Winter, Arthur

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Email Address
winter@iastate.edu
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Title
Professor
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Organizational Unit
Department of Chemistry

The Department of Chemistry seeks to provide students with a foundation in the fundamentals and application of chemical theories and processes of the lab. Thus prepared they me pursue careers as teachers, industry supervisors, or research chemists in a variety of domains (governmental, academic, etc).

History
The Department of Chemistry was founded in 1880.

Dates of Existence
1880-present

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Now showing 1 - 10 of 37
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Symmetry-breaking photoinduced charge transfer state in a near-IR absorbing meso-linked BODIPY dimer

2025-04-29 , Ali, Fariyad , Gehrmann, Elizabeth , Zhang, Tianyi , Kashif, Qasim Qayyum , Anand, Robbyn , Phillips, David Lee , Winter, Arthur , Department of Chemistry

The synthesis and characterization of a conformationally restrained near-IR absorbing homoleptic meso-linked BODIPY dye is reported. The photophysical properties have been investigated using steady-state and time-resolved femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. A combination of spectroscopies (steady-state absorption/emission, ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy measurements), singlet oxygen generation quantum yields, and computational studies were conducted to evaluate the nature of the excited state of the dimer 3D compared to its monomer 3M as a control. The results are consistent with a symmetry-breaking intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) state for 3D being formed in polar solvents, but the formation of the ICT states competes with other photophysical channels (ISC, fluorescence) even in the most polar solvents tested, so the formation efficiency is less than the related “green” light absorbing BODIPY dimer 2 previously reported. The ICT state formation is attributed to the direct meso coupling of the BODIPY dimer, which stymies nonradiative deactivation through both a conformational restraint of the individual BODIPY subunits and a blocking the rotation of the bond connecting the two BODIPY multimers, preventing subunit electronic communication in the excited state and subsequent charge recombination. Consistent with some fraction of intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) states being formed upon photoexcitation (∼1 ps in MeOH and 500 fs in DMF), the lifetime, emission intensity, and absorbance are attenuated in polar solvents for the dimer than the monomer. Further, for 3D diminished ISC is observed in more polar solvents, which is attributed to an increase in the fraction of excited states undergoing the ICT pathway in polar solvents, while for the monomer 3M there is no effect of solvent polarity on ISC. Overall, this study provides insights into the delicate balance between different photophysical channels in symmetric dimers. The exceptional optical properties of this dimer make this chromophore a promising scaffold for initiating charge separation using wavelengths in the challenging-to-access far-red/near-IR region of the optical spectrum, while suggesting further improvements could be made to increase the fraction of excited states undergoing ICT.

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Photo-labile BODIPY protecting groups for glycan synthesis

2022-09-01 , Leichnitz, Sabrina , Dissanayake, Komadhie C. , Winter, Arthur , Seeberger, Peter H. , Department of Chemistry

Protective groups that can be selectively removed under mild conditions are an essential aspect of carbohydrate chemistry. Groups that can be selectively removed by visible light are particularly attractive because carbohydrates are transparent to visible light. Here, different BODIPY protecting groups were explored for their utility during glycan synthesis. A BODIPY group bearing a boron difluoride unit is stable during glycosylations but can be cleaved with green light as illustrated by the assembly of a trisaccharide.

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Anti-Aromaticity Relief as an Approach to Stabilize Free Radicals

2021-11-15 , Zhang, Rui , Ellern, Arkady , Department of Chemistry

A new strategy to stabilize free radicals electronically is described by conjugating formally antiaromatic substituents to the free radical. With an antiaromatic substituent, the radical acts as an electron sink to allow configuration mixing of a low-energy zwitterionic state that provides antiaromaticity relief to the substituent. A combination of X-ray crystallography, VT-EPR and VT-UV/Vis spectroscopy, as well as computational analysis, was used to investigate this phenomenon. We find that this strategy of antiaromaticity relief is successful at stabilizing radicals, but only if the antiaromatic substituent is constrained to be planar by synthetically imposed conformational restraints that enable state mixing. This work leads to the counterintuitive finding that increasing the antiaromaticity of the radical substituent leads to greater radical stability, providing proof of concept for a new stereoelectronic approach for stabilizing free radicals.

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Direct Photorelease of Alcohols from Boron-Alkylated BODIPY Photocages

2020-03-27 , Peterson, Julie , Fischer, Logan , Gehrmann, Elizabeth , Shrestha, Pradeep , Smith, Emily , Yuan, Ding , Wijesooriya, Chamari , Winter, Arthur , Ames National Laboratory , Department of Chemistry , Ames Laboratory

BODIPY photocages allow release of substrates us-ing visible light irradiation. They have the drawback of requiring reasonably good leaving groups for photorelease. Photorelease of alcohols is often accomplished by attachment with carbonate linkages, which upon photorelease liberate CO2 and gen-erate the alcohol. Here, we show that boron-alkylated BODIPY photocages are capable of directly photoreleasing both aliphatic alcohols and phenols upon irradiation via photocleavage of ether linkages. Direct photorelease of a hydroxycoumarin dye was demonstrated in living HeLa cells.

