Effects of substituents on the photosensitizing and electrocatalytic properties of phthalocyanines
- Authors: Maree, Suzanne Elizabeth
- Date: 2002
- Subjects: Phthalocyanines
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4554 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1018247
- Description: In this work a selection of octasubstituted phthalocyaninato Zinc, Ge(IV) and Sn(IV) complexes were synthesized for possible use in photodynamic therapy and their photochemistry, photophysics and electrochemistry studied. Third-generation complexes containing steroids, e.g. cholesterol and estrone, were synthesized to improve tumour selectivity. The zinc phthalocyanine complexes (ZnPc) showed that complexes containing electron-donating groups have higher photostability. Germanium phthalocyanine complexes (GePc) undergo phototransformation rather than direct photobleaching and the tin phthalocyanine complexes (SnPc) undergo photobleaching mediated by photoreduction of the phthalocyanine ring. Singlet oxygen production showed increased in the following order: GePc>SnPc>ZnPc. Triplet lifetimes of the GePc (168-340μs) are very similar to that of the ZnPc (197 - 366μs), but the triplet lifetimes of the SnPc are ten fold shorter (10 - 32μs ). Triplet quantum yields are higher for the GePc (0.20 - 0.50) and SnPc (0.08 - 0.45) than for the ZnPc (0.02 - 0.25). Fluorescence lifetimes of GePc ( 4.0 - 5.1 ns) are significantly longer than that of ZnPc (1.9 - 3.0 ns) and SnPc (0.2 - 0.4 ns). Fluorescence quantum yields decrease in the following order: GePc(0.21-0.31)>ZnPc(0.02-0.21)>SnPc(0.02- 0.06). Ring-substituted cobalt phthalocyanine complexes of the form CoPc(R)4 (R= NH2, N02, C(CH3)3, S03H and COOH) are compared for their catalytic activities towards the oxidation of cysteine. The potential for the electrocatalytic oxidation of cysteine is closely related to the Com/Co11 couple of the CoPc(R)4 complexes in acidic media and to the Con/Co1 couple in basic media. The catalytic current and the oxidation potential for cysteine are dependent on the pH of the solution, the potential becoming less positive and the currents increasing with increase in pH.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2002
- Authors: Maree, Suzanne Elizabeth
- Date: 2002
- Subjects: Phthalocyanines
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4554 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1018247
- Description: In this work a selection of octasubstituted phthalocyaninato Zinc, Ge(IV) and Sn(IV) complexes were synthesized for possible use in photodynamic therapy and their photochemistry, photophysics and electrochemistry studied. Third-generation complexes containing steroids, e.g. cholesterol and estrone, were synthesized to improve tumour selectivity. The zinc phthalocyanine complexes (ZnPc) showed that complexes containing electron-donating groups have higher photostability. Germanium phthalocyanine complexes (GePc) undergo phototransformation rather than direct photobleaching and the tin phthalocyanine complexes (SnPc) undergo photobleaching mediated by photoreduction of the phthalocyanine ring. Singlet oxygen production showed increased in the following order: GePc>SnPc>ZnPc. Triplet lifetimes of the GePc (168-340μs) are very similar to that of the ZnPc (197 - 366μs), but the triplet lifetimes of the SnPc are ten fold shorter (10 - 32μs ). Triplet quantum yields are higher for the GePc (0.20 - 0.50) and SnPc (0.08 - 0.45) than for the ZnPc (0.02 - 0.25). Fluorescence lifetimes of GePc ( 4.0 - 5.1 ns) are significantly longer than that of ZnPc (1.9 - 3.0 ns) and SnPc (0.2 - 0.4 ns). Fluorescence quantum yields decrease in the following order: GePc(0.21-0.31)>ZnPc(0.02-0.21)>SnPc(0.02- 0.06). Ring-substituted cobalt phthalocyanine complexes of the form CoPc(R)4 (R= NH2, N02, C(CH3)3, S03H and COOH) are compared for their catalytic activities towards the oxidation of cysteine. The potential for the electrocatalytic oxidation of cysteine is closely related to the Com/Co11 couple of the CoPc(R)4 complexes in acidic media and to the Con/Co1 couple in basic media. The catalytic current and the oxidation potential for cysteine are dependent on the pH of the solution, the potential becoming less positive and the currents increasing with increase in pH.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2002
Synthetic approaches to marine labdane diterpenes
- Authors: Wisch, Gregory Albert
- Date: 2002 , 2013-05-10
- Subjects: Diterpenes
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4289 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003131 , Diterpenes
- Description: The work presented in this thesis describes the synthesis of labd-13-en-8ß, 15-diol (46) a stable reduced derivative of an unstable marine natural product aldehyde [8ß-hydroxylabd-13E-en-15-al (6)] isolated by Cimino, et al. from the skin of a Notaspidean mollusc Pleurobranchaea meckelii. The rationale for the synthesis was to provide sufficient 46 for eventual mild oxidation to 6 and investigation of the biological activity of this latter compound. (-)-Sclareol (32), a common diterpene synthetic precursor, was the starting point for the ten step synthesis of 46 described in this thesis. A search of the literature revealed that only one non stereospecific synthesis of 46 had been previously reported. To provide the necessary background to the synthetic component of this thesis, both the occurrence of labdane and ent-labdane in the marine environment and the use of