valentin V. Novikov; Alexandra I. Zhamoytina; Luca Gonsalvi; Maurizio Peruzzini

An improved, high-yield, one-pot synthetic procedure for water-soluble ligands functionalized with trialkyl ammonium side groups H2 N(CH2 )2 NHSO2 -p-C6 H4 CH2 [NMe2 (Cn H2n+1 )](+) ([HL(n) ](+) ; n=8, 16) was developed. The corresponding new surface-active complexes [(p-cymene)RuCl(L(n) )] and [Cp*RhCl(L(n) )] (Cp*=η(5) -C5 Me5 ) were prepared and characterized. For n=16 micelles are formed in water at concentrations as low as 0.6 mM, as demonstrated by surface-tension measurements. The complexes were used for catalytic transfer hydrogenation of ketones with formate in water. Highly active catalyst systems were obtained in the case of complexes bearing C16 tails due to their ability to be adsorbed at the water/substrate interface. The scope of these catalyst systems in aqueous solutions was extended from partially water soluble aryl alkyl ketones (acetophenone, butyrophenone) to hydrophobic dialkyl ketones (2-dodecanone).


RSC Advances | 2015

Recent advances in biological applications of cage metal complexes

Yan Z. Voloshin; Valentin V. Novikov; Yulia V. Nelyubina

This review highlights advances in biochemical and medical applications of cage metal complexes (clathrochelates) and related polyhedral compounds as rigid scaffolds for macromolecular binding (topological drugs), in radiation therapy and diagnostics, and as paramagnetic probes for NMR and MRI applications.

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Yan Z. Voloshin

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Alexander S. Belov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Oleg A. Varzatskii

National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine

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Yulia V. Nelyubina

A. N. Nesmeyanov Institute of Organoelement Compounds

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Yurii N. Bubnov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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