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1.
J Mater Chem B ; 2024 Jul 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38984659

ABSTRACT

This research investigates the encapsulation of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) within cholesteryl-modified ß-cyclodextrin (CD21chol) and aims to elucidate the drug inclusion efficiency through a comprehensive analysis employing both experimental and computational techniques. The study employs thermogravimetric characterization to assess the thermal stability of the encapsulated complex and infrared measurements to explore the vibrational characteristics, providing valuable insights into the physicochemical properties. Additionally, molecular simulations are employed to evaluate the interactions between 5-FU and CD21chol on the molecular-level dynamics of drug encapsulation. This integrated approach facilitates a comprehensive understanding of encapsulation, offering valuable data for developing drug delivery systems.

2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 16(4): 1460-8, 2014 Jan 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24301539

ABSTRACT

This work deals with the photophysics of novel pyridinium betaine based on 2-pyridin-1-yl-1H-benzimidazole (SBPa) substituted symmetrically by mono- (Th2SBPa) and bi-thiophene fragments (Th4SBPa). The study is based on a combination of steady-state, femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopic measurements supported by PCM-(TD)DFT calculations. It is found that the two step ICT process (S0 → S2 excitation followed by S2(CT) → S1(CT) internal conversion) occurring for the parent molecule remains unaffected for Th2SBPa while the situation is less clear for Th4SBPa. Actually, for both molecules, a new decay route involving the π-electron system localized in thiophenic groups is responsible for the production of triplet states. Involvement of this new route in the parallel production of S1(CT) is strongly suspected.

3.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 14(6): 1945-56, 2012 Feb 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22231287

ABSTRACT

This work deals with the photophysics of a pyridinium betaine, 2-pyridin-1-yl-1H-benzimidazole (SBPa), based on a combination of steady-state, femtosecond photoionization (gas phase) and femtosecond transient absorption (solution) spectroscopic measurements, supported by (LR)-PCM-(TD)DFT calculations. Preliminary and new electrochemical results have revealed a strongly negative solvatochromic charge transfer (CT) absorption due to a S(0) → S(2) vertical transition and a weakly-solvatochromic emission due to S(1) → S(0) transition. Advanced TDDFT optimizations of the Franck-Condon states S(2)(FC) and S(1)(FC) led to two additional CT levels with planar geometry, S(2)(CT) and S(1)(CT), respectively, allowing prediction of a two-step photoinduced ICT process, i.e., S(0) → S(2)(FC) and S(2)(CT) → S(1)(CT), separated by a S(2)(FC) → S(2)(CT) back charge transfer relaxation. While the pyridinium ring is the acceptor group in both steps, two different donor groups, the benzene ring and the imidazole bridge, are involved in the excitation and internal conversion processes, respectively. Femtosecond transient absorption experiments supported by MCR-ALS decomposition confirmed indeed the contribution of two distinct CT states in the photophysics of SBPa: following excitation to the S(2)(CT) state, ultrafast production of the emissive S(1) state (the only channel observable in the gas phase) was observed to occur in competition with a further ICT process toward the S(1)(CT) state, with a time constant ranging from 300 fs to 20 ps depending on the solvent. While in aprotic media this ICT process was found to be purely solvent controlled (double polarity and viscosity dependency), in protic solvents, the influence of the hydrogen bond network has to be taken into account. Comparison with data obtained for a pre-twisted SBPa analogue led us to exclude the presence of any large-amplitude geometrical change during ICT. Analyzing the solvent dependency using the power law approach, we concluded that the S(1)(CT) state decays essentially through IC in the 3-40 ps time range whereas the emissive S(1) state decays within 130-260 ps via IC, ISC and fluorescence.

4.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 13(29): 13185-95, 2011 Aug 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21695327

ABSTRACT

This work reports on the solvatochromic properties of a simple heterocyclic betaine pyridinium, 2-(1-pyridinio)benzimidazolate (SBPa), having promising potentialities in non-linear optics. From advanced PCM-TDDFT calculations, the solvatochromism of SBPa was found to be unusual, involving two different electronic states for absorption (S(0)→ S(2)) and emission (S(1)→S'(0)). To account for this behavior, we developed an innovative physical treatment which consists in a non-linear fit of the solvatochromic data using the Bilot-Kawski theoretical model and visualizing the least-square coefficient χ(2) on a 2D map as a function of the solute polarizability and gas phase absorption energy. In parallel, Kamlet-Taft correlations were undertaken to select a propitious set of electrostatic solvents usable in this treatment. Protic solvents that lead to specific interactions and nonpolar solvents that favor dimerization processes were excluded. From a choice of aprotic solvents with sufficiently high polarity, 4 dipole moments µ(g)(S(0)) = +9.1 D, µ(e)(S(2)) = -1.5 D, µ(e)(S(1)) = 0 D and µ(g)(S'(0)) = +3.31 D were determined, the 3 former values being in close agreement with TDDFT values, although the solute polarizability values seem underestimated. Anyhow, disregarding this discrepancy, we evaluated the static hyperpolarizability to ß(0) = -64 × 10(-30) esu from the solvatochromic data in close agreement with DFT calculations.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 132(21): 7379-90, 2010 Jun 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20455540

ABSTRACT

Two photochromic diarylethenes blocked by alkyl bridges in an ideal conformation for photocyclization are studied by stationary and femtosecond transient spectroscopy in order to depict the photocyclization processes: the bistable 1,2-dicyano[2.n]metacyclophan-1-ene with n = 2, abbreviated as [2.2], and its non-bistable analogue with n = 4, abbreviated as [2.4]. The data are interpreted in the light of AM1-CIS calculations and state correlation diagrams based on conclusive TD-DFT calculations. For [2.2], a solvent-sensitive excitation wavelength threshold governing the photocyclization yield is clearly evidenced between the S(1) and S(2) singlet states. Excitation above and beyond this threshold induces two distinct photochemical pathways. The S(1) vertical excitation induces direct efficient (phi approximately = 0.9-1), and ultrafast (approximately 120 fs) photocylization from S(1) open form that leads to a ground-state transition structure, probably through a conical intersection, then to a hot cyclized ground state that relaxes by vibrational cooling. Upon higher excitation energy, the system undergoes internal conversion to the hot S(1) state, then evolves toward the cyclized S(1) state and relaxes by ultrafast S(1)-S(0) internal conversion. Alternatively, the possibility for a second conical intersection near hot S(1) state is discussed. This second photoclosure reaction is less efficient and both the photocylization yield and overall kinetics depend on solvent polarity (phi = 0.49, tau = 2.5 ps in nonpolar solvent; phi = 0.7, tau = 1.5 ps in polar solvent). In the case of [2.4], for which the distance between the two reactive carbons is larger, a unique photoclosure mechanism is found and a structural effect is reported. Indeed, this mechanim is similar to the above second reaction of [2.2] but characterized by much slower kinetics ranging from 12 to 20 ps (depending on the excitation wavelength and solvent polarity). All polarity effects are rationalized in terms of stabilization of the transient states of charge-transfer character involved in the photocyclization process.

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