sclareol in the synthesis of marine natural products, was reviewed. The initial step in the synthesis of 46 was the potassium permanganate oxidation of sclareol to give a bisnorlabdane ketone. Reduction of this ketone with lithium aluminium hydride produced a mixture of diols which, through t-butyldimethysilyl triflate protection, afforded a quantitative route to protecting the C-13 ketone in an effort to prevent unwanted intramolecular cyclization reactions. Dehydration of the tertiary alcohol moiety at C-8 with phosphorous oxychloride yielded the Δ⁸·¹⁵ exocyclic alkene required for the next oxidation step. Ozonolysis succeeded in producing the desired C-8 ketone after much deliberation and research into alternative oxidation strategies. Methyl lithium methylation quantitatively afforded the desired a-methyl substitution at C-8, identified at the onset as the key step in the synthesis. Tetra-butylarnmonium fluoride deprotection yielded the 8ß,13-dihydoxylated product, which was in turn subjected to a Swern oxidition to give the desired 8ß-hydroxy-bisnorlabda-13-one. A modified Horner-Wadsworth-Emmons reaction allowed for elaboration at C-13 to yield a to Δ¹³ olefin with a terminal C-15 ethyl ester. Diisobutylaluminium hydride reduction of the ester produced the desired labd-13-en-8ß, 15-diol (46) in a low overall yield of 3.4%. Although opportunities for optimization of at least three steps in the synthesis exist, time constraints prevented both optimization of these steps and an investigation of the oxidation of 46 to 6. , KMBT_363 , Adobe Acrobat 9.54 Paper Capture Plug-in
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2002
- Authors: Wisch, Gregory Albert
- Date: 2002 , 2013-05-10
- Subjects: Diterpenes
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4289 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003131 , Diterpenes
- Description: The work presented in this thesis describes the synthesis of labd-13-en-8ß, 15-diol (46) a stable reduced derivative of an unstable marine natural product aldehyde [8ß-hydroxylabd-13E-en-15-al (6)] isolated by Cimino, et al. from the skin of a Notaspidean mollusc Pleurobranchaea meckelii. The rationale for the synthesis was to provide sufficient 46 for eventual mild oxidation to 6 and investigation of the biological activity of this latter compound. (-)-Sclareol (32), a common diterpene synthetic precursor, was the starting point for the ten step synthesis of 46 described in this thesis. A search of the literature revealed that only one non stereospecific synthesis of 46 had been previously reported. To provide the necessary background to the synthetic component of this thesis, both the occurrence of labdane and ent-labdane in the marine environment and the use of sclareol in the synthesis of marine natural products, was reviewed. The initial step in the synthesis of 46 was the potassium permanganate oxidation of sclareol to give a bisnorlabdane ketone. Reduction of this ketone with lithium aluminium hydride produced a mixture of diols which, through t-butyldimethysilyl triflate protection, afforded a quantitative route to protecting the C-13 ketone in an effort to prevent unwanted intramolecular cyclization reactions. Dehydration of the tertiary alcohol moiety at C-8 with phosphorous oxychloride yielded the Δ⁸·¹⁵ exocyclic alkene required for the next oxidation step. Ozonolysis succeeded in producing the desired C-8 ketone after much deliberation and research into alternative oxidation strategies. Methyl lithium methylation quantitatively afforded the desired a-methyl substitution at C-8, identified at the onset as the key step in the synthesis. Tetra-butylarnmonium fluoride deprotection yielded the 8ß,13-dihydoxylated product, which was in turn subjected to a Swern oxidition to give the desired 8ß-hydroxy-bisnorlabda-13-one. A modified Horner-Wadsworth-Emmons reaction allowed for elaboration at C-13 to yield a to Δ¹³ olefin with a terminal C-15 ethyl ester. Diisobutylaluminium hydride reduction of the ester produced the desired labd-13-en-8ß, 15-diol (46) in a low overall yield of 3.4%. Although opportunities for optimization of at least three steps in the synthesis exist, time constraints prevented both optimization of these steps and an investigation of the oxidation of 46 to 6. , KMBT_363 , Adobe Acrobat 9.54 Paper Capture Plug-in
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2002
Thermal and photostability studies of furosemide and its cyclodextrin mixtures
- Authors: Melane, Babalwa Blossom
- Date: 2002 , 2013-05-16
- Subjects: Furosemide , Furosemide -- Stability
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4440 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007625 , Furosemide , Furosemide -- Stability
