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Featured researches published by Walter W. Weare.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Direct Observation of a Hydroperoxide Surface Intermediate upon Visible Light-Driven Water Oxidation at an Ir Oxide Nanocluster Catalyst by Rapid-Scan FT-IR Spectroscopy

Narayanappa Sivasankar; Walter W. Weare; Heinz Frei

A surface hydroperoxide intermediate has been detected upon oxidation of water at an Ir oxide nanocluster catalyst system under pulsed excitation of a [Ru(bpy)(3)](2+) visible light sensitizer by recording of the OO vibrational mode at 830 cm(-1). Rapid-scan FT-IR spectroscopy of colloidal H(2)O, D(2)O, and D(2)(18)O solutions in the attenuated total reflection mode allowed spectral assignment of IrOOH on the basis of an observed D shift of 30 cm(-1), and (18)O shifts of 24 cm(-1) ((16)O(18)O) and 46 cm(-1) ((18)O(18)O). The laser pulse response of the infrared band is consistent with the kinetic relevancy of the intermediate. This is the first observation of a surface intermediate of oxygen evolution at an Ir oxide multielectron catalyst.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2014

Light-Driven Hydrogen Evolution by BODIPY-Sensitized Cobaloxime Catalysts

Juergen Bartelmess; Aaron J. Francis; Karim A. El Roz; Felix N. Castellano; Walter W. Weare; Roger D. Sommer

We report four photocatalytically active cobaloxime complexes for light-driven hydrogen evolution. The cobaloxime catalysts are sensitized by different meso-pyridyl boron dipyrromethene (BODIPY) chromophores, bearing either two bromo- or iodo-substituents on the BODIPY core. The pyridine linker between the BODIPY and cobaloxime is further modified by a methyl substituent on the pyridine, influencing the stability and electronic properties of the cobaloxime catalyst and thus the photocatalytic efficiency of each system. Four cobaloxime catalyst complexes and three novel BODIPY chromophores are synthesized and characterized by absorption, fluorescence, infrared (IR) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, and electrochemistry. Crystal structures for the BODIPY-cobaloxime complexes 2 and 3 are presented. In contrast to the photocatalytically inactive, nonhalogenated reference complex 1, the four newly reported molecules are active for photocatalytic hydrogen evolution, with a maximum turnover number (TON) of 30.9 mol equiv of H2 per catalyst for the meso-methylpyridyl 2,6-diiodo BODIPY-sensitized cobaloxime complex 5. We conclude that accessing the photoexcited triplet state of the BODIPY chromophore by introducing heavy atoms (i.e., bromine or iodine) is necessary for efficient electron transfer in this system, enabling catalytic hydrogen generation. In addition, relatively electron-donating pyridyl linkers improve the stability of the complex, increasing the overall TON for hydrogen production.


Biomacromolecules | 2015

Synthesis, Characterization, and Antimicrobial Efficacy of Photomicrobicidal Cellulose Paper.

Bradley L. Carpenter; Frank Scholle; Hasan Sadeghifar; Aaron J. Francis; Jonathan Boltersdorf; Walter W. Weare; Dimitris S. Argyropoulos; Paul A. Maggard; Reza A. Ghiladi

Toward our goal of scalable, antimicrobial materials based on photodynamic inactivation, paper sheets comprised of photosensitizer-conjugated cellulose fibers were prepared using porphyrin and BODIPY photosensitizers, and characterized by spectroscopic (infrared, UV-vis diffuse reflectance, inductively coupled plasma optical emission) and physical (gel permeation chromatography, elemental, and thermal gravimetric analyses) methods. Antibacterial efficacy was evaluated against Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC-2913), vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (ATCC-2320), Acinetobacter baumannii (ATCC-19606), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (ATCC-9027), and Klebsiella pneumoniae (ATCC-2146). Our best results were achieved with a cationic porphyrin-paper conjugate, Por((+))-paper, with inactivation upon illumination (30 min, 65 ± 5 mW/cm(2), 400-700 nm) of all bacterial strains studied by 99.99+% (4 log units), regardless of taxonomic classification. Por((+))-paper also inactivated dengue-1 virus (>99.995%), influenza A (∼ 99.5%), and human adenovirus-5 (∼ 99%). These results demonstrate the potential of cellulose materials to serve as scalable scaffolds for anti-infective or self-sterilizing materials against both bacteria and viruses when employing a photodynamic inactivation mode of action.


Molecules | 2015

Antiviral, Antifungal and Antibacterial Activities of a BODIPY-Based Photosensitizer

Bradley L. Carpenter; Xingci Situ; Frank Scholle; Juergen Bartelmess; Walter W. Weare; Reza A. Ghiladi

