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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.
331

Crystal engineering of active pharmaceutical ingredients to improve solubility and dissolution rates.

Blagden, Nicholas, de Matas, Marcel, Gavan, Pauline T., York, Peter 2007 July 1930 (has links)
No / The increasing prevalence of poorly soluble drugs in development provides notable risk of new products demonstrating low and erratic bioavailabilty with consequences for safety and efficacy, particularly for drugs delivered by the oral route of administration. Although numerous strategies exist for enhancing the bioavailability of drugs with low aqueous solubility, the success of these approaches is not yet able to be guaranteed and is greatly dependent on the physical and chemical nature of the molecules being developed. Crystal engineering offers a number of routes to improved solubility and dissolution rate, which can be adopted through an in-depth knowledge of crystallisation processes and the molecular properties of active pharmaceutical ingredients. This article covers the concept and theory of crystal engineering and discusses the potential benefits, disadvantages and methods of preparation of co-crystals, metastable polymorphs, high-energy amorphous forms and ultrafine particles. Also considered within this review is the influence of crystallisation conditions on crystal habit and particle morphology with potential implications for dissolution and oral absorption.
332

Aromaticity, Supramolecular Stacks, and Luminescence Properties of Cyclic Trinuclear Complexes

Lu, Zhou 12 1900 (has links)
The dissertation covers three major topics: metal-assisted aromaticity, synthetic approaches to tailor donor-acceptor supramolecular stacks, and photoluminescence properties of cyclic trinuclear complexes (CTCs) of d10 metals. First, multiple theoretical approaches are adapted to discuss in detail the origin of aromaticity of CTCs, putting forward a metal-assisted aromaticity model. Next are the discoveries of donor-acceptor stacked CTC–CTC' complexes from both experimental and computational perspectives, reporting multiple novel crystallography-determined structures and revealing their pertinent intermolecular ground-state charge transfer. The spontaneous binding behavior is also determined by UV-vis and NMR titrations and rationalized as the cooperation of multiple supramolecular interactions, including metallophilicity, electrostatic attraction, and dispersion. The last part includes systematic investigations of photoluminescence properties of halogen-metal-bonded CTCs and sandwich-like cation–π-bonded heptanuclear clusters based on CTCs. The cooperative effects of metal-centered conformation, the heavy-atom and relativistic effects from both the halogen and metal atoms play complementary roles in the phosphorescence process to promote the inter-system crossing and radiative transitions.
333

Design, Synthesis and Optoelectronic Properties of Monovalent Coinage Metal-Based Functional Materials toward Potential Lighting, Display and Energy-Harvesting Devices

Ghimire, Mukunda Mani 08 1900 (has links)
Groundbreaking progress in molecule-based optoelectronic devices for lighting, display and energy-harvesting technologies demands highly efficient and easily processable functional materials with tunable properties governed by their molecular/supramolecular structure variations. To date, functional coordination compounds whose function is governed by non-covalent weak forces (e.g., metallophilic, dπ-acid/dπ-base stacking, halogen/halogen and/or d/π interactions) remain limited. This is unlike the situation for metal-free organic semiconductors, as most metal complexes incorporated in optoelectronic devices have their function determined by the properties of the monomeric molecular unit (e.g., Ir(III)-phenylpyridine complexes in organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) and Ru(II)-polypyridyl complexes in dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs)). This dissertation represents comprehensive results of both experimental and theoretical studies, descriptions of synthetic methods and possible application allied to monovalent coinage metal-based functional materials. The main emphasis is given to the design and synthesis of functional materials with preset material properties such as light-emitting materials, light-harvesting materials and conducting materials. In terms of advances in fundamental scientific phenomena, the major highlight of the work in this dissertation is the discovery of closed-shell polar-covalent metal-metal bonds manifested by ligand-unassisted d10-d10 covalent bonds between Cu(I) and Au(I) coinage metals in the ground electronic state (~2.87 Å; ~45 kcal/mol). Moreover, this dissertation also reports pairwise intermolecular aurophilic interactions of 3.066 Å for an Au(I) complex, representing the shortest ever reported pairwise intermolecular aurophilic distances among all coinage metal(I) cyclic trimetallic complexes to date; crystals of this complex also exhibit gigantic luminescence thermochromism of 10,200 cm-1 (violet to red). From applications prospective, the work herein presents monovalent coinage metal-based functional optoelectronic materials such as heterobimetallic complexes with near-unity photoluminescence quantum yield, metallic or semiconducting integrated donor-acceptor stacks and a new class of Au(III)-based black absorbers with cooperative intermolecular iodophilic (I…I) interactions that sensitize the harvesting of all UV, all visible, and a broad spectrum of near-IR regions of the solar spectrum. These novel functional materials of cyclic trimetallic coinage metal complexes have been characterized by a broad suit of spectroscopic and structural analysis methods in the solid state and solution.
334