- Description: Furosemide (Lasix®), abbreviated as FR and also known as frusemide, is a drug used for renal problems and treatment of cardiac edema. Various polymorphic forms of furosemide, dependent upon the method of preparation and thermal treatment, have been reported. The main thermal decomposition product of furosemide has been identified as saluamine. The dissolution properties of furosemide have also been reported to be improved by complexation with beta-cyclodextrin. Photostabilities of the different crystal forms have been studied. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and thermogravimetry (TG) have been used to examine the thermal behaviour of furosemide itself and of its physical and kneaded mixtures with betacyclodextrin (BCD) and gamma-cyclodextrin (GCD). There is strong evidence from DSC that complex formation between FR and GCD occurs. This is supported by IR and XRD data. Decreases in the intensity and broadening of the characteristic carbonyl (1660 cm'l) and amine (1588 cm⁻¹) bands in the kneaded mixture, compared to the physical mixture, were observed with IR. X-ray diffraction results for the 1:3 molar ratio FR/GCD kneaded mixture showed a halo diffraction pattern characteristic. of an amorphous solid and did not resemble patterns from the drug, or the gamma, cyclodextrin, or the physical mixture. Photostability studies have been conducted on solid furosemide and its mixtures with GCD or BCD. An HPLC method was developed to determine the amount of drug remaining after exposure and the presence of any degradants. Results indicated that about 10% degradation of the drug occurred during exposure for 16 hours at 550 W/m², with the appearance of polar degradants. Although IR and DSC results for the 1:3 molar ratio FR/GCD kneaded mixture showed a probable strong interaction between FR and GCD, the photostability of FR was decreased. The 1 :3 molar ratio FR/BCD kneaded mixture showed less photo-degradation than the 1:3 molar ratio FR/GCD mixture under similar conditions, suggesting that inclusion of the drug molecule (FR) is different in the two cyclodextrins.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2002
- Authors: Melane, Babalwa Blossom
- Date: 2002 , 2013-05-16
- Subjects: Furosemide , Furosemide -- Stability
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4440 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007625 , Furosemide , Furosemide -- Stability
- Description: Furosemide (Lasix®), abbreviated as FR and also known as frusemide, is a drug used for renal problems and treatment of cardiac edema. Various polymorphic forms of furosemide, dependent upon the method of preparation and thermal treatment, have been reported. The main thermal decomposition product of furosemide has been identified as saluamine. The dissolution properties of furosemide have also been reported to be improved by complexation with beta-cyclodextrin. Photostabilities of the different crystal forms have been studied. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and thermogravimetry (TG) have been used to examine the thermal behaviour of furosemide itself and of its physical and kneaded mixtures with betacyclodextrin (BCD) and gamma-cyclodextrin (GCD). There is strong evidence from DSC that complex formation between FR and GCD occurs. This is supported by IR and XRD data. Decreases in the intensity and broadening of the characteristic carbonyl (1660 cm'l) and amine (1588 cm⁻¹) bands in the kneaded mixture, compared to the physical mixture, were observed with IR. X-ray diffraction results for the 1:3 molar ratio FR/GCD kneaded mixture showed a halo diffraction pattern characteristic. of an amorphous solid and did not resemble patterns from the drug, or the gamma, cyclodextrin, or the physical mixture. Photostability studies have been conducted on solid furosemide and its mixtures with GCD or BCD. An HPLC method was developed to determine the amount of drug remaining after exposure and the presence of any degradants. Results indicated that about 10% degradation of the drug occurred during exposure for 16 hours at 550 W/m², with the appearance of polar degradants. Although IR and DSC results for the 1:3 molar ratio FR/GCD kneaded mixture showed a probable strong interaction between FR and GCD, the photostability of FR was decreased. The 1 :3 molar ratio FR/BCD kneaded mixture showed less photo-degradation than the 1:3 molar ratio FR/GCD mixture under similar conditions, suggesting that inclusion of the drug molecule (FR) is different in the two cyclodextrins.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2002
Applications of the Baylis-Hillman reaction in the synthesis of coumarin derivatives
- Authors: Musa, Musiliyu Ayodele
- Date: 2003
- Subjects: Coumarins Heterocyclic compounds -- Derivatives
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4403 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1006705
- Description: The reaction of specially prepared salicylaldehyde benzyl ethers with the activated alkenes, methyl acrylate or acrylonitrile, in the presence of the catalyst, DABCO, has afforded Baylis-Hillman products, which have been subjected to conjugate addition with either piperidine or benzylamine. Hydrogenolysis of these conjugate addition products in the presence of a palladium-on-carbon catalyst has been shown to afford the corresponding 3-substituted coumarins, while treatment of O-benzylated Baylis-Hillman adducts with HCl or HI afforded the corresponding 3-(halomethyl)coumarins directly, in up to 94%. The 3-(halomethyl)coumarins have also been obtained in excellent yields (up to 98%) and even more conveniently, by treating the unprotected Baylis-Hillman products with HCl in a mixture of AcOH and Ac₂O, obtained from tert-butyl acrylate and various salicylaldehydes. The generality of an established route to the synthesis of coumarins via an intramolecular Baylis-Hillman reaction, involving the use of salicylaldehyde acrylate esters in the presence of DABCO, has also been demonstrated. Reactions between the 3-(halomethyl)coumarins and various nitrogen and carbon nucleophiles have been shown to proceed with a high degree of regioselectivity at the exocyclic allylic centre to afford 3-substituted coumarin products. The electronimpact mass spectra of selected coumarin derivatives have been investigated using high-resolution and B/E linked scan data. Fragmentation pathways have been proposed and fragmentation modes associated with different coumarin-containing analogues have been compared. A series of coumarin-containing analogues of ritonavir (a clinically useful HIV-1 protease inhibitor) have been prepared and characterized. The synthetic approach has involved the coupling of coumarin derivatives with a hydroxyethylene dipeptide isostere to afford ritonavir analogues containing coumarin termini. An interactive docking procedure has been used to explore the docking of ritonavir and a coumarincontaining analogue into the enzyme active site.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2003
