Silvia Pieraccini

University-Hospital of Padova, Padova, Veneto, Italy

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Publications (43)239.54 Total impact

  • Source
    Dataset: TOC new3
  • Article: Control of the Helical Chirality of Enantiopure Sulfinyl Z-Azobenzene-Based Photoswitches.
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    ABSTRACT: A new class of enantiopure ortho,ortho-disubstituted azobenzene photoswitches has been synthesized from (S)-2-(p-tolylsulfinyl)benzoquinone and arylhydrazines. The sulfoxide acts as a unidirectional controller of the helical chirality that arises in the Z isomer after photoisomerization. Highly congested E-azobenzenes 5 c showed two atropisomeric diastereoconformers in the solid state that converged upon irradiation into a unique Z isomer with defined helicity (M), as evident in the X-ray structure. The chiroptical properties of this three-state enantiopure switch can be externally tuned both photochemically and/or thermally. Theoretical CD spectra calculated by using time-dependent DFT methods support the existence of two atropoisomeric E isomers and only one Z isomer with (M) helicity. Complementary to the classical azobenzene-based switches, the photoswiching event is promoted under green/blue light and do not occur under UV irradiation.
    Chemistry 01/2013; · 5.93 Impact Factor
  • Article: Small-Angle X-Ray Scattering Study of Self-Assembling Lipophilic Guanines in Organic Solvents: G-Quadruplex Formation and Cation Effects in Cyclohexane.
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    ABSTRACT: Lipophilic guanilic derivatives (lipoGs) dissolved in organic solvents can undergo different self-assembly pathways based on different H-bonded motifs, e.g. the cyclic discrete G-quartet, which forms in the presence of alkali metal ions, and the ``infinite'' tape-like G-ribbon observed in the absence of ions. Using in-solution small-angle X-ray scattering, we analyzed a series of lipoGs dissolved in cyclohexane in the presence of different salts. The formation of G-quartet based supramolecular aggregates has been confirmed, evidencing the coexistence equilibrium of octamers and non-covalent molecular nanowires (the so-called G-quadruplexes). By global fitting the scattering data, the concentration of the two kinds of particles as well as the nanowire length have been derived as a function of temperature for the different compounds and salts. The derived thermodynamic parameters show that the self-assembly aggregation process is enthalpy driven, while the observed enthalpy-entropy compensation suggests that similar stacking interactions control the self-assembly of the different compounds. However, the strength of the stacking interactions, and then the nanowire stability, depends on the nature of templating cations and on their capacity to fill the central cavity of quadruplexes, with the order Sr < Na ≤ K.
    The Journal of Physical Chemistry B 01/2013; · 3.70 Impact Factor
  • Article: 1,2-Di(phenylethynyl)ethenes with axially chiral, 2,2'-bridged 1,1'-binaphthyl substituents: potent cholesteric liquid-crystal inducers.
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    ABSTRACT: Axially chiral, 3,5-dihydro-4H-dinaphtho[2,1-c:1',2'-e]azepine (dinaphthazepine) and 1,1'-binaphthyl-2,2'-disulfonimide (dinaphthosulfonimide) moieties were rigidly connected via N-p-phenylene linkers to photochemically (E)/(Z)-isomerisable 1,2-diethynylethene scaffolds. The chemical stability of the resulting systems was found to be critically related to the other substituents on the central π-conjugated scaffold. High helical twisting power (HTP), up to 315 μm(-1), for the induction of a cholesteric liquid-crystalline phase through doping of a nematic phase was measured, resulting from the introduction of the chiral, mesogenic 1,1'-binaphthyl motifs. Single crystal X-ray analysis revealed that the phenylene spacer is in π-conjugation with the N-atom of the dinaphthazepine but not with the N-atom of the dinaphthosulfonimide moiety. This difference in orientation results in visible-transparency in the electronic absorption spectrum and higher (E)/(Z)-photoisomerisation quantum yields of the dinaphthosulfonimide-derived chiral dopants, as compared to the dinaphthazepine systems, which feature intramolecular charge-transfer absorption in the visible region.
    Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 09/2012; 10(39):8016-26. · 3.70 Impact Factor
  • Article: Lipophilic guanosine derivatives as carbon nanotube dispersing agents
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    ABSTRACT: Two different lipophilic guanosine derivatives (LipoGs) have been used for the disaggregation of single walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) in chloroform. UV–vis–NIR spectrophotometry, Raman spectroscopy and NIR-photoluminescence measurements as well as AFM and SEM highlight a well debundling of SWCNTs while fluorescence measurements show the adsorption of LipoGs onto SWCNT surface. The ability of LipoGs to disperse SWCNTs has been demonstrated to depend on their tendency to self-assemble into ribbon-like supramolecular structures. In turn, the super-organization of these supramolecular structures appears to control the homogeneity of the dispersion.
    Carbon 01/2012; 55:4663-4672. · 5.38 Impact Factor
  • Article: The interplay of configuration and conformation in helical perylenequinones: Insights from chirality induction in liquid crystals and calculations.
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    ABSTRACT: The chirality transfer in liquid crystals induced by two helical perylenequinones (namely, the natural compounds cercosporin and phleichrome) was investigated by integrating measurements of helical twisting power with a conformational analysis by DFT calculations and with the prediction of their twisting ability by the surface-chirality method. The two quasi-enantiomeric derivatives induce oppositely handed cholesteric phases when introduced as dopants in nematic solvents. We evaluated the role of the different conformations of the chiral hydroxyalkyl side chains in determining the helical twisting power: They were found to affect the strength of the chirality transfer, although the handedness of the induced cholesteric phase is essentially determined by the axial chirality (helicity) of the core of the perylenequinones.
    Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry 01/2012; 8:155-63. · 2.52 Impact Factor
  • Article: Identifying guanosine self assembly at natural isotopic abundance by high-resolution 1H and 13C solid-state NMR spectroscopy.
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    ABSTRACT: By means of the (1)H chemical shifts and the proton-proton proximities as identified in (1)H double-quantum (DQ) combined rotation and multiple-pulse spectroscopy (CRAMPS) solid-state NMR correlation spectra, ribbon-like and quartet-like self-assembly can be identified for guanosine derivatives without isotopic labeling for which it was not possible to obtain single crystals suitable for diffraction. Specifically, characteristic spectral fingerprints are observed for dG(C10)(2) and dG(C3)(2) derivatives, for which quartet-like and ribbon-like self-assembly has been unambiguously identified by (15)N refocused INADEQUATE spectra in a previous study of (15)N-labeled derivatives (Pham, T. N.; et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc.2005, 127, 16018). The NH (1)H chemical shift is observed to be higher (13-15 ppm) for ribbon-like self-assembly as compared to 10-11 ppm for a quartet-like arrangement, corresponding to a change from NH···N to NH···O intermolecular hydrogen bonding. The order of the two NH(2)(1)H chemical shifts is also inverted, with the NH(2) proton closest in space to the NH proton having a higher or lower (1)H chemical shift than that of the other NH(2) proton for ribbon-like as opposed to quartet-like self-assembly. For the dG(C3)(2) derivative for which a single-crystal diffraction structure is available, the distinct resonances and DQ peaks are assigned by means of gauge-including projector-augmented wave (GIPAW) chemical shift calculations. In addition, (14)N-(1)H correlation spectra obtained at 850 MHz under fast (60 kHz) magic-angle spinning (MAS) confirm the assignment of the NH and NH(2) chemical shifts for the dG(C3)(2) derivative and allow longer range through-space N···H proximities to be identified, notably to the N7 nitrogens on the opposite hydrogen-bonding face.
    Journal of the American Chemical Society 12/2011; 133(49):19777-95. · 9.91 Impact Factor
  • Article: Central-to-axial chirality transfer revealed by liquid crystals: a combined experimental and computational approach for the determination of absolute configuration of carboxylic acids with an α chirality centre.
