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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer at Nickel Pincer Complexes

Schneck, Felix 26 April 2019 (has links)
No description available.
12

The Electrochemical Reduction of Superoxide in Acetonitrile: A Concerted Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer (PCET) Reaction.

Singh, Pradyumna Shaakuntal January 2005 (has links)
Superoxide, the product of the one-electron reduction of dioxygen, is a molecule of enormous importance. It participates in a variety of critical physiological processes and is also an important component of fuel cells where it is an intermediate in the cathodic reaction. However, the electrochemical behavior of superoxide, mainly its reduction, is not well understood. Here, the electrochemical behavior of superoxide has been investigated in acetonitrile on glassy carbon electrodes, through cyclic voltammetry experiments. By stabilizing the electrogenerated superoxide, aprotic solvents afford an opportunity to study its electrochemical reactions further. Superoxide was generated electrochemically from dioxygen at the first voltammetric peak. In the presence of hydrogen-bond donors (water, methanol, 2-propanol), the superoxide forms a complex with the donor resulting in a positive shift in the formal potential which can be analyzed to obtain formation constants for these complexes. Stronger acids (2,2,2- trifluoroethanol, 4-tert-butylphenol) result in protonation of superoxide followed by reduction to produce HO₂-. On scanning to more negative potentials a second peak is observed which is irreversible and extremely drawn out along the potential axis indicating a small value of the transfer coefficient α. Addition of hydrogenbond donors, HA, brings about a positive shift in this peak, without a noticeable change in shape. The reaction occurring at the second peak is a concerted proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) in which the electron is transferred to superoxide and a proton is transferred from HA to superoxide forming HO₂- and A- in a concerted process. We estimate the standard potential for this reaction for the case of water as the donor. This value suggests that the reaction at the second peak occurs at very high driving forces. Kinetic simulations using both Butler-Volmer and Marcusian schemes were performed to estimate the kinetic parameters. The unusually low rate constants obtained suggest high nonadiabaticity for this PCET reaction. The reaction was also found to proceed with an unusually large reorganization energy. Consistent with a PCET, a kinetic isotope effect, HA vs. DA, was detected for the three hydrogen-bond donors.
13

Synthesis of Biomimetic Systems for Proton and Electron Transfer Reactions in the Ground and Excited State

Parada, Giovanny A. January 2015 (has links)
A detailed understanding of natural photosynthesis provides inspiration for the development of sustainable and renewable energy sources, i.e. a technology that is capable of converting solar energy directly into chemical fuels. This concept is called artificial photosynthesis. The work described in this thesis contains contributions to the development of artificial photosynthesis in two separate areas. The first one relates to light harvesting with a focus on the question of how electronic properties of photosensitizers can be tuned to allow for efficient photo-induced electron transfer processes. The study is based on a series of bis(tridentate)ruthenium(II) polypyridyl complexes, the geometric properties of which make them highly appealing for the construction of linear donor-photosensitizer-acceptor arrangements for efficient vectorial photo-induced electron transfer reactions. The chromophores possess remarkably long lived 3MLCT excited states and it is shown that their excited-state oxidation strength can be altered by variations of the ligand scaffold over a remarkably large range of 900 mV. The second area of relevance to natural and artificial photosynthesis that is discussed in this thesis relates to the coupled movement of protons and electrons. The delicate interplay between these two charged particles regulates thermodynamic and kinetic aspects in many key elementary steps of natural photosynthesis, and further studies are needed to fully understand this concept. The studies are based on redox active phenols with intramolecular hydrogen bonds to quinolines. The compounds thus bear a strong resemblance to the tyrosine/histidine couple in photosystem II, i.e. the water-plastoquinone oxidoreductase enzyme in photosynthesis. The design of the biomimetic models is such that the distance between the proton donor and acceptor is varied, enabling studies on the effect the proton transfer distance has on the rate of proton-coupled electron transfer reactions. The results of the studies have implications for the development of artificial photosynthesis, in particular in connection with redox leveling, charge accumulation, as well as electron and proton transfer. In addition to these two contributions, the excited-state dynamics of the intramolecular hydrogen-bonded phenols was investigated, thereby revealing design principles for technological applications based on excited-state intramolecular proton transfer and photoinduced tautomerization.
14

Synthesis of Terminal Transition Metal Pnictide Complexes by Activation of Small Molecules

Abbenseth, Josh 08 July 2019 (has links)
No description available.
15

Mechanistic studies on the light-dependent NADPH:Protochlorophyllide Oxidoreductase and animal cryptochromes