- Authors: Musa, Musiliyu Ayodele
- Date: 2003
- Subjects: Coumarins Heterocyclic compounds -- Derivatives
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4403 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1006705
- Description: The reaction of specially prepared salicylaldehyde benzyl ethers with the activated alkenes, methyl acrylate or acrylonitrile, in the presence of the catalyst, DABCO, has afforded Baylis-Hillman products, which have been subjected to conjugate addition with either piperidine or benzylamine. Hydrogenolysis of these conjugate addition products in the presence of a palladium-on-carbon catalyst has been shown to afford the corresponding 3-substituted coumarins, while treatment of O-benzylated Baylis-Hillman adducts with HCl or HI afforded the corresponding 3-(halomethyl)coumarins directly, in up to 94%. The 3-(halomethyl)coumarins have also been obtained in excellent yields (up to 98%) and even more conveniently, by treating the unprotected Baylis-Hillman products with HCl in a mixture of AcOH and Ac₂O, obtained from tert-butyl acrylate and various salicylaldehydes. The generality of an established route to the synthesis of coumarins via an intramolecular Baylis-Hillman reaction, involving the use of salicylaldehyde acrylate esters in the presence of DABCO, has also been demonstrated. Reactions between the 3-(halomethyl)coumarins and various nitrogen and carbon nucleophiles have been shown to proceed with a high degree of regioselectivity at the exocyclic allylic centre to afford 3-substituted coumarin products. The electronimpact mass spectra of selected coumarin derivatives have been investigated using high-resolution and B/E linked scan data. Fragmentation pathways have been proposed and fragmentation modes associated with different coumarin-containing analogues have been compared. A series of coumarin-containing analogues of ritonavir (a clinically useful HIV-1 protease inhibitor) have been prepared and characterized. The synthetic approach has involved the coupling of coumarin derivatives with a hydroxyethylene dipeptide isostere to afford ritonavir analogues containing coumarin termini. An interactive docking procedure has been used to explore the docking of ritonavir and a coumarincontaining analogue into the enzyme active site.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2003
Cyclodepsipeptides from a Kenyan marine cyanobacterium
- Authors: Dzeha, Thomas Mwambire
- Date: 2003
- Subjects: Cyanobacteria , Stereochemistry , Natural products -- Kenya
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4303 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004961 , Cyanobacteria , Stereochemistry , Natural products -- Kenya
- Description: An examination of an organic extract of the cyanobacterium Lyngbya majuscula collected from Wasini Island off the southern Kenyan coast led to the isolation of the known cyclodepsipeptide antanapeptin A (7), recently isolated from a Madagascan collection of L. majuscula, and a new bioactive cyclodepsipeptide, homodolastatin 16 (42). Although L. majuscula is a common, pantropical cyanobacterium this study represents the first investigation of the natural product chemistry of a Kenyan population of L. majuscula. The structures of the two cyclodepsipeptides were determined from 2D NMR and mass spectrometry data. The L- stereochemistry of the proline, valine, and N-methylphenylalanine amino acids in 7 and the L – proline configuration in 42, was confirmed by Marfey’s HPLC method. Chiral GC was used to determine the absolute stereochemistry of the hydroxyisovaleric acid moiety in 7 and 42, the lactate residue in 42 and tentatively propose an L-stereochemistry for the Nmethylisoleucine amino acid in 42. Homodolastatin 16, a higher homologue of the potential anti-cancer agent, dolastatin 16, exhibited moderate activity against two oesophageal cancer cell lines.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2003
- Authors: Dzeha, Thomas Mwambire
- Date: 2003
- Subjects: Cyanobacteria , Stereochemistry , Natural products -- Kenya
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4303 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004961 , Cyanobacteria , Stereochemistry , Natural products -- Kenya