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    ABSTRACT: The conversion into 6,7-dihydro-5H-dibenz[c,e]azepine (DAZ) N-protected amides is a viable route for the determination of the absolute configuration of chiral 2-substituted carboxylic acids. The biphenyl moiety of DAZ, besides being a probe of chirality for the electronic circular dichroism (ECD) spectroscopy, makes these systems suitable for configuration assignment by exploiting the chirality amplification which occurs in nematic liquid crystals. To assess the reliability of the liquid crystal method in detecting the absolute stereochemistry of chiral amides bound to a biphenyl group, we measured the helical twisting power of a series of DAZ-N-protected amides and compared these data with the results obtained from ECD measurements. We will show that the liquid crystal method, corroborated by HTP predictions, is trustworthy with our biphenyl derivatives, even when ECD spectra are ambiguous for the presence of aryl moieties displaying strong UV absorptions in the same range of the biphenyl chromophore.
    Chirality 10/2011; 23(9):736-43. · 2.35 Impact Factor
  • Article: Chirality transfer across length-scales in nematic liquid crystals: fundamentals and applications.
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    ABSTRACT: When a chiral dopant is dissolved in an achiral liquid crystal medium, the whole sample organizes into a helical structure with a characteristic length-scale of the order of microns. The relation between chirality at these quite different length-scales can be rationalized by a relatively simple model, which retains the relevant factors coming into play: the molecular shape of the chiral dopant, which controls the chirality of short range intermolecular interactions, and the elastic properties of the nematic environment, which control the restoring torques opposing distortion of the director. In this tutorial review the relation between molecular and phase chirality will be reviewed and several applications of the chiral doping of nematic LCs will be discussed. These range from the exploitation of the amplified molecular chirality for stereochemical purposes (e.g., the determination of the absolute configuration or the enantiomeric excess), to newer applications in physico-chemical fields. The latter take advantage of the periodicity of the chiral field, with length-scales ranging from hundreds to thousands of nanometres, which characterise the cholesteric phase.
    Chemical Society Reviews 10/2010; 40(1):258-71. · 28.76 Impact Factor
  • Article: Nanopatterning the surface with ordered supramolecular architectures of N(9)-alkylated guanines: STM reveals.
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    ABSTRACT: STM study of the self-assembly at the solid-liquid interface of substituted guanines exposing in the N(9)-position alkyl side chains with different lengths revealed the formation of distinct crystalline nanopatterns.
    Chemical Communications 07/2010; 46(25):4493-5. · 6.17 Impact Factor
  • Article: A non-empirical chromophoric interpretation of CD spectra of DNA G-quadruplex structures.
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    ABSTRACT: G-quadruplex DNA (G4-DNA) structures are four-stranded helical DNA (or RNA) structures, comprising stacks of G-tetrads, which are the outcome of planar association of four guanines in a cyclic Hoogsteen hydrogen-bonding arrangement. In the last decade the number of publications where CD spectroscopy has been used to study G4-DNAs, is extremely high. However, with very few exceptions, these investigations use an empirical interpretation of CD spectra. In this interpretation two basic types of CD spectra have been associated to a single specific difference in the features of the strand folding, i.e. the relative orientation of the strands, "parallel" (all strands have the same 5' to 3' orientation) or "antiparallel". Different examples taken from the literature where the empirical interpretation is not followed or is meaningless are presented and discussed. Furthermore, the case of quadruplexes formed by monomeric guanosine derivatives, where there is no strand connecting the adjacent quartets and the definition parallel/antiparallel strands cannot apply, will be discussed. The different spectral features observed for different G-quadruplexes is rationalised in terms of chromophores responsible for the electronic transitions. A simplified exciton coupling approach or more refined QM calculations allow to interpret the different CD features in terms of different stacking orientation (head-to-tail, head-to-head, tail-to-tail) between adjacent G-quartets irrespectively of the relative orientation of the stands (parallel/antiparallel).
    Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 06/2010; 8(12):2683-92. · 3.70 Impact Factor
  • Article: Nanopatterning the surface with ordered supramolecular architectures of N9-alkylated guanines: STM reveals
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    ABSTRACT: A comparative STM study on the self-assembly at the HOPG–solution interface of substituted guanines exposing in the N9-position alkyl side chains with different length has been performed. All molecules studied were found to form monomorphic 2D crystals, which are stable on the several tens of min time scale and exceed various hundreds of nm2. Subtle changes in the length of the alkyl side-chains dramatically influenced the 2D patterns on graphite. Derivatives with alkyl tails longer than C12 self-assembled into linear H-bonded ribbons through the NH(2)–O(6) and NH(1)–N(7) pairing with 4 molecules in the unit cell. The same H-bonding pattern was observed for N9-ethylguanine 1, but the packing shows only 2 molecules in the unit cell (the adjacent H-bonded non-centrosymmetric ribbons run indeed in a parallel way while for 6–9 they are antiparallel). For derivatives with tails of intermediate length (from C6 to C10) no H-bonded supramolecular polymers were formed at the surface: ordered monolayers of single (non-H-bonded) molecules or H-bonded dimers were observed. In light of the dynamic self-assembly characteristics of guanines, our results may be of interest for the generation of responsive nanopatterned surfaces featuring pre-programmed structural motifs at the supramolecular level.
    Chemical Communications 05/2010; · 6.17 Impact Factor
  • Article: Triggering of guanosine self-assembly by light.
    Angewandte Chemie International Edition 04/2010; 49(21):3657-60. · 13.45 Impact Factor
  • Article: Solvent-induced switching between two supramolecular assemblies of a guanosine-terthiophene conjugate.
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    ABSTRACT: We report here our findings on a lipophilic guanosine derivative armed with a terthiophene unit that undergoes a pronounced variation of its supramolecular organisation by changing the polarity of the solvent. In chloroform the guanosine derivative, templated by alkali metal ions, assembles via H-bonding in G-quartet based D(4)-symmetric octamers; the polar guanine bases are located into the inner part of the assembly and act as a scaffold for the terthienyl pendants. On the other hand, in the more polar (and H-bond competing) acetonitrile, different aggregates are observed in which the terthiophene chains are pi-pi stacked in a helicoidal (left-handed) arrangement in the central core, and the guanine bases (free from hydrogen bonding) are located at the periphery and exposed to the solvent. The system can be switched back and forth by subsequent addition of chloroform and acetonitrile. The solvent-induced switching can be easily followed by circular dichroism spectroscopy: the CD exciton-couplet in the guanine chromophore absorption region observed in chloroform disappears after addition of acetonitrile, indicating the disassembly of the G-quartet based octameric structure, while an intense quasi-conservative exciton splitting in the 300-450 nm spectral region becomes predominant in the CD spectrum. This latter strong bisignate optical activity can be ascribed to the helical packing of conjugated terthiophene moieties stabilised by pi-pi interactions. NMR spectra and photophysical investigations confirm the structures of the guanine-directed and thiophene-directed assemblies in chloroform and acetonitrile, respectively.
    Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 02/2010; 8(4):774-81. · 3.70 Impact Factor
  • Article: N-arylated 3,5-dihydro-4H-dinaphtho[2,1-c:1',2'-e]azepines: axially chiral donors with high helical twisting powers for nonplanar push-pull chromophores.
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    ABSTRACT: Axially chiral, N-arylated 3,5-dihydro-4H-dinaphtho[2,1-c:1',2'-e]azepines have been prepared by short synthetic protocols from enantiopure 1,1'-bi(2,2'-naphthol) (BINOL) and anilines. Alkynes substituted with two N-phenyldinaphthazepine donors readily undergo a formal [2+2] cycloaddition, followed by retro-electrocyclization, with tetracyanoethene (TCNE) to yield donor-substituted 1,1,4,4-tetracyanobuta-1,3-dienes (TCBDs) featuring intense intramolecular charge-transfer (CT) interactions. A dicyanovinyl derivative substituted with one N-phenyldinaphthazepine donor was obtained by a "one-pot" oxidation/Knoevenagel condensation from the corresponding propargylic alcohol. Comparative electrochemical, X-ray crystallographic, and UV/Vis studies show that the electron-donor qualities of N-phenyldinaphthazepine are similar to those of N,N-dimethylanilino residues. The circular dichroism (CD) spectrum of a push-pull chromophore incorporating the chiral donor moiety features Cotton effects of exceptional intensity. With their elongated shape and the rigidity of the chiral N-aryldinaphthazepine donors, these chromophores are effective inducers of twist distortion in nematic liquid crystals (LCs). Thus, a series of the dinaphthazepine derivatives was used as dopants in the nematic LC E7 (Merck) and high helical twisting powers (beta) of the order of hundreds of microm(-1) were measured. Theoretical calculations were employed to elucidate the relation between the structure of the dopants and their helical twisting power. For the derivatives with two dinaphthazepine moieties, a strong dependence of the beta-values on the structure and conformation of the linker between them was found.
