Metal‐Organic Frameworks‐Derived Nanocarbon Materials and Nanometal Oxides for Photocatalytic Applications

Harnessing low-density solar energy and converting it into high-density chemical energy through photocatalysis has emerged as a promising avenue for the production of chemicals and remediation of environmental pollution, which contributes to alleviating the overreliance on fossil fuels. In recent years, metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) have gained widespread application in the field of photocatalysis due to their photostability, tunable structures, and responsiveness in the visible light range. However, most MOFs exhibit relatively low response to light, limiting their practical applications. MOFs-derived nanomaterials not only retain the inherent advantages of pristine MOFs but also show enhanced light adsorption and responsiveness. This review categorizes and summarizes MOFs-derived nanomaterials, including nanocarbons and nanometal oxides, providing representative examples for the synthetic strategies of each category. Subsequently, the recent research progress on MOFs-derived materials in photocatalytic applications are systematically introduced, specifically in the areas of photocatalytic water splitting to H2, photocatalytic CO2 reduction, and photocatalytic water treatment. The corresponding mechanisms involved in each photocatalytic reaction are elaborated in detail. Finally, the review discusses the challenges and further directions faced by MOFs-derived nanomaterials in the field of photocatalysis, highlighting their potential role in advancing sustainable energy production and environmental remediation.

Design, Synthesis, and Characterization of Novel Styryl Dyes as Fluorescent Probes for Tau Aggregate Detection in Vitro and in Cells

Design, Synthesis, and Characterization of Novel Styryl Dyes as Fluorescent Probes for Tau Aggregate Detection in Vitro and in Cells

Chanat Aonbangkhen et al. made new indolium and quinolinium styryl compounds as fluorescent dyes to study how they interact with and bind to tau aggregates, which are a hallmark of Alzheimer′s disease, both in cells and in vitro. Due to restricted methine bridge rotation in their core structures, these dyes fluoresced more in viscous solutions. When attached to tau aggregates, Dye 4 (the cover structure) with a quinolinium part and two positively charged residues made the red fluorescence 28 times brighter. This dye-stained live cell tau aggregates. The non-toxic fluorescent probes introduced in this study may be useful for early AD detection.


Nucleophilic Selenocyclization Reaction of Benzodiynes Promoted by Sodium Selenide: Synthesis of Isoselenochromenes

We describe here the synthesis of isoselenochromenes via a nucleophilic selenocyclization reaction of benzodiynes with sodium selenide.  The central parameters that affect this cyclization reaction were studied, and the best reaction conditions were applied to different substrates to determine the scope of the method. The results indicated that isoselenochromenes were obtained in higher yields when the reactions were performed by the addition of NaBH4 (3 equiv), at room temperature, under nitrogen atmosphere, to a solution of elemental selenium (2 equiv) in dimethylformamide (2 mL). After 1 h, a benzodiynes (0.25 mmol) solution in EtOH (2 mL) was added at room temperature. The reaction was stirred at 75 oC until the starting material was consumed.  The best conditions were applied to benzodiynes having electron-rich, electron poor aromatic rings, and alkyl groups directly bonded to the alkynes. The same reaction condition was extended to isothiochromene derivatives but failed to prepare isotelurochromenes.  The isoselenochromenes were easily transformed into three new classes of organoselenium compounds using classical methods available in the literature.  We also conducted several control experiments to propose a reaction mechanism.

Synthesis of R‐GABA Derivatives via Pd(II) Catalyzed Enantioselective C(sp3)‐H Arylation and Virtual Validation with GABAB1 Receptor for Potential leads

GABA (γ-amino butyric acid) analogues like baclofen, tolibut, phenibut, etc., are well-known GABAB1 inhibitors and pharmaceutically important drugs. However, there is a huge demand for more chiral GABA aryl analogues with promising pharmacological actions. Here, we demonstrate the chiral ligand acetyl-protected amino quinoline (APAQ) mediated enantioselective synthesis of GABAB1 inhibitor drug scaffolds from easily accessible GABA via Pd-catalyzed C(sp3)-H activation. The synthetic methodology shows moderate to good yields, up to 74% of ee. We have successfully demonstrated the deprotection and removal of the directing group to synthesize R-tolibut in  86% yield. Further, we employed computation to probe the binding of R-GABA analogues to the extracellular domain of the human GABAB1 receptor. Our Rosetta-based molecular docking calculations show better binding for four R-enantiomers of GABA analogues than R-baclofen and R-phenibut. In addition, we employed GROMACS MD simulations and MMPB(GB)SA calculations to identify per-residue contribution to binding free energy. Our computational results suggest analogues (3R)-4-amino-3-(3,4-dimethylphenyl)butanoic acid, (3R)-4-amino-3-(3-fluorophenyl)butanoic acid, (3R)-3-(4-acetylphenyl)-4-aminobutanoic acid, (3R)-4-amino-3-(4-methoxyphenyl)butanoic acid, and (3R)-4-amino-3-phenylbutanoic acid are potential leads which could be synthesized from our methodology reported here.