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Simple Air‐Stable [3] Radialene Anion Radicals as Environmentally Switchable Catholytes in Water

2023-11-15 , Hasan, Fuead , Gillen, Jonathan H. , Jayaweera, Amaya T. , McDearmon Jr., William D. , Winter, Arthur , Bejger, Christopher M. , Department of Chemistry

The hexacyano[3]radialene radical anion (1) is an attractive catholyte material for use in redox flow battery (RFB) applications. The substitution of cyano groups with ester moieties enhances solubility while maintaining redox reversibility and favorable redox potentials. Here we show that these ester-functionalized, hexasubstituted [3]radialene radical anions dimerize reversibly in water. The dimerization mode is substitution pattern dependent and can be switched in solution. Stimuli-responsive behavior is achieved by exploiting an unprecedented tristate switching mechanism, wherein the radical can be toggled between the free radical, a π-dimer, and a sigma-dimer -- each with dramatically different optical, magnetic, and redox properties -- by changing the solvent environment, temperature, or salinity. The symmetric, triester-tricyano[3]radialene (3) forms a solvent-responsive, σ-dimer in water that converts to the radical anion with the addition of organic solvents or to a π-dimer in brine solutions. Diester-tetracyano[3]radialene (2) exists primarily as a π-dimer in aqueous solutions and a radical anion in organic solvents. The dimerization behavior of both 2 and 3 is temperature dependent in solutions of methanol. Dimerization equilibrium has a direct impact on catholyte stability during galvanostatic charge-discharge cycling in static H-cells. Specifically, conditions that favor the free radical anion or π-dimer exhibit significantly enhanced cycling profiles.

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Generation and direct observation of a triplet arylnitrenium ion

2022-06-16 , Du, Lili , Wang, Juanjuan , Qiu, Yunfan , Liang, Runhui , Lu, Penglin , Chen, Xuebo , Phillips, David Lee , Winter, Arthur , Department of Chemistry

Nitrenium ions are important reactive intermediates in both chemistry and biology. Although singlet nitrenium ions are well-characterized by direct methods, the triplet states of nitrenium ions have never been directly detected. Here, we find that the excited state of the photoprecursor partitions between heterolysis to generate the singlet nitrenium ion and intersystem crossing (ISC) followed by a spontaneous heterolysis process to generate the triplet p-iodophenylnitrenium ion (np). The triplet nitrenium ion undergoes ISC to generate the ground singlet state, which ultimately undergoes proton and electron transfer to generate a long-lived radical cation that further generates the reduced p-iodoaniline. Ab Initio calculations were performed to map out the potential energy surfaces to better understand the excited state reactivity channels show that an energetically-accessible singlet-triplet crossing lies along the N-N stretch coordinate and that the excited triplet state is unbound and spontaneously eliminates ammonia to generate the triplet nitrenium ion. These results give a clearer picture of the photophysical properties and reactivity of two different spin states of a phenylnitrenium ion and provide the first direct glimpse of a triplet nitrenium ion.

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Efficient Far-Red/Near-IR Absorbing BODIPY Photocages by Blocking Unproductive Conical Intersections

2020-08-12 , Shrestha, Pradeep , Dissanayake, Komadhie , Gehrmann, Elizabeth , Wijesooriya, Chamari , Smith, Emily , Mukhopadhyay, Atreyee , Winter, Arthur , Ames National Laboratory , Department of Chemistry , Ames Laboratory