- Description: An examination of an organic extract of the cyanobacterium Lyngbya majuscula collected from Wasini Island off the southern Kenyan coast led to the isolation of the known cyclodepsipeptide antanapeptin A (7), recently isolated from a Madagascan collection of L. majuscula, and a new bioactive cyclodepsipeptide, homodolastatin 16 (42). Although L. majuscula is a common, pantropical cyanobacterium this study represents the first investigation of the natural product chemistry of a Kenyan population of L. majuscula. The structures of the two cyclodepsipeptides were determined from 2D NMR and mass spectrometry data. The L- stereochemistry of the proline, valine, and N-methylphenylalanine amino acids in 7 and the L – proline configuration in 42, was confirmed by Marfey’s HPLC method. Chiral GC was used to determine the absolute stereochemistry of the hydroxyisovaleric acid moiety in 7 and 42, the lactate residue in 42 and tentatively propose an L-stereochemistry for the Nmethylisoleucine amino acid in 42. Homodolastatin 16, a higher homologue of the potential anti-cancer agent, dolastatin 16, exhibited moderate activity against two oesophageal cancer cell lines.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2003
Metal interactions with neural substrates and their role in neurodegeneration
- Authors: Lack, Barbara Anne
- Date: 2003
- Subjects: Nervous system -- Degeneration Neurotoxicology Chemical reactions Metals -- Physiological effect Melatonin -- Physiological effect
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4391 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005709
- Description: "Life" may be characterized as a controlled stationary flow equilibrium, maintained by energy consuming chemical reactions. The physiological functioning of these life systems include at least 28 of the elements isolated on the periodic table thus far, most of which are metals. However, as with Paracelsus Principle: "The dose makes the poison", there exists a definite link between metal levels, essential and toxic, and the onset of neurodegenerative diseases. The economic costs of brain dysfunction are enormous, but this pales in comparison to the staggering emotional toll on the victims themselves and their families. In an attempt to improve the understanding of the causes of neurodegeneration, this study focuses on one potential aspect: the possible link between metals and neurotransmitter homeostasis utilising a variety of electronanalytical techniques. Adsorptive cathodic stripping voltammetry was employed to investigate the binding affinities and complex formation of melatonin and its precursor serotonin with calcium, potassium, sodium, lithium and aluminium. The results showed that all the metals studied formed complexes with both pineal indoleamines. However, the stability and affmity of the ligands toward the various metals varied greatly. The study suggests a further role for melatonin, that of metalloregulator and possible metal detoxifier in the brain, the in vivo studies which followed will further substantiate this notion. This research additionally focused on the cholinergic system, in particular acetylcholine complex formation studies with mercury, lead, cadmium, copper and zinc using the adsorptive cathodic stripping voltammetry method. The formation and characterisation of a solid mercury-acetylcholine complex lent further strength to the in situ electrochemical complex formation observed. The results showed the preference of acetylcholine for environmentally toxic heavy metals (such as Cd²⁺) over those divalent cations that occur naturally in the body. The possible metalloregulatory role melatonin played in the three brain regIOns: cerebellum, cortex and corpus striatum of male Wistar rats was studied as an in vivo extension of the earlier in vitro studies. Anodic stripping voltammetry was employed to detect metal levels present. The results showed that daily injections of melatonin was responsible for significantly decreasing copper(I), cadmium(II) and lead(II) levels in various regions of the rat brain of those animals that had undergone a pinealectomy in comparison to the saline injected group having undergone the same treatment. Histological and electrochemical stripping techniques were applied to investigate the implications of high A1³⁺ levels in the brain regions, particularly the hippocampus. Melatonin showed signs of promise in indirect symptom alleviation and by significantly decreasing A1³⁺ levels in rats that had been dosed with melatonin prior to A1³⁺ treatments in comparison with the control groups. Finally a preliminary study outlining a method for the production of a calcium selective microelectrode was undertaken. Further work is still needed to optimise the microelectrode production as well as its possible applications. However, whilst the overall conclusions of this entire multidisciplinary study may indeed only be in effect one piece of a very large puzzle on neurodegenerative diseases, this piece will no doubt serve as a building block for further ideas and work in this field.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2003
- Authors: Lack, Barbara Anne
- Date: 2003
- Subjects: Nervous system -- Degeneration Neurotoxicology Chemical reactions Metals -- Physiological effect Melatonin -- Physiological effect
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4391 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005709