Revisiting Stereoselective Propene Polymerization Mechanisms: Insights through the Activation Strain Model

The stereoelectronic factors responsible for stereoselectivity in propene polymerization with several metallocene and post-metallocene transition metal catalysts have been revisited using a combined approach of DFT calculations, the Activation Strain Model, Natural Energy Decomposition Analysis and a molecular descriptor (%VBur). There are in most cases two different paths leading to the formation of stereoerrors (SE), and the classical model does not suffice to fully understand stereoregulation. Improving stereoselectivity requires raising the energies of both SE insertion transition states. Our analyses show that the degrees of deformation of the active site (catalyst+chain) and the prochiral monomer differ for these two paths, and between different catalyst classes. Based on such analyses we discuss: a) the subtle differences in SE formation between stereoselective catalysts with different ligand frameworks; b) the reason for exceptional stereoselectivity reported for a special ansa-metallocene catalyst; c) the (double) stereocontrol origin for isoselective catalysts; d) the electronic contribution for isoselective catalysts generating SE by a modification of the ligand wrapping mode during the polymerization. Although this study will not immediately suggest new catalyst structures, we believe that understanding stereoregulation in great detail will increase our chances of success.

Electro‐oxidative methylation of 2‐isocyanobiaryls using N,N‐dimethylformamide (DMF) as carbon source: Synthesis of 6‐methylphenanthridines

A benign electrochemical method to access 6-methylphenanthridines from 2-isocyanobiaryls using N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) as a methyl source is reported. The protocol operates at ambient temperature without the need for harmful methylating reagents. Mechanistic studies suggested that DMF delivered a methylene synthon, followed by reduction at the cathode and tautomerization. The method offers environmental benefits by avoiding metal-based reagents and harsh conditions.

Dual Functional Microcapsule based on Monodisperse Short PEG Amphiphile for Drug Encapsulation and Protein Affinity Controlled Release

A short monodisperse poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) and a neutral organic rotamer conjugate TEG-BTA-2 amphiphile was designed for the construction of a stimuli-responsive switchable self-assembled structure for drug encapsulation by noncovalent interaction and targeted controlled delivery. A short PEG, tetraethylene glycol (TEG) was covalently attached with a neutral organic rotamer benzothiazole dye (BTA-2) affording the neutral TEG-BTA-2 (<500 D). The TEG-BTA-2 is self-assembled into a microsphere in an aqueous medium, but remarkably undergoes morphology change switching to a rice-like microcapsule for curcumin encapsulation. Curcumin-loaded microcapsules were stable in an aqueous solution, however, were noticed disintegrating upon the addition of BSA protein. This is possibly due to an interaction with BSA protein leading to a protein affinity-controlled curcumin release in a neutral PBS buffer. Moreover, cell internalization of the neutral amphiphile TEG-BTA-2 into A549 cells was observed by fluorescence microscopy, providing an opportunity for application as a molecular vehicle for targeted drug delivery and monitoring.

Synthesis of Naphthalimide Azocarboxylates Showing Turn‐on Fluorescence by Substitution Reaction With Sulfinates

The synthesis and characterization of sulfinate addition-responsive fluorescent molecules are described. We found that addition reaction of sulfinates to naphthalimide-substituted azocarboxylates afforded the corresponding sulfonyl hydrazides with high fluorescence quantum yields (up to 0.91 in THF and 0.54 in methanol), which exhibited a large Stokes shift (105 nm) in protic methanol solvent, while the unsubstituted hydrazide and the sulfonyl-position isomer showed no fluorescence in polar solvents.

Modulation of the Structure‐function Relationship of the “nano‐greenhouse effect” towards Optimized Supra‐photothermal Catalysis

Modulation of the Structure-function Relationship of the “nano-greenhouse effect” towards Optimized Supra-photothermal Catalysis

The structure-function relationship of the “nano-greenhouse effect” was investigated in a prototypical Ni@SiO2 core-shell catalyst towards photothermal CO2 catalysis. This work deepens the understandings on the contributing factor of the “nano-greenhouse effect” towards enhanced photothermal conversion. It also provides insights on the design principles of an ideal photothermal catalyst in balancing heat management and mass transport processes.


Abstract

Photothermal catalytic CO2 hydrogenation holds great promise for relieving the global environment and energy crises. The “nano-greenhouse effect” has been recognized as a crucial strategy for improving the heat management capabilities of a photothermal catalyst by ameliorating the convective and radiative heat losses. Yet it remains unclear to what degree the respective heat transfer and mass transport efficiencies depend on the specific structures. Herein, the structure-function relationship of the “nano-greenhouse effect” was investigated and optimized in a prototypical Ni@SiO2 core-shell catalyst towards photothermal CO2 catalysis. Experimental and theoretical results indicate that modulation of the thickness and porosity of the SiO2 nanoshell leads to variations in both heat preservation and mass transport properties. This work deepens the understandings on the contributing factor of the “nano-greenhouse effect” towards enhanced photothermal conversion. It also provides insights on the design principles of an ideal photothermal catalyst in balancing heat management and mass transport processes.

Interfacial Activity of Janus Particle: Unity of Molecular Surfactant and Homogeneous Particle

Interfacial Activity of Janus Particle: Unity of Molecular Surfactant and Homogeneous Particle

Janus particles, which combine the amphiphilicity of molecular surfactants and the Pickering effect of homogeneous particles, have gained significant attention in recent years. In this review, synthesis methods, stabilization mechanism and the applications in interfacial engineering of Janus particles are discussed.


Abstract

Janus particles with different compositions and properties segmented to different regions on the surface of one objector provide more opportunities for interfacial engineering. As a novel interfacial active material, Janus particles integrate the amphiphilic properties of molecular surfactants and the Pickering effect of homogeneous particles. In this research, the outstanding properties of Janus particles on various interfaces are examined from both theoretical and practical perspectives, and the advantages of Janus particles over molecular surfactants and homogeneous particle surfactants are analyzed. We believe that Janus particles are ideal tools for interface regulation and functionalization in the future.