Antimicrobial photodynamic inactivation (aPDI) employing the BODIPY-based photosensitizer 2,6-diiodo-1,3,5,7-tetramethyl-8-(N-methyl-4-pyridyl)-4,4′-difluoro-boradiazaindacene (DIMPy-BODIPY) was explored in an in vitro assay against six species of bacteria (eight total strains), three species of yeast, and three viruses as a complementary approach to their current drug-based or non-existent treatments. Our best results achieved a noteworthy 5–6 log unit reduction in CFU at 0.1 μM for Staphylococcus aureus (ATCC-2913), methicillin-resistant S. aureus (ATCC-44), and vancomycin-resistant Enterococcus faecium (ATCC-2320), a 4–5 log unit reduction for Acinetobacter baumannii ATCC-19606 (0.25 μM), multidrug resistant A. baumannii ATCC-1605 (0.1 μM), Pseudomonas aeruginosa ATCC-97 (0.5 μM), and Klebsiella pneumoniae ATCC-2146 (1 μM), and a 3 log unit reduction for Mycobacterium smegmatis mc2155 (ATCC-700084). A 5 log unit reduction in CFU was observed for Candida albicans ATCC-90028 (1 μM) and Cryptococcus neoformans ATCC-64538 (0.5 μM), and a 3 log unit reduction was noted for Candida glabrata ATCC-15545 (1 μM). Infectivity was reduced by 6 log units in dengue 1 (0.1 μM), by 5 log units (0.5 μM) in vesicular stomatitis virus, and by 2 log units (5 μM) in human adenovirus-5. Overall, the results demonstrate that DIMPy-BODIPY exhibits antiviral, antibacterial and antifungal photodynamic inactivation at nanomolar concentrations and short illumination times.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2015

Synthesis of Unsupported d1–dx Oxido-Bridged Heterobimetallic Complexes Containing VIV: A New Direction for Metal-to-Metal Charge Transfer

Xinyuan Wu; Tao Huang; Travis T. Lekich; Roger D. Sommer; Walter W. Weare

Heterobimetallic complexes composed only of first-row transition metals [(TMTAA)V(IV)═O→M(II)Py5Me2](OTf)2 (TMTAA = 7,16-dihydro-6,8,15,17-tetramethyldibenzo[b,i][1,4,8,11]tetraazacyclotetradecine; Py5Me2 = 2,6-bis(1,1-bis(2-pyridyl)ethyl)pyridine; M = Mn(II), Fe(II), Co(II), Ni(II), Cu(II); OTf = trifluoromethanesulfonate) have been synthesized through a dative interaction between a terminal oxido and M(II) metal centers. This is the first series of V(IV)═O→M(II) heterobimetallic complexes containing an unsupported oxido bridge. Among these five complexes, only V(IV)═O→Fe(II) (3b) has a clear new absorption band upon formation of the dinuclear species (502 nm, ε = 1700 M(-1) cm(-1)). This feature is assigned to a metal-to-metal charge transfer (MMCT) transition from V(IV) to Fe(II), which forms a V(V)-O-Fe(I) excited state. This assignment is supported by electrochemical data, electronic absorption profiles, and resonance Raman spectroscopy and represents the first report of visible-light induced MMCT in a heterobimetallic oxido-bridged molecule where the electron originates on a d(1) metal center.


New Journal of Chemistry | 2013

meso-Pyridyl BODIPYs with tunable chemical, optical and electrochemical properties

Juergen Bartelmess; Walter W. Weare; Narah Latortue; Christina Duong; Daniel S. Jones

A series of meso-pyridyl substituted BODIPY molecules has been synthesized, characterized and their optical and electrochemical properties compared. By utilizing ethanol and dichloromethane during the initial condensation reactions, there is a significant increase in the isolated yields compared to standard protocols. The properties of the highly fluorescent BODIPYs could be tuned by modifying the substituents of the pyridine, leading to pyridyl BODIPY as prospective ligands for future metal complexes. Furthermore, the presented BODIPY derivatives are shown to be applicable for fluorescence pH sensing over selective pH ranges.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2006

Synthesis of Molybdenum Complexes that Contain “Hybrid” Triamidoamine Ligands, [(Hexaisopropylterphenyl-NCH2CH2)2NCH2CH2N-aryl]3-, and Studies Relevant to Catalytic Reduction of Dinitrogen

Walter W. Weare; Richard R. Schrock; and Adam S. Hock; Peter Müller


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2010

Unusually Long Lifetime of Excited Charge-Transfer State of All-Inorganic Binuclear TiOMnII Unit Anchored on Silica Nanopore Surface

Tanja Cuk; Walter W. Weare; Heinz Frei


Dyes and Pigments | 2013

Preparation and characterization of multi-cationic BODIPYs and their synthetically versatile precursors

Juergen Bartelmess; Walter W. Weare


Inorganic Chemistry | 2006

Synthesis of [(HIPTNCH 2 CH 2 ) 3 N]Crk Compounds (HIPT = 3,5-(2,4,6-!-Pr 3 C 6 H 2 ) 2 C 6 H 3 ) and an Evaluation of Chromium for the Reduction of Dinitrogen to Ammonia

Walter W. Weare; Richard R. Schrock; Peter Müller; Nathan C. Smythe

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Roger D. Sommer

North Carolina State University

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Juergen Bartelmess

North Carolina State University

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Aaron J. Francis

North Carolina State University

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Tao Huang

North Carolina State University

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Xinyuan Wu

North Carolina State University

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Bradley L. Carpenter

North Carolina State University

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Felix N. Castellano

North Carolina State University

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Heinz Frei

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Reza A. Ghiladi

North Carolina State University

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Richard R. Schrock

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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