    Chemistry 09/2009; 15(36):9005-16. · 5.93 Impact Factor
  • Article: Self-assembled hexadecanitroxide.
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    ABSTRACT: A radical-armed guanosine derivative shows drastic magnetic changes by addition (removal) of alkali metal cations corresponding to the reversible assembly (disassembly). In the presence of templating metal ions, the assembly is formed by 8 molecules and 16 open-shell moieties confined in a sphere with a diameter of ca. 30 A.
    Organic Letters 07/2009; 11(14):3004-7. · 5.86 Impact Factor
  • Article: Guanosine hydrogen-bonded scaffolds: a new way to control the bottom-up realisation of well-defined nanoarchitectures.
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    ABSTRACT: Over the last two decades, guanosine-related molecules have been of interest in different areas, ranging from structural biology to medicinal chemistry, supramolecular chemistry and nanotechnology. The guanine base is a multiple hydrogen-bonding unit, capable also of binding to cations, and fits very well with contemporary studies in supramolecular chemistry, self-assembly and non-covalent synthesis. This Concepts article, after reviewing on the diversification of self-organised assemblies from guanosine-based low-molecular-weight molecules, will mainly focus on the use of guanine moiety as a potential scaffold for designing functional materials of tailored physical properties.
    Chemistry 06/2009; 15(32):7792-806. · 5.93 Impact Factor
  • Article: ChemInform Abstract: Guanosine Hydrogen-Bonded Scaffolds: A New Way to Control the Bottom-Up Realisation of Well-Defined Nanoarchitectures
    ChemInform 01/2009; 40(46).
  • Article: A cation-directed switch of intermolecular spin-spin interaction of guanosine derivatives functionalized with open-shell units.
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    ABSTRACT: The guanosine derivative 1 functionalized with the persistent radical unit 4-carbonyl-2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidin-1-oxyl in solution has no particular intermolecular spin-spin interactions; however, in the presence of potassium ions this compound can form a D4-symmetric octameric assembly [1(8)K]+ in which the nitroxyl moieties show a weak electron spin-spin exchange interaction. Since the relative geometry of the radicals is the outcome of K+-directed self-assembly, the spin-spin interaction can be suppressed by removing the alkaline ion.
    Organic Letters 06/2008; 10(9):1739-42. · 5.86 Impact Factor
  • Article: Chiral doping of nematic phases and its application to the determination of absolute configuration.
    Silvia Pieraccini, Alberta Ferrarini, Gian Piero Spada
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    ABSTRACT: Doping nematic liquid crystals with nonracemic chiral compounds induces a twisted nematic (cholesteric) phase. The ability of solutes to twist the nematic phase may be related to the overall shape of the chiral dopant and consequently to its absolute configuration. The cholesteric induction is therefore a powerful tool complementary to chiroptical techniques to obtain stereochemical information on chiral molecules.
    Chirality 06/2008; 20(5):749-59. · 2.35 Impact Factor

Institutions

  • 2012
    • University-Hospital of Padova
      Padova, Veneto, Italy
  • 2011
    • University of Padua
      • Department of Chemical Sciences
      Padova, Veneto, Italy
  • 2001–2010
    • University of Bologna
      • "Toso Montanari" Department of Industrial Chemistry CHIMIND
      Bologna, Emilia-Romagna, Italy
  • 2005–2007
    • Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
      • Departamento de Química Inorgánica
      Madrid, Madrid, Spain
    • Università degli Studi della Calabria
      Rende, Calabria, Italy