Publications

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2014
Moro, AJ, Pana A-M, Cseh L, Costisor O, Parola J, Cunha-Silva L, Puttreddy R, Rissanen K, Pina F.  2014.  Chemistry and Photochemistry of 2,6-Bis(2-hydroxybenzilidene)cyclohexanone. An Example of a Compound Following the Anthocyanins Network of Chemical Reactions. Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 118:6208-6215., Number 32 Abstract
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Sousa, A, Cabrita L, Araujo P, Mateus N, Pina F, de Freitas V.  2014.  Color stability and spectroscopic properties of deoxyvitisins in aqueous solution. New Journal of Chemistry. 38:539-544., Number 2 Abstract
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Sousa, A, Cabrita L, Araujo P, Mateus N, Pina F, de Freitas V.  2014.  Color stability and spectroscopic properties of deoxyvitisins in aqueous solution. New Journal of Chemistry. 38:539-544., Number 2 Abstract
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Reimao-Pinto, MM, Cordeiro A, Almeida C, Pinheiro AV, Moro A, Lima JC, Baptista PV.  2014.  Dual-color control of nucleotide polymerization sensed by a fluorescence actuator. Photochemical & Photobiological Sciences. 13:751-756., Number 5 Abstract
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Ruivo, A, Andrade SM, Rocha J, Laia CAT, Pina F.  2014.  Formation of Photoluminescent Lead Bromide Nanoparticles on Aluminoborosilicate Glass. Journal of Physical Chemistry C. 118:12436-12442., Number 23 Abstract
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Oliveira, J, Bras NF, da Silva MA, Mateus N, Parola JA, de Freitas V.  2014.  Grape anthocyanin oligomerization: A putative mechanism for red color stabilization? Phytochemistry. 105:178-185. Abstract
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Bianchi, A, Delgado-Pinar E, Garcia-Espana E, Giorgi C, Pina F.  2014.  Highlights of metal ion-based photochemical switches. Coordination Chemistry Reviews. 260:156-215. Abstract
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Bianchi, A, Delgado-Pinar E, Garcia-Espana E, Giorgi C, Pina F.  2014.  Highlights of metal ion-based photochemical switches. Coordination Chemistry Reviews. 260:156-215. Abstract
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Marrucho, IM, Branco LC, Rebelo LPN.  2014.  Ionic Liquids in Pharmaceutical Applications. Annual Review of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Vol 5. 5(Prausnitz, J. M., Doherty, M. F., Segalman, R. A., Eds.).:527-546. Abstract
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Penon, O, Moro AJ, Santucci D, Amabilino DB, Lima JC, Perez-Garcia L, Rodriguez L.  2014.  Molecular recognition of aliphatic amines by luminescent Zn-porphyrins. Inorganica Chimica Acta. 417:222-229. Abstract
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Castet, F, Champagne B, Pina F, Rodriguez V.  2014.  A Multistate pH-Triggered Nonlinear Optical Switch. Chemphyschem. 15:2221-2224., Number 11 Abstract
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Jordao, N, Cabrita L, Pina F, Branco LC.  2014.  Novel Bipyridinium Ionic Liquids as Liquid Electrochromic Devices. Chemistry-a European Journal. 20:3982-3988., Number 14 Abstract
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Cabrita, L, Petrov V, Pina F.  2014.  On the thermal degradation of anthocyanidins: cyanidin. Rsc Advances. 4:18939-18944., Number 36 Abstract
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Lopes-Costa, T, Basilio N, Pedrosa JM, Pina F.  2014.  Photochromism of the natural dye 7,4 '-dihydroxy-5-methoxyflavylium (dracoflavylium) in the presence of (2-hydroxypropyl)-beta-cyclodextrin. Photochemical & Photobiological Sciences. 13:1420-1426., Number 10 Abstract
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Gago, S, Gonzalez J, Blasco S, Parola JA, Albelda MT, Garcia-Espana E, Pina F.  2014.  Protonation, coordination chemistry, cyanometallate "supercomplex" formation and fluorescence chemosensing properties of a bis(2,2 '-bipyridino)cyclophane receptor. Dalton Transactions. 43:2437-2447., Number 6 Abstract
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Melo, MJ, Otero V, Vitorino T, Araujo R, Muralha VSF, Lemos A, Picollo M.  2014.  A Spectroscopic Study of Brazilwood Paints in Medieval Books of Hours. Applied Spectroscopy. 68:434-444., Number 4 Abstract
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Pina, F.  2014.  Thermodynamic and Kinetic Processes of Anthocyanins and Related Compounds and their Bio-Inspired Applications. Recent Advances in Polyphenol Research, Vol 4. 4:341-370. Abstract
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2013
Rondao, R, de Melo JSS, Pina J, Melo MJ, Vitorino T, Parola AJ.  2013.  Brazilwood Reds: The (Photo)Chemistry of Brazilin and Brazilein, 2013. Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 117:10650-10660. Abstract