Synthesis and Electron Transfer Studies of Supramolecular Triads

Bodenstedt, Kurt 05 1900 (has links)
This study expands the role of polythiophenes as an electron donating chromophore within energy harvesting milti-modular donor-acceptor systems. The polythiophene moiety would act as an electron donating spacer group between the donor and acceptor entities, viz., phenothiazine and fulleropyrrolidine, respectively, in the newly synthesized supramolecular triads. The triads 10-{[2,2';5',2"] terthiophene-5-fulleropyrrolidine} phenothiazine and 10-{[2,2'] bithiophene-5-fulleropyrrolidine} phenothiazine were synthesized and characterized through electrochemical and spectroscopic methods to ascertain their structural integrity. the componets of the triads were selected for their established redox parameters. Phenothiazine would act as a secondary donor and would facilitate hole-transfer from the polythiophene primary electron donor, due to its ease of oxidation and yield a long-lived charge separated state. Fulleropyrrolidine would act as an acceptor for ease of reductive capabilities and its ability to hold multiple charges. Finally, occurrence of photoinduced electron transferleading to the anticipated charge separated states is established from advanced transient spectroscopic techniques on these novel supramolecular systems.
335

The assembly of molecular networks at surfaces : towards novel enantioselective heterogeneous catalysts

Jensen, Sean January 2010 (has links)
Understanding the supramolecular interactions governing the self-assembly of molecular building blocks upon surfaces is fundamental to the design of new devices such as sensors or catalysts. Successful heterogeneous enantioselective catalysts have relied upon the adsorption of ‘chiral modifiers’, usually chiral amino acids, onto reactive metal surfaces. One of the most researched examples is the hydrogenation of β-ketoesters using nickel-based catalysts. The stability of the chiral modifiers upon catalyst surfaces is a major obstacle to the industrial scale-up of this reaction. In this study, the replacement of conventional modifiers with porous, chiral and functionalised self-assembled networks is investigated. Perylene-3,4,9,10-tetracarboxylic diimide (PTCDI) and melamine (1,3,5-triazine,-2,4,6-triamine) have been shown to form hydrogen bonded networks on Ag-Si(111)√3x√3R30° in ultra-high vacuum (UHV) and Au(111) substrates in UHV and ambient conditions, these networks are capable of hosting guest molecules. These networks are investigated further in this study. In UHV, the behaviour of the components and network formation on Ni(111) is probed using scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) and temperature-programmed desorption (TPD). The stability of the PTCDI-melamine network on Au(111) was analysed using TPD. Metal coordination interactions between each of the network components and nickel upon the Au(111) surface were examined by STM before testing the ability of the network to act as a template for metal growth. Finally, a number of polymerisation reactions are investigated with a view to replacing chiral modifiers with porous, chiral, functionalised covalent networks. Periodic covalent networks should possess the greater chemical and thermal stability required for more widespread use. In UHV and ambient conditions, STM is used to monitor the progress of surface-confined reactions on Au(111) and characterise the resultant covalent structures.
336

Synthèse et étude de nouveaux récepteurs ditopiques fonctionnalisés dérivés de calix[6]arènes: des calix[6]cryptamides aux calix[6]trens / Synthesis and study of new functionalized ditopic receptors based on calix[6]arenes: from calix[6]cryptamides to calix[6]trens