Archipowa, Nataliya January 2018 (has links)
Nature uses sunlight either as energy source or as information carrier. Photoreception is achieved by two groups of specialised proteins: photo-enzymes that catalyse photoreactions and photosensors that initiate physiological functions. In the present work mechanistic studies were conducted on one representative of each group by using site-directed mutagenesis as well as stationary and time-resolved spectroscopy. The photo-enzyme NADPH:Protochlorophyllide Oxidoreductase (POR) catalyses the light-dependent C17-C18 double bond reduction of protochlorophyllide, including a hydride and a proton transfer, to produce chlorophyllide, the immediate precursor of chlorophyll. POR provides a unique opportunity to study the hydride transfer mechanism in detail. Three distinct intermediates, prior to product formation, were observed that were interpreted as electron and proton-coupled electron transfer reactions from NADPH indicating a sequential hydride transfer mechanism. An active-site mutant, POR-C226S, yields distinct different intermediates compared to POR wild type but ends in the same chlorophyllide stereoisomer most likely due to an altered protochlorophyllide binding. This work provides the first direct observation of a stepwise hydride transfer mechanism in a biological system. Cryptochromes (CRY) are so far defined as flavoprotein blue-light photosensors that regulate the circadian clock throughout nature and are suggested as the candidate magnetoreceptor in animals. Animal CRY are subdivided into two classes of proteins: the light-responsive Type I (invertebrates) and the light-independent Type II (mainly vertebrates). The molecular basis of their different roles in the circadian clock is still unknown. Animal Type I CRY are suggested to undergo conformational changes - required for induction of subsequent signalling cascades - induced by the change in the FAD redox state due to light absorption. The study shows that in contrast to Type I animal Type II CRY do not bind tightly FAD as a cofactor due to the lack of structural features and therefore provide the molecular basis for their different biological roles ruling out a direct photomagnetoreceptor function. Further, detailed studies on a fruit fly (Dm)CRY reveal that it does not undergo a photocycle as FAD release and Trp decomposition were observed. Thus, it is suggested that light is a negative regulator of DmCRY stability linking the initial photochemistry to subsequent dark processes leading to signal transduction on a molecular level.
16

Regulation of Proton Coupled Electron Transfer from Amino Acids in Artificial Model Systems: A Mechanistic Study / En Mekanistisk Studie rörande Reglering av Protonkopplad Elektronöverföring från Aminosyror i Artificiella Modellsystem

Sjödin, Martin January 2004 (has links)
<p>Amino acid radicals are key redox intermediates in several natural enzymes including Cytochrome c peroxidase, DNA photolyase, ribonucletide reductase, cytochrome c oxidase and photosystem II. Electron transfer from amino acids is often coupled to deprotonation and this thesis concerns the coupling of electron transfer from tyrosine and tryptophan to trisbipyridineruthenium(III) with deprotonation in model complexes. Specifically the mechanisms for these proton coupled electron transfer reactions have been studied and the controlling parameters have been identified, the possible mechanisms being stepwise electron transfer followed by deprotonation and deprotonation followed by electron transfer or concerted electron transfer/deprotonation.</p><p>Proton coupled electron transfer reactions have been studied using nano-second flash photolysis in water solution and the effect of pH, temperature, reaction driving force, deuteration and nature of the amino acid has been determined. I have shown that the rate constant for the concerted reaction depends intrinsically on the mixing entropy of the released proton and that the pH-dependence can be used as an experimental tool for mechanistic discrimination. Moreover I have shown that the concerted reaction inherently has a high reorganisation energy due to the coupling of the electron motion with deprotonation. Hydrogen bonding to the transferring proton however significantly reduces this reorganisation energy. The concerted reaction also has a relatively high driving force counteracting the high reorganisation energy in the competition between the concerted reaction and the stepwise electron transfer first reaction. The relative importance of the high reorganisation energy and the high driving force for the concerted reaction determines the mechanistic outcome of the reaction, the stepwise reaction being favoured by high over-all driving forces and the concerted reaction by high pH.</p><p>By comparing my results from model complexes with tyrosineZ oxidation in photosystem II, I give strong evidence for a concerted electron transfer/deprotonation mechanism.</p>
17

Regulation of Proton Coupled Electron Transfer from Amino Acids in Artificial Model Systems: A Mechanistic Study / En Mekanistisk Studie rörande Reglering av Protonkopplad Elektronöverföring från Aminosyror i Artificiella Modellsystem

Sjödin, Martin January 2004 (has links)
Amino acid radicals are key redox intermediates in several natural enzymes including Cytochrome c peroxidase, DNA photolyase, ribonucletide reductase, cytochrome c oxidase and photosystem II. Electron transfer from amino acids is often coupled to deprotonation and this thesis concerns the coupling of electron transfer from tyrosine and tryptophan to trisbipyridineruthenium(III) with deprotonation in model complexes. Specifically the mechanisms for these proton coupled electron transfer reactions have been studied and the controlling parameters have been identified, the possible mechanisms being stepwise electron transfer followed by deprotonation and deprotonation followed by electron transfer or concerted electron transfer/deprotonation. Proton coupled electron transfer reactions have been studied using nano-second flash photolysis in water solution and the effect of pH, temperature, reaction driving force, deuteration and nature of the amino acid has been determined. I have shown that the rate constant for the concerted reaction depends intrinsically on the mixing entropy of the released proton and that the pH-dependence can be used as an experimental tool for mechanistic discrimination. Moreover I have shown that the concerted reaction inherently has a high reorganisation energy due to the coupling of the electron motion with deprotonation. Hydrogen bonding to the transferring proton however significantly reduces this reorganisation energy. The concerted reaction also has a relatively high driving force counteracting the high reorganisation energy in the competition between the concerted reaction and the stepwise electron transfer first reaction. The relative importance of the high reorganisation energy and the high driving force for the concerted reaction determines the mechanistic outcome of the reaction, the stepwise reaction being favoured by high over-all driving forces and the concerted reaction by high pH. By comparing my results from model complexes with tyrosineZ oxidation in photosystem II, I give strong evidence for a concerted electron transfer/deprotonation mechanism.
18

Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer from Hydrogen-Bonded Phenols

Irebo, Tania January 2010 (has links)
Proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) is one of the elementary reactions occurring in many chemical and biological systems, such as photosystem II where the oxidation of tyrosine (TyrZ) is coupled to deprotonation of the phenolic proton. This reaction is here modelled by the oxidation of a phenol covalently linked to a Ru(bpy)32+-moitey, which is photo-oxidized by a laser flash-quench method. This model system is unusual as mechanism of PCET is studied in a unimolecular system in water solution. Here we address the question how the nature of the proton accepting base and its hydrogen bond to phenol influence the PCET reaction. In the first part we investigate the effect of an internal hydrogen bond PCET from. Two similar phenols are compared. For both these the proton accepting base is a carboxylate group linked to the phenol on the ortho-position directly or via a methylene group. On the basis of kinetic and thermodynamic arguments it is suggested that the PCET from these occurs via a concerted electron proton transfer (CEP). Moreover, numerical modelling of the kinetic data provides an in-depth analysis of this CEP reaction, including promoting  vibrations  along the O–H–O coordinate that are required to explain the data. The second part describes the study on oxidation of phenol where either water or an external base the proton acceptor. The pH-dependence of the kinetics reveals four mechanistic regions for PCET within the same molecule when water is the base. It is shown that the competition between the mechanisms can be tuned by the strength of the oxidant. Moreover, these studies reveal the conditions that may favour a buffer-assisted PCET over that with deprotonation to water solution.
19

Redox active tyrosines in photosystem II: role in proton coupled electron transfer reactions

Keough, James M. 07 January 2013 (has links)
Proton coupled electron transfer reactions often involve tyrosine residues, because when oxidized, the phenolic side chain deprotonates. Tyrosine Z (YZ) is responsible for extracting electrons in a stepwise fashion from the oxygen evolving-complex in order to build enough potential to oxidize water. This process requires that each step YZ must deprotonate and reprotonate in order to maintain the high midpoint potential that is necessary to oxidize the oxygen-evolving complex, which makes YZ highly involved in proton coupled electron transfer reactions. In this thesis YZ has been studied within oxygen-evolving photosystem II utilizing electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy to monitor the tyrosyl radical that is formed upon light excitation. Kinetic analysis of YZ has shed light on the factors that are important for PSII to carry out water oxidation at the oxygen-evolving complex. Most notably the strong hydrogen-bonding network and the midpoint potential of YZ have been shown to be integral aspects of the water splitting reactions of PSII. By studying YZ within oxygen-evolving PSII, conclusions are readily applied to the native system.
20

Protein structural changes and tyrosyl radical-mediated electron transfer reactions in ribonucleotide reductase and model compounds

Offenbacher, Adam R. 18 January 2011 (has links)
Tyrosyl radicals can facilitate proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reactions that are linked to catalysis in many biological systems. One such protein system is ribonucleotide reductase (RNR). This enzyme is responsible for the conversion of ribonucleotides to deoxyribonucleotides. The beta2 subunit of class Ia RNRs contains a diiron cluster and a stable tyrosyl radical (Y122*). Reduction of ribonucleotides is dependent on reversible, long-distance PCET reactions involving Y122* located 35 Å from the active site. Protein conformational dynamics are postulated to precede diiron cluster assembly and PCET reactions in RNR. Using UV resonance Raman spectroscopy, we identified structural changes to histidine, tyrosine, and tryptophan residues with metal cluster assembly in beta2. With a reaction-induced infrared spectroscopic technique, local amide bond structural changes, which are associated with the reduction of Y122*, were observed. Moreover, infrared spectroscopy of tyrosine-containing pentapeptide model compounds supported the hypothesis that local amide bonds are perturbed with tyrosyl radical formation. These findings demonstrate the importance of the amino acid primary sequence and amide bonds on tyrosyl radical redox changes. We also investigated the function of a unique tyrosine-histidine cross-link, which is found in the active site of cytochrome c oxidase (CcO). Spectrophotometric titrations of model compounds that mimic the cross-link were consistent with a proton transfer role in CcO. Infrared spectroscopic data support the formation of tyrosyl radicals in these model compounds. Collectively, the effect of the local structure and the corresponding protein dynamics involved in tyrosyl radical-mediated PCET reactions are illustrated in this work.

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