The ground and excited state (in the singlet state, S-1) acid-base equilibria, together with the photophysical properties of the two main constituents of brazilwood, brazilin and brazilein, have been investigated in aqueous solutions in the pH range: -1 < pH < 10. Brazilin is the colorless reduced form of brazilein where three ground and three excited state species (BredHn, with n = 2-4 representing the protonated hydroxyl groups) are observed with two corresponding acidity constants: pK(a1) = 6.6 and pK(a2) = 9.4 (pK(a1)(*) = 4.7 and pK(a2)(*) = 9.9, obtained from the Forster cycle). In the case of brazilein, three ground species (pK(a1) = 6.5 and pK(a2) = 9.5) and four excited state species were identified (again from the Forster cycle: pK(a1)(*) = 3.9 and pK(a2)(*) = 9.8). The colorless species (brazilin) presents a high fluorescence quantum yield (phi(F) = 0.33) and competitive radiative channel (k(F) = 1.3 x 10(9) s(-1)) over radiationless processes (k(NR) = 2.6 x 10(9) s(-1)). In contrast to this behavior, brazilein displays a phi(F) value 2 orders of magnitude lower and a dominance of the radiationless decay pathways, which is suggested to be linked to an excited state proton transfer leading to a quinoidal-like structure. This is further supported by time-resolved data (obtained in a ps time domain). The overall data indicates that brazilin is more prone to degradation than brazilein, mainly due to the high efficiency of the racliationless decay channel (likely through internal conversion), which confers a stabilizing inherent characteristic to the latter. In the case of brazilein, the efficiency of the radiationless channel is linked to an excited state intramolecular proton transfer resulting from an excited state equilibrium involving neutral and zwitterionic tautomeric species of this compound. Furthermore, a theoretical study has been performed with the determination of the optimized ground-state and excited molecular geometries for the two compounds together with the prediction of the lowest vertical one-electron excitation energy and the relevant molecular orbital contours and charge densities changes using density functional theory calculations. These were found to corroborate differences in acidity in the ground and excited states.

Avo, J, Martins S, Parola AJ, Lima JC, Branco PS, Ramalho JPP, Pereira A.  2013.  A Family of Styrylcoumarins: Synthesis, Spectroscopic, Photophysical and Photochemical Properties, 2013. Chempluschem. 78:789-792. Abstract
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Gago, S, Fonseca IM, Parola AJ.  2013.  Hybrid mesoporous silica grafted with photoisomerizable 2-hydroxychalcones, 2013. Microporous and Mesoporous Materials. 180:40-47. Abstract