Lascaux, Angélique 24 June 2013 (has links)
Ce travail s'inscrit dans le cadre de la chimie supramoléculaire, domaine s'intéressant à l'étude d'édifices moléculaires liés par des interactions non-covalentes, fréquemment rencontrés dans le monde du vivant. Afin de mieux comprendre les phénomènes de complexation, de nombreux récepteurs moléculaires synthétiques ont été développés depuis ces cinquante dernières années. Dans le cadre de la reconnaissance moléculaire, les calix[6]arènes s'avèrent être des plateformes idéales puisqu'ils sont aisément fonctionnalisables et possèdent une cavité hydrophobe propice à l'inclusion de petites molécules organiques. D'ailleurs de nombreux récepteurs calix[6]aréniques ont déjà été développés et ont été étudiés pour leur aptitude à complexer des molécules neutres, des anions, des paires d'ions ou des ions métalliques. Cependant, ils souffrent de certaines limitations puisqu'ils ne sont pas hydrosolubles et sont difficilement post-fonctionnalisables limitant de ce fait leur applicabilité. Nous nous sommes donc intéressés à la synthèse de récepteurs calix[6]aréniques fonctionnalisés ainsi qu'à l'étude de leurs propriétés réceptrices vis-à-vis d'entités chargées ou de molécules neutres. Les études de ces systèmes ont été réalisées essentiellement par spectroscopie de Résonance Magnétique Nucléaire (RMN).<p>Dans le cadre de ce travail, des récepteurs ditopiques mono- et trisfonctionnalisés de type calix[6]cryptamide ont tout d'abord été développés. Ces récepteurs présentent un motif trenamide qui constitue un second site de reconnaissance, distinct mais proche du premier formé par la cavité calix[6]arénique. Ces récepteurs se sont révélés capables de complexer les molécules neutres polaires ainsi que des entités chargées avec une grande sélectivité en milieu aprotique mais également en présence d'un solvant protique. Le chapeau trenamide étant relativement contraint et bien préorganisé, il assure un fort effet chélate et permet une sélectivité de taille pour l'anion fluorure. La proximité des deux sites de reconnaissance ainsi que la sélectivité pour l'anion fluorure permettent à ces récepteurs de reconnaître des ammoniums sous forme de paires d'ions de contact uniquement avec le fluorure comme partenaire anionique. Les résultats obtenus ont démontré que l'introduction de fonctionnalisations soit au niveau du chapeau trenamide, à proximité du site de reconnaissance, soit au niveau du petit col du calix[6]arène n'inhibait pas les propriétés de complexation de ces récepteurs. Les premiers essais d'introduction de groupes hydrosolubilisants ont alors été réalisés et se sont révélés très prometteurs. En effet, l'introduction de groupements PEG sur un calix[6]cryptamide trisfonctionnalisé a permis de démontrer l'aptitude de ce récepteur à complexer des molécules neutres en milieu aqueux (CD3OD/D2O).<p>Dans un second temps, des récepteurs mono- et trisfonctionnalisés de type calix[6]tren ont été développés. Les études préliminaires réalisées ont permis de mettre en évidence que, comme le calix[6]tren non fonctionnalisé, ces récepteurs étaient capable de complexer de petites molécules organiques lorsqu'ils sont polarisés, soit sous leur forme per-protonnée soit sous la forme d'un complexe métallique (Zn2+ ou Cun+). <p><p>L'ensemble de ces travaux a ainsi permis de valider la stratégie de synthèse visant à introduire des bras fonctionnels sur des récepteurs ditopiques calix[6]aréniques et de démontrer que ces nouveaux récepteurs fonctionnalisés conservaient des propriétés de reconnaissance. Ces travaux permettent donc d'envisager de multiples applications pour ce type de récepteurs.<p>This work falls within the field of supramolecular chemistry, a field concerned with the study of molecular structures linked by non-covalent interactions. Such weak interactions are frequently encountered in the living world and in particular in molecular recognition processes. In order to better understand and exploit these recognition processes, many synthetic molecular receptors have been developed over the last fifty years. In this regard, calix[6]arenes have proved to be ideal platforms because they can be easily functionalized and they possess a hydrophobic cavity suitable for the inclusion of small organic molecules. Hence, many calix[6]arene based receptors have been studied for their ability to complex neutral molecules, anions, ion pairs or metal ions. However, most of these receptors suffer from major limitations that limit their applicability: they are not water soluble and hardly post-functionalizable. In the frame of this thesis, we were therefore interested in the synthesis of functionalized calix[6]arene based receptors and in the study of their host-guest properties toward charged species or neutral molecules. Studies of these host-guest systems have been carried out mainly by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectroscopy (NMR).<p><p>First, mono- and trisfunctionalized ditopic receptors based on a calix[6]cryptamide skeleton were synthesized. These receptors possess two binding sites in close proximity: a trenamide subunit and the calix[6]arene cavity. They have proved to be capable of complexing neutral polar molecules as well as charged species with high selectivity in aprotic solvents but also in a protic environment. The trenamide cap being relatively constrained and well pre-organized, it provides a strong chelate effect and allows a selectivity of size for the fluoride anion. Remarkably, the proximity of the two recognition sites allow these receptors to recognize ammonium ions in the form of contact ion pairs but only with a fluoride anion as the partner. The results have shown that the introduction of functionalizations at the trenamide cap or at the narrow rim of the calix[6]arene do not inhibit the complexation properties of these receptors. First attempts in order to introduce water-solubilizing groups have been undertaken and promising results have been obtained. Indeed, the introduction of PEG groups on a trisfunctionalized calix[6]cryptamide has led to a receptor able to complex neutral molecules in an aqueous environment (CD3OD/D2O).<p><p>In a second step, mono- and trisfunctionalized receptors derived from calix[6]tren have been synthesized. Preliminary studies have highlighted that, similarly to the parent calix[6]tren, these receptors are able to complex small organic molecules when they are polarized either in their per-protonated form or in the form of a metal complex (Zn2+ or Cun+).<p><p>All this work validates the synthetic strategy that consists of introducing functional arms on ditopic calix[6]arene based receptors and opens new perspectives for the elaboration and study of molecular receptors in an aqueous environment. <p> / Doctorat en Sciences / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
337