Photocages are light-sensitive chemical protecting groups that give investigators control over activation of biomolecules using targeted light irradiation. A compelling application of far-red/near-IR absorbing photocages is their potential for deep tissue activation of biomolecules and phototherapeutics. Towards this goal, we recently reported BODIPY photocages that absorb near-IR light. However, these photocages have reduced photorelease efficiencies compared to shorter-wavelength absorbing photocages, which has hindered their application. Because photochemistry is a zero-sum competition of rates, improving the quantum yield of a photoreaction can be achieved either by making the desired photoreaction more efficient or by hobbling competitive decay channels. This latter strategy of inhibiting unproductive decay channels was pursued to improve the release efficiency of long-wavelength absorbing BODIPY photocages by synthesizing structures that block access to unproductive singlet internal conversion conical intersections, which have recently been located for simple BODIPY structures from excited state dynamic simulations. This strategy led to the synthesis of new conformationally-restrained boron-methylated BODIPY photocages that absorb light strongly around 700 nm. In the best case, a photocage was identified with an extinction coefficient of 124,000 M-1cm-1, a quantum yield of photorelease of 3.8%, and an overall quantum efficiency of 4650 M-1cm-1 at 680 nm. This derivative has a quantum efficiency that is 50-fold higher than the best known BODIPY photocages absorbing >600 nm, validating the effectiveness of a strategy for designing efficient photoreactions by thwarting competitive excited state decay channels. Furthermore, 1,7-diaryl substitutions were found to improve the quantum yields of photorelease by excited state participation and blocking ion pair recombination by internal nucleophilic trapping. No cellular toxicity (trypan blue exclusion) was observed at 20 μM, and photoactivation was demonstrated in HeLa cells using red light.

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Preprint

Optical and EPR Detection of a Triplet Ground State Phenyl Nitrenium Ion

2023-09-25 , Qiu,Yunfan , Du, Lili , Cady, Sarah , Phillips, David Lee , Winter, Arthur , Department of Chemistry

Nitrenium ions are important reactive intermediates participating in synthetic chemistry and biological processes. Phenyl nitrenium ions (Ph-NH+) typically have closed-shell singlet ground states with large singlet–triplet energy gaps, while little is known of triplet nitrenium ions regarding their reactivity, lifetimes, spectroscopic signatures, and electronic configurations. In this work, m-pyrrolidinyl-phenyl hydrazine hydrochloride (1) is synthesized as the photoprecursor to photochemically generate the corresponding m-pyrrolidinyl-phenyl nitrenium ion (2), which is computed to adopt a π,π* triplet ground state. A combination of femtosecond (fs-) and nanosecond (ns-) transient absorption (TA) spectroscopy, cryogenic continuous-wave electronic paramagnetic resonance (CW-EPR) spectroscopy, computational analysis, and photoproduct studies, elucidated the complete photolysis pathway of this photoprecursor and offers the first direct experimental detection of a ground state triplet nitrenium ion. Upon photoexcitation, 1 is optically pumped to singlet excited states, followed by internal conversion (IC) to S1 on the sub-picosecond timescale, where bond heterolysis occurs and the NH3 leaving group is extruded in 1.8 ps, generating a vibrationally-hot, spin-conserving closed-shell singlet phenyl nitrenium ion (12) that undergoes vibrational cooling in 19 ps. Subsequent intersystem crossing (ISC) takes place in 534 ps, yielding the ground state triplet phenyl nitrenium ion (32), with a lifetime of 0.8 μs. Unlike electrophilic singlet phenyl nitrenium ions, this triplet phenyl nitrenium reacts through sequential H atom abstractions, resulting in the eventual formation of the reduced m-pyrrolidinyl-aniline as the predominant stable photoproduct. Supporting the triplet ground state, continuous irradiation of 1 in a glassy matrix at 80 K forms a paramagnetic species consistent with the triplet nitrenium ion by cryogenic CW-EPR spectroscopy.

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Controlling Antimicrobial Activity of Quinolones Using Visible/NIR Light-Activated BODIPY Photocages

2022-05-17 , Contreras-García, Elena , Lozano, Carmen , García-Iriepa, Cristina , Marazzi, Marco , Winter, Arthur , Torres, Carmen , Sampedro, Diego , Department of Chemistry

Controlling the activity of a pharmaceutical agent using light offers improved selectivity, reduction of adverse effects, and decreased environmental build-up. These benefits are especially attractive for antibiotics. Herein, we report a series of photoreleasable quinolones, which can be activated using visible/NIR light (520–800 nm). We have used BODIPY photocages with strong absorption in the visible to protect two different quinolone-based compounds and deactivate their antimicrobial properties. This activity could be recovered upon green or red light irradiation. A comprehensive computational study provides new insight into the reaction mechanism, revealing the relevance of considering explicit solvent molecules. The triplet excited state is populated and the photodissociation is assisted by the solvent. The light-controlled activity of these compounds has been assessed on a quinolone-susceptible E. coli strain. Up to a 32-fold change in the antimicrobial activity was measured.

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Solvent-Responsive Radical Dimers

2020-07-16 , Peterson, Joshua , Winter, Arthur , Department of Chemistry

An air- and thermally stable aryl dicyanomethyl radical is reported that switches between two dimeric forms—a σ dimer and a π dimer—by changing the solvent. The two dimer forms exhibit unique optical properties leading to solvatochromic behavior. The solvent-responsive behavior of these radicals can be explained by the higher polarizability of the pimer than the σ dimer that leads to pimer stabilization in polar solvents.