Hybrid photochromic mesoporous materials based on MCM-41 and SBA-15 were synthesized by covalent attachment of 3'-butoxy-7-hydroxyflavylium (Fl-OH) and 3'-butoxy-7-metoxyflavylium (Fl-OCH3) hydrogensulfates. The pristine materials were initially grafted with 3-chloropropyl groups, reacted with 3'-hydroxyacetophenone and finally condensed with appropriate salicylaldehydes to yield the new hybrids MCM-41-Fl-OH and SBA-15-Fl-OCH3. The materials were characterized by powder X-ray diffraction, N-2 adsorption, solid-state C-13 CPMAS NMR spectroscopy, and thermogravimetric and elemental analyses, which confirm the successful covalent bonding of the flavylium moieties with loadings of 16.90 +/- 0.05% and 11.78 +/- 0.04% (w/w) for MCM-41-Fl-OH and SBA-15-OCH3, respectively. Flavylium compounds originate in solution a multiequilibria reaction network than can be actuated by pH and light, defining pH-coupled photochromic systems. The new hybrids show pH-dependent reflectance spectra resembling those observed in solution, but shifted to higher pH ranges, indicating a higher stability of the grafted flavylium cations. Irradiation of these materials equilibrated at adequate pH values where the photoisomerizable trans-chalcones predominate shows formation of the respective flavylium cations that recover back to the initial compositions upon standing in the dark, leading these new organic-inorganic hybrids as pH-dependent photochromic materials. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Leydet, Y, Batat P, Jonusauskas G, Denisov S, Lima JC, Parola AJ, McClenaghan ND, Pina F.  2013.  Impact of Water on the Cis-Trans Photoisomerization of Hydroxychalcones, 2013. Journal of Physical Chemistry A. 117:4167-4173. Abstract

The photochromism of a 2-hydroxychalcone has been studied in CH3CN and H2O/CH3OH (1/1, v/v), as well as in analogous deuterated solvents using steady-state (UV-vis absorption, H-1 and C-13 NMR) and time-resolved (ultrafast transient absorption and nanosecond flow flash photolysis) spectroscopies. Whereas the irradiation of trans-chalcone (Ct) under neutral pH conditions leads to the formation of the same final chromene derivative (B) in both media, two distinct photochemical mechanisms are proposed in agreement with thermodynamic and kinetic properties of the chemical reaction network at the ground state. Following light excitation, the first steps are identical in acetonitrile and aqueous solution: the Franck-Condon excited state rapidly populates the trans-chalcone singlet excited state (1)Ct* (LE), which evolves into a twisted state P-1*. This excited state is directly responsible for the photochemistry in acetonitrile in the nanosecond time scale (16 ns) leading to the formation of cis-chalcone (Cc) through a simple isomerization process. The resulting cis-chalcone evolves into the chromene B through a tautomerization process in the ground state (tau= 10 ms). Unlike in acetonitrile, in H2O/CH3OH (1/1, v/v), the P* state becomes unstable and evolves into a new state attributed to the tautomer (1)Q*. This state directly evolves into B in one photochemical step through a consecutive ultrafast tautomerization process followed by electrocyclization. This last case represents a new hypothesis in the photochromism of 2-hydroxychalcone derivatives.

Petrov, V, Diniz AM, Cunha-Silva L, Parola AJ, Pina F.  2013.  Kinetic and thermodynamic study of 2 '-hydroxy-8-methoxyflavylium. Reaction network interconverting flavylium cation and flavanone, 2013. Rsc Advances. 3:10786-10794. Abstract

2'-Hydroxyflavylium and 2'-hydroxyflavanone derivatives can be interconverted by a precise sequence of pH jumps, through the respective intermediate (mono) ionized trans-chalcones. In acidic and neutral media, the well known network of chemical reactions involving flavylium cation, quinoidal base, hemiketal, and cis and trans chalcones is established. In the pH range 8 < pH < 10, the chalcone (Ct) deprotonates and evolves to the formation of a flavanone (F). At higher pH values, the di-ionized trans-chalcone is the stable species, formed from the flavylium cation. Acidification of the di-ionized trans-chalcone gives the flavylium cation or the flavanone, via the mono-ionized trans-chalcone, respectively at pH < 1 and pH approximate to 9. In contrast with the chalcones, the flavanone once formed is stable even in acidic media. However, under strongly basic conditions, it leads back to the di-ionized trans-chalcone, the most stable species at more basic pH values, and the reactions leading to Ct(-), F, Ct(2-), Ct(-), constitute a one direction cycle for interconversion of these species.

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