- Description: "Life" may be characterized as a controlled stationary flow equilibrium, maintained by energy consuming chemical reactions. The physiological functioning of these life systems include at least 28 of the elements isolated on the periodic table thus far, most of which are metals. However, as with Paracelsus Principle: "The dose makes the poison", there exists a definite link between metal levels, essential and toxic, and the onset of neurodegenerative diseases. The economic costs of brain dysfunction are enormous, but this pales in comparison to the staggering emotional toll on the victims themselves and their families. In an attempt to improve the understanding of the causes of neurodegeneration, this study focuses on one potential aspect: the possible link between metals and neurotransmitter homeostasis utilising a variety of electronanalytical techniques. Adsorptive cathodic stripping voltammetry was employed to investigate the binding affinities and complex formation of melatonin and its precursor serotonin with calcium, potassium, sodium, lithium and aluminium. The results showed that all the metals studied formed complexes with both pineal indoleamines. However, the stability and affmity of the ligands toward the various metals varied greatly. The study suggests a further role for melatonin, that of metalloregulator and possible metal detoxifier in the brain, the in vivo studies which followed will further substantiate this notion. This research additionally focused on the cholinergic system, in particular acetylcholine complex formation studies with mercury, lead, cadmium, copper and zinc using the adsorptive cathodic stripping voltammetry method. The formation and characterisation of a solid mercury-acetylcholine complex lent further strength to the in situ electrochemical complex formation observed. The results showed the preference of acetylcholine for environmentally toxic heavy metals (such as Cd²⁺) over those divalent cations that occur naturally in the body. The possible metalloregulatory role melatonin played in the three brain regIOns: cerebellum, cortex and corpus striatum of male Wistar rats was studied as an in vivo extension of the earlier in vitro studies. Anodic stripping voltammetry was employed to detect metal levels present. The results showed that daily injections of melatonin was responsible for significantly decreasing copper(I), cadmium(II) and lead(II) levels in various regions of the rat brain of those animals that had undergone a pinealectomy in comparison to the saline injected group having undergone the same treatment. Histological and electrochemical stripping techniques were applied to investigate the implications of high A1³⁺ levels in the brain regions, particularly the hippocampus. Melatonin showed signs of promise in indirect symptom alleviation and by significantly decreasing A1³⁺ levels in rats that had been dosed with melatonin prior to A1³⁺ treatments in comparison with the control groups. Finally a preliminary study outlining a method for the production of a calcium selective microelectrode was undertaken. Further work is still needed to optimise the microelectrode production as well as its possible applications. However, whilst the overall conclusions of this entire multidisciplinary study may indeed only be in effect one piece of a very large puzzle on neurodegenerative diseases, this piece will no doubt serve as a building block for further ideas and work in this field.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2003
Metallophthalocyanine derivatives as catalysts for the detection of sulphur dioxide, cyanide, nitrite and amino acids
- Authors: Thamae, Mamothibe Amelia
- Date: 2003
- Subjects: Cyanides Nitric oxide Electrochemistry Nitrites Suplhur dioxide Amino acids
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4295 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004542
- Description: Electrocatalytic reduction and oxidation of nitrite using cobalt phthalocyanine derivatives was studied. The detection limit of 1 x 10⁻¹° mol dm⁻³ was achieved when these molecules were employed as catalysts for nitrite detection. The mechanisms for nitrite catalysis were proposed. The position of the peripheral substituents on cobalt porphyrazines (related to cobalt phthalocyanines) affected the catalytic activity of these complexes. The highest activity for nitrite reduction was observed on the cobalt(II) 2,3-tetramethyltetrapyridinoporphyrazine ([CoTm-2,3-tppa]⁴⁺), with cobalt phthalocyanine showing the lowest activity, and the cobalt(II) 3,4- tetramethyltetrapyridinoporphyrazine ([CoTm-3,4-tppa]⁴⁺), showing intermediate behaviour. A mixture of a negatively charged cobalt(II) tetrasulfophthalocyanine ([Co¹¹TSPc]⁴⁻) and a positively charged [CoTm-3,4-tppa]⁴⁺ showed better activity for nitrite reduction than did the individual components. Cobalt porphyrazines lowered the potentials for nitrite reduction in that peaking was observed, as opposed to cobalt phthalocyanine, where only the increase in currents was observed without peaking. Using the cobalt phthalocyanine derivatives, nitrite can be reduced to ammonia with high current efficiency. A glassy carbon electrode modified with [Co¹¹TSPc]⁴⁻ was employed for the determination of nitrite. Nitrate had an insignificant effect on nitrite oxidation on these modified electrodes. Electrocatalytic determination of S0₂ was studied as a function of pH at a glassy carbon electrode modified with iron(II) tetrasulfophthalocaynine. It was found that depending on pH, S0₂.xH₂0, HS0₃⁻ and/or SO₃²⁻ are the main compounds in solution and that these compounds behave differently at the electrode surface. Detection limits ranging from 4.0 ± 0.1 x 10⁻⁵ to 7.5 ± 0.1 x 10⁻⁵ mol dm⁻³ depending on pH were observed. Similar results were obtained when cobalt(II) tetrasulfophthalocaynine was employed for S0₂ catalysis under the same experimental conditions. Cysteine and histidine determination using oxidation currents was performed on glassy carbon electrodes modified with [CoTm-3,4-tppa]⁴⁺ (represented as [CoTm-3,4-tppa]⁴⁺-GCE) in pH 7 Tris buffer. The detection limit of 1.0 x 10⁻⁵ mol dm⁻³ for cysteine and 2.24 x 10⁻⁷ mol dm⁻³ for histidine were obtained. Cyanide can be detected down to 1 x 10⁻¹¹ mol dm⁻³ using [CoTm-3,4-tppa]⁴⁺-GCE in pH 10.8 buffer. Cyanide and S0₂ coordinate to the [CoTSPc]⁴⁻ species. The coordination is accompanied by oxidation of the central Co(II) metal, forming a [Co¹¹¹CoTSPc]³⁻ species. The rate constants for cyanide coordination to the [Co¹¹TSPc]⁴⁻ complex are larger than those reported for the coordination of cyanide to FePc and RuPc complexes in non-aqueous media. Autoreduction of [Co¹¹Tmtppa]⁴⁺ occurred in the presence of either histidine or cysteine, with the formation of metal reduced species, [Co¹Tmtppa(-2)]³⁺. Nitric oxide and nitrite coordinate to the [Co¹¹Tmtppa]⁴⁺ species, without auto-reduction of this species, which was observed for cysteine or histidine. The use of [Co¹¹TSPc]⁴ resulted in improved rate of interaction with nitrite when compared to the [Co¹¹Tmtppa]⁴⁺ species.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2003
- Authors: Thamae, Mamothibe Amelia
- Date: 2003
- Subjects: Cyanides Nitric oxide Electrochemistry Nitrites Suplhur dioxide Amino acids
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4295 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004542
- Description: Electrocatalytic reduction and oxidation of nitrite using cobalt phthalocyanine derivatives was studied. The detection limit of 1 x 10⁻¹° mol dm⁻³ was achieved when these molecules were employed as catalysts for nitrite detection. The mechanisms for nitrite catalysis were proposed. The position of the peripheral substituents on cobalt porphyrazines (related to cobalt phthalocyanines) affected the catalytic activity of these complexes. The highest activity for nitrite reduction was observed on the cobalt(II) 2,3-tetramethyltetrapyridinoporphyrazine ([CoTm-2,3-tppa]⁴⁺), with cobalt phthalocyanine showing the lowest activity, and the cobalt(II) 3,4- tetramethyltetrapyridinoporphyrazine ([CoTm-3,4-tppa]⁴⁺), showing intermediate behaviour. A mixture of a negatively charged cobalt(II) tetrasulfophthalocyanine ([Co¹¹TSPc]⁴⁻) and a positively charged [CoTm-3,4-tppa]⁴⁺ showed better activity for nitrite reduction than did the individual components. Cobalt porphyrazines lowered the potentials for nitrite reduction in that peaking was observed, as opposed to cobalt phthalocyanine, where only the increase in currents was observed without peaking. Using the cobalt phthalocyanine derivatives, nitrite can be reduced to ammonia with high current efficiency. A glassy carbon electrode modified with [Co¹¹TSPc]⁴⁻ was employed for the determination of nitrite. Nitrate had an insignificant effect on nitrite oxidation on these modified electrodes. Electrocatalytic determination of S0₂ was studied as a function of pH at a glassy carbon electrode modified with iron(II) tetrasulfophthalocaynine. It was found that depending on pH, S0₂.xH₂0, HS0₃⁻ and/or SO₃²⁻ are the main compounds in solution and that these compounds behave differently at the electrode surface. Detection limits ranging from 4.0 ± 0.1 x 10⁻⁵ to 7.5 ± 0.1 x 10⁻⁵ mol dm⁻³ depending on pH were observed. Similar results were obtained when cobalt(II) tetrasulfophthalocaynine was employed for S0₂ catalysis under the same experimental conditions. Cysteine and histidine determination using oxidation currents was performed on glassy carbon electrodes modified with [CoTm-3,4-tppa]⁴⁺ (represented as [CoTm-3,4-tppa]⁴⁺-GCE) in pH 7 Tris buffer. The detection limit of 1.0 x 10⁻⁵ mol dm⁻³ for cysteine and 2.24 x 10⁻⁷ mol dm⁻³ for histidine were obtained. Cyanide can be detected down to 1 x 10⁻¹¹ mol dm⁻³ using [CoTm-3,4-tppa]⁴⁺-GCE in pH 10.8 buffer. Cyanide and S0₂ coordinate to the [CoTSPc]⁴⁻ species. The coordination is accompanied by oxidation of the central Co(II) metal, forming a [Co¹¹¹CoTSPc]³⁻ species. The rate constants for cyanide coordination to the [Co¹¹TSPc]⁴⁻ complex are larger than those reported for the coordination of cyanide to FePc and RuPc complexes in non-aqueous media. Autoreduction of [Co¹¹Tmtppa]⁴⁺ occurred in the presence of either histidine or cysteine, with the formation of metal reduced species, [Co¹Tmtppa(-2)]³⁺. Nitric oxide and nitrite coordinate to the [Co¹¹Tmtppa]⁴⁺ species, without auto-reduction of this species, which was observed for cysteine or histidine. The use of [Co¹¹TSPc]⁴ resulted in improved rate of interaction with nitrite when compared to the [Co¹¹Tmtppa]⁴⁺ species.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2003
Pyrroloiminoquinone metabolites from South African Latrunculid sponges
- Authors: Antunes, Edith Martins
- Date: 2003
- Subjects: Sponges -- South Africa PQQ (Biochemistry) Marine metabolites -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4340 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005001