Controlled Transfer Of Macroscopically Organized Nanoscopically Patterned Sub–10 nm Features onto 2D Crystalline and Amorphous Materials

Tyson C Davis (9121889) 05 August 2020 (has links)
<div>Surface level molecules act as an interface that mediates between the surface and the environment. In this way, interfacial molecules are responsible for conferring characteristics of relevance to many modern material science problems, such as electrical conductivity and wettability. For many applications, such as organic photovoltaics and nanoelectronics, macroscopic placement of chemical patterns at the sub-10 nm must be achieved to advance next generation device applications.</div><div><br></div><div>In the work presented here, we show that sub-10 nm orthogonal features can be prepared by translating the building principles of the lipid bilayer into striped phase lipids on 2D materials (e.g. highly ordered pyrolytic graphite (HOPG), MoS2). Macroscopic patterning of these nanoscopic elements is achieved via Langmuir Schafer deposition of polymerizable diyne amphiphiles. On the Langmuir trough, amphiphiles at the air water interface are ordered into features that can be observed on the macroscale using Brewster angle microscopy. Upon contact of the 2D material with the air-water interface the macroscopic pattern on the trough is transferred to the 2D material creating a macroscopic pattern consisting of sub-10 nm orthogonal chemistries. We also show here how hierarchical ordering can be accomplished via noncovalent microcontact printing of amphiphiles onto 2D materials. Microcontact printing allows a greater measure of control over the placement and clustering of interfacial molecules.</div><div><br></div><div>The alkyl chain/surface enthalpy has a great deal of influence over the ordering of amphiphiles at the sub-nm scale. Here, we examine this influence by depositing diyne amphiphiles onto MoS2 which has a weaker alkyl adsorption enthalpy compared to HOPG. We found that dual-chain amphiphiles deposited on MoS2 adopt a geometry that maximized the molecule-molecule interaction compared to the geometry adopted on HOPG.</div><div><br></div><div>Finally, we show how the hierarchical pattern of diyne amphiphiles can be transferred off of the 2D material onto an amorphous material. This is done by reacting the amorphous material with the conjugated backbone of the diyne moiety through a hydrosilylation reaction to exfoliate the film from the 2D crystalline material. The resulting polymer ‘skin’ has many applications were controlling interfacial properties of an amorphous material is important.</div>
338

Synthesis and Ligand Engineering of Colloidal Metal Chalcogenide Nanoparticles for Scalable Solution Processed Photovoltaics

