Amine-borane dimers and oligomers with varied steric and electronic profiles were prepared via capping agent-controlled AA/BB polycondensations. They were used for transfer hydrogenations to aldehydes, ketones, imines as well as electron-poor alkene/alkyne moieties. The amine-borane Lewis-paired oligomers and the congested bis(amine-borane)s provided the highest yields. This was likely helped by facilitated dissociation (oligomers) or H-bond assistance. In the case of the oligomers, the second equivalent of H2 present was also engaged in the reaction. Solid-state NMR characterization provides evidence that the Boron-containing materials obtained after transfer dehydrogenation are highly similar to those obtained from thermal dehydrogenation. The oligomers bridge the gap between simple amine-borane molecular reductants and the poly-amine-boranes and provide a full picture of the reactivity changes at the different scales.
[ASAP] Nanozyme-Based Biofuel Cell Ingeniously Coupled with Luminol Chemiluminescence System through In Situ Co-Reactant Generation for Dual-Signal Biosensing

Methane Activation by [AlFeO3]+: the Hidden Spin Selectivity
The performance of heteronuclear cluster [AlFeO3]+ in activating methane has been explored by a combination of high-level quantum chemical calculations with gas-phase experiments. At room temperature, [AlFeO3]+ is a mixture of 7[AlFeO3]+ and 5[AlFeO3]+, in which two states lead to different reactivity and chemoselectivity for methane activation. While hydrogen abstraction from methane is the only product channel for the 7[AlFeO3]+/CH4 couple, 5[AlFeO3]+ is able to convert this substrate to formaldehyde. In addition, the introduction of an external electric field may regulate the reactivity and product selectivity. The interesting doping effect of Fe and the associated electronic origins are discussed, which may guide one on the design of Fe-involved catalyst for methane conversion.
Bimetallic Manganese Catalysts: A Route to Controlled and Switchable Polymerization of Lactones
The sustainable solution to the environmental problem of polymeric materials calls for efficient and well-controlled ring-opening polymerization catalytic systems. Inspired by the highly reactive and stereospecific bimetallic catalysts, three kinds of bimetallic Salen-Mn catalysts supported by biaryl linking moieties are synthesized and applied to polymerization catalysis of lactide (LA) and ε-caprolactone (ε-CL) in this work. The polymerization is initiated in situ by the ring-opening of epoxide compounds, in which the ionic cocatalyst could accelerate the reaction process. The Mn-Mn coordination effect contributes to the higher activity and iso-selectivity towards LA compared to the mononuclear Salen-Mn catalyst. The reactivity and stereoselectivity are determined by the conformation of catalysts, specifically the Mn-Mn separation and dihedral angle. Finally, the CO2-controlled switchable polymerizations are carried out with LA and ε-CL. The reversibility of the on-off switching operation is influenced by the combination between CO2 molecules and active species. The success in binuclear Salen-Mn catalysts not only expands the range of bimetallic catalyst analogues but also claims the promising potential of Mn-based catalysts in practical and theoretical research.
Designing novel piperine-vanillin nano-crystals for bioavailability enhancement
Co-Schiff base complexes functionalized on graphene as efficient heterogeneous nanocatalysts for alcohols oxidation
Advances in Optical Probes for the Detection of Hydrazine in Environmental and Biological Systems
Removal of Th(IV) from groundwater by adsorption onto nano-Kaolin and nano-Kaolin/MnFe2O4 composite
Photophysical Tuning of Imidazolium Tetrahalidomanganate(II) Complexes Towards Highly Efficient Green Emitters with Near‑Unity Quantum Yield
Ten ionic manganese(II) complexes of [EMIm]2[MnX2Y2] (EMIm = 1‑ethyl-3-methylimidazolium ion; X, Y = Cl, Br or I) and [BnMIm]2[MnX2Y2] (BnMIm = 1-benzyl-3-methylimidazolium ion; X, Y = Cl, Br or I) types were synthesized and studied in terms of their thermal and photophysical properties. Complexes with [BnMIm]+ cation were found to exhibit higher crystallinity, owing to the aromatic π-stacking, and superior photoluminescent quantum yields, promoted by the increased Mn⋯Mn distance. For complexes with chlorine and bromine ligands efficient tunability of photophysical parameters was demonstrated. Out of all complexes, [BnMIm]2[MnBr4] was found to have the highest photoluminescence quantum yield at room temperature (Φ = 0.59). To highlight the importance of a large Mn⋯Mn distance for achieving high Φ values, a mixed-anion analog of complex [BnMIm]2[MnBr4] was prepared, with the suggested formula of [BnMIm]4[MnBr4]Br2. The latter have shown a significant improvement in d–d absorption efficiency and a reduction in nonradiative deactivation, which led to an outstanding Φ value of 0.97. Finally, the optical band gap of [BnMIm]4[MnBr4]Br2 was estimated to describe its applicability as light-emitting material.
Bioinspired Functionalization of Carbonyl Compounds Enabled by Metal Chelated Bifunctional Ligands
In Nature, enzymatic reactions proceed through exceptionally ordered transition states giving rise to extraordinary levels of stereoselection. In those reactions, the active site of the enzyme plays crucial roles – through one position, it holds the substrate in the proximity to the reaction epicentre that facilitates both the reactivity and stereoselectivity of the chemical process. Inspired by this natural phenomenon, synthetic chemists have designed bifunctional ligands that not only coordinate to a metal centre but also preassociate with an organic substrate, e.g. aldehyde and ketone, and exerts stereodirecting influence to accelerate the attack of the incoming reacting partner from a particular enantiotopic face. The chief goal of the current review is to give an overview of the recently developed approaches enabled by privileged bio-inspired bifunctional ligands that not only bind to the metal catalyst but also activates carbonyl substrates via organocatalysis, thereby easing in the new bond forming step. As carbonyl a-functionalizations are dominated by enamine and enolate chemistry, the current review primarily focusses on enamine- and enolate-metal catalysis by bifunctional ligands. Thus, developments based on traditional cooperative catalysis occurring through two directly coupled but independent catalytic cycles of an organocatalyst and a metal catalyst are not covered.