Ryan Gupta Ellis (9175325) 09 September 2022 (has links)
<p>As global population continue to rise, the demand for energy is slated to increase substantially. To combat climate change, large amounts of renewable energy will be needed to feed this growing demand. Of renewable energy sources, photovoltaics are well positioned to meet this increasing demand due to the immense abundance of solar energy incident on earth. However, existing energy intensive, low throughput, and costly manufacturing techniques for photovoltaics may pose a barrier to continued large scale implementation.</p> <p>Solution processing has emerged as a promising photovoltaics fabrication technique with high throughput, high materials utilization, and lower cost than existing vacuum-based methods. Thin film photovoltaic materials such as Cu(In,Ga)(S,Se)<sub>2</sub> and CdTe have both been fabricated using various solution processing methods. Of the various solution processing routes, colloidal metal chalcogenide nanoparticles have demonstrated promise as a hydrazine-free route for the solution processing of high efficiency Cu(In,Ga)(S,Se)<sub>2</sub> solar cells. However, conventional solution processing with colloidal nanoparticles has long suffered from anionic and carbonaceous impurities, stemming from legacy synthesis methods. The work in this dissertation aims to solve these issues through the development of novel synthetic methods, ligand engineering, and ultimately improved scalability through slot-die coating.</p> <p> Typical colloidal syntheses rely on the use of metal salts as precursors such as metal halides, nitrates, acetates, and so forth, where the anions may incorporate and alter the electrical properties of the targeted nanomaterials. In this work, the recent advances in amine-thiol chemistry and its unique ability to solubilize many metal containing species are expanded upon. Alkylammonium metal thiolate species are easily formed upon addition of monoamine and dithiol to elemental Cu, In, Ga, Sn, Zn, Se, or metal chalcogenides such as Cu<sub>2</sub>S and Ag<sub>2</sub>S. These species were then used directly for the synthesis of colloidal nanoparticles without the need for any additional purification. The metal thiolate thermal decomposition pathway was studied, verifying that only metal chalcogenides and volatile byproducts are formed, providing a flexible route to compositionally uniform, phase pure, and anionic impurity-free colloidal nanoparticles including successful syntheses of In<sub>2</sub>S<sub>3</sub>, (In<sub>x</sub>Ga<sub>1–x</sub>)<sub>2</sub>S<sub>3</sub>, CuInS<sub>2</sub>, CuIn(S<sub>x</sub>Se<sub>1–x</sub>)<sub>2</sub>, Cu(In<sub>x</sub>Ga<sub>1–x</sub>)S<sub>2</sub>, Cu<sub>2</sub>ZnSnS<sub>4</sub>, and AgInS<sub>2</sub>. </p> <p>However, further impurities from deleterious carbonaceous residues originating from long chain native ligands were still a persistent problem. This impurity carbon has been observed to hinder grain formation during selenization and leave a discrete residue layer between the absorber layer and the back contact. An exhaustive hybrid organic/inorganic ligand exchange was developed in this work to remove tightly bound oleyalmine ligands through a combination of microwave-assisted solvothermal pyridine ligand stripping followed by inorganic capping with diammonium sulfide, yielding greater than 98% removal of native ligands via a rapid process. Despite the aggressive ligand removal, the nanoparticle stoichiometry remained largely unaffected when making use of the hybrid ligand exchange. Scalable blade coating of the ligand exchanged nanoparticle inks from non-toxic dimethyl sulfoxide inks yielded remarkably smooth and crack free films with RMS roughness less than 7 nm. Selenization of ligand exchanged nanoparticle films afforded substantially improved grain growth as compared to conventional non-ligand exchanged methods yielding an absolute improvement in device efficiency of 2.8%. Hybrid ligand exchange nanoparticle-based devices reached total-area power conversion efficiencies of 12.0%.</p> <p>While extremely effective in ligand removal, ligand exchange pathways increase process complexity and solvent usage substantially, which may limit the cost advantage solution processing aims to provide. Further synthesis improvement was developed through a ligand exchange free, direct sulfide capped strategy. Using sulfolane as a benign solvent, CuInS<sub>2</sub> nanoparticles with thermally degradable thioacetamide ligands were synthesized using thermal decomposition of isolated metal thiolates from Cu<sub>2</sub>S and In precursors. Through gentle thermal treatment, these ligands decomposed into non-contaminating gaseous byproducts leaving carbon free nanoparticle films without the need for ligand exchange.</p> <p>With the development of virtually contamination free colloidal nanoparticle inks, focus was shifted to scalability using slot die coating. Unlike typical lab-scale coating techniques such as spin coating, slot die coating is a widely used industrial coating technique with nearly 100% materials utilization, and high throughput roll-to-roll compatibility. A custom lab-scale slot-die coater was used to rapidly proof coating conditions, which were rapidly analyzed for uniformity using absorbance scanning in conjunction with profilometry. A cosolvent chlorobenzene/dichlorobenzene ink was developed to yield highly uniform, crack free thin films from non-ligand-exchanged Cu(In,Ga)S<sub>2</sub> nanoparticles, which were finished into devices with champion total are efficiencies of 10.7%. To the best of our knowledge, this represents the first report of slot die coated Cu(In,Ga)(S,Se)<sub>2</sub> photovoltaics. The methods presented in this work offer a pathway towards low impurity, high efficiency, scalable solution processed Cu(In,Ga)(S,Se)<sub>2</sub> photovoltaics to enable low cost renewable energy.</p>
339

Halogen bonding interlocked host systems for recognition and sensing of anions

Mullaney, Benjamin R. January 2014 (has links)
This thesis describes the synthesis of halogen bonding receptors for integration within interlocked anion host systems. Chapter 1 introduces the field of supramolecular chemistry, with a particular focus on anion recognition and sensing, halogen bonding, and the synthesis of mechanically interlocked structures. Chapter 2 describes the preparation and anion binding properties of carbazole-based receptor molecules. A systematic anion binding study on a series of halogen- and hydrogen-bonding 3,6-bis-triazolium carbazole acyclic receptors is described initially, followed by the development of a halogen bonding rotaxane. The anion and metal complexation properties of acyclic and macrocyclic systems incorporating the 1,8-bis-triazole carbazole motif are also presented. Chapter 3 details the synthesis and anion complexation investigations of halogen and hydrogen bonding naphthalene-based acyclic and interlocked rotaxane host molecules. Chapter 4 presents receptors based on the 4,4'-bis-triazole-2,2'-bipyridyl motif. A halogen bonding rhenium(I) bipyridyl complex is exploited in the development of a rotaxane host system which optically senses anions via luminescence purely through halogen bonding interactions. The anion recognition and sensing properties of diquat-based receptors are also investigated, and shown to exhibit optical and electrochemical responses to anions. Chapter 5 summarises the major conclusions from Chapters 2-4. Chapter 6 describes the experimental procedures used in the work, and includes characterisation data for the synthesised compounds. Supplementary information relating to crystallographic data, and absorption, luminescence and electrochemical studies, is provided in the Appendices.
340

Ion-pair and anion recognition by macrocycles and interpenetrative assemblies

Picot, Simon C. January 2013 (has links)
This thesis investigates the design and synthesis of macrocycles and examines their ion-pair recognition, anion recognition and interpenetrative assembly capabilities. Chapter One introduces the field of supramolecular chemistry. Key concepts in host–guest complexation and self-assembly are outlined, with particular emphasis on the design of host systems for anion and ion-pair recognition. Chapter Two details the synthesis and binding properties of a heteroditopic 1,2,3-triazole- containing macrocycle that exhibits cooperative ion-pair recognition. Solution and solid-state evidence shows that the triazole motif simultaneously binds anions and cations. The exten- sion of this work towards the formation of interlocked structures containing an expanded heteroditopic macrocycle and threading components is explored. Chapter Three discusses the design and syntheses of series of electron-deficient macrocycles based on imidazolium, pyridinium and triazole. These are investigated for anion binding ability and assembly of interpenetrative assemblies with electron-rich threading components. Chapter Four describes research into the formation of interpenetrative assemblies using neutral components. Their design is based around aromatic donor–acceptor interactions and halogen bonding. Chapter Five presents some conclusions from the research undertaken. Chapter Six provides titration protocols, Job plot approximations, experimental procedures and characterisation of the compounds described in this thesis. Appendix details additional X-ray crystallographic data.

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