- Description: An in depth chemical investigation of the major and minor pyrroloiminoquinone metabolites produced by four species of endemic South African Latrunculid sponges, collected from Algoa Bay and the Tsitsikamma Marine Reserve off the south eastern coast of South Africa, yielded eleven new and twelve known pyrroloiminoquinone metabolites. The structures of the new metabolites were determined using standard spectroscopic techniques. Tsitsikamma pedunculata was shown to contain 7,8-dehydro-3-dihydro-discorhabdin C (2.1), 14-bromo-7,8-dehydro-3-dihydro-discorhabdin C (2.2), discorhabdin S (2.3), 14-bromo-1-hydroxy-discorhabdin S (2.4), 1-bromo-2-hydroxy-4-debromo-discorhabdin S (2.5), and 2,4-debromo-3-dihydro-discorhabdin C (2.6), together with the known compounds 14-bromo-discorhabdin C (1.51), 14-bromo-3-dihydro-discorhabdin C (1.52) and 3-dihydro-discorhabdin C. The metabolites from T. pedunculata were characterised by the presence of a reduced C-3 carbonyl and bromination at C-14. Compounds isolated from a second Latrunculid sponge, Latrunculia lorii, ranged from a substituted bicyclic pyrrolecarboxylic acid, makaluvic acid A (1.47), to the simple tricyclic known pyrroloiminoquinones makaluvamine C (1.33) and damirone B (1.20) and the more complex discorhabdin D type metabolites, discorhabdin M (3.2), 1-amino discorhabdin D (3.3), 1-methoxy discorhabdin D (3.4) and 1-alanyl discorhabdin D (3.5). Discorhabdin G* (3.1) was also isolated and characterised. This is the first reported occurrence of the known compounds 1.20, 1.33 and 1.47 in a Latrunculia sponge. Discorhabdin and bis-pyrroloiminoquinone type compounds predominated in Tsitsikamma favus. Three known, tsitsikammamines A (1.71) and B (1.72), 1.52, and five new pyrroloiminoquinones, tsitsikammamine N-oxime (4.1), tsitsikammamine B N-oxime (4.2), 2.1, 2.4 and 2.6, were isolated from this sponge. A fourth Latrunculid sponge (Strongylodesma sp.) yielded three known compounds, discorhabdins A (1.57), D (1.61) and 1.53, and one new pyrroloiminoquinone 3.3. The dual role of these metabolites as cytotoxic agents and pigments resulted in an attempt to relate the photochemical properties of these metabolites to their cytotoxicity. The pyrroloiminoquinone metabolites studied exhibited moderate singlet oxygen quantum yields, while three compounds (1.57, 4.1 and 4.2) were shown to be capable of producing radicals at a wavelength of 532 nm. The possibility of a correlation between the electrochemical properties and anti-cancer (HCT-116) activity of selected pyrroloiminoquinones was explored. A study of the oesophageal and ovarian cytotoxicities of two pyrroloiminoquinones (1.57 and 1.72), together with an investigation into the intercalation and topoisomerase I inhibitory activity of the bis-pyrroloiminoquinones (1.71, 1.72, 4.1 and 4.2), are presented.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2003
- Authors: Antunes, Edith Martins
- Date: 2003
- Subjects: Sponges -- South Africa PQQ (Biochemistry) Marine metabolites -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4340 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005001
- Description: An in depth chemical investigation of the major and minor pyrroloiminoquinone metabolites produced by four species of endemic South African Latrunculid sponges, collected from Algoa Bay and the Tsitsikamma Marine Reserve off the south eastern coast of South Africa, yielded eleven new and twelve known pyrroloiminoquinone metabolites. The structures of the new metabolites were determined using standard spectroscopic techniques. Tsitsikamma pedunculata was shown to contain 7,8-dehydro-3-dihydro-discorhabdin C (2.1), 14-bromo-7,8-dehydro-3-dihydro-discorhabdin C (2.2), discorhabdin S (2.3), 14-bromo-1-hydroxy-discorhabdin S (2.4), 1-bromo-2-hydroxy-4-debromo-discorhabdin S (2.5), and 2,4-debromo-3-dihydro-discorhabdin C (2.6), together with the known compounds 14-bromo-discorhabdin C (1.51), 14-bromo-3-dihydro-discorhabdin C (1.52) and 3-dihydro-discorhabdin C. The metabolites from T. pedunculata were characterised by the presence of a reduced C-3 carbonyl and bromination at C-14. Compounds isolated from a second Latrunculid sponge, Latrunculia lorii, ranged from a substituted bicyclic pyrrolecarboxylic acid, makaluvic acid A (1.47), to the simple tricyclic known pyrroloiminoquinones makaluvamine C (1.33) and damirone B (1.20) and the more complex discorhabdin D type metabolites, discorhabdin M (3.2), 1-amino discorhabdin D (3.3), 1-methoxy discorhabdin D (3.4) and 1-alanyl discorhabdin D (3.5). Discorhabdin G* (3.1) was also isolated and characterised. This is the first reported occurrence of the known compounds 1.20, 1.33 and 1.47 in a Latrunculia sponge. Discorhabdin and bis-pyrroloiminoquinone type compounds predominated in Tsitsikamma favus. Three known, tsitsikammamines A (1.71) and B (1.72), 1.52, and five new pyrroloiminoquinones, tsitsikammamine N-oxime (4.1), tsitsikammamine B N-oxime (4.2), 2.1, 2.4 and 2.6, were isolated from this sponge. A fourth Latrunculid sponge (Strongylodesma sp.) yielded three known compounds, discorhabdins A (1.57), D (1.61) and 1.53, and one new pyrroloiminoquinone 3.3. The dual role of these metabolites as cytotoxic agents and pigments resulted in an attempt to relate the photochemical properties of these metabolites to their cytotoxicity. The pyrroloiminoquinone metabolites studied exhibited moderate singlet oxygen quantum yields, while three compounds (1.57, 4.1 and 4.2) were shown to be capable of producing radicals at a wavelength of 532 nm. The possibility of a correlation between the electrochemical properties and anti-cancer (HCT-116) activity of selected pyrroloiminoquinones was explored. A study of the oesophageal and ovarian cytotoxicities of two pyrroloiminoquinones (1.57 and 1.72), together with an investigation into the intercalation and topoisomerase I inhibitory activity of the bis-pyrroloiminoquinones (1.71, 1.72, 4.1 and 4.2), are presented.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2003
Stability studies on some substituted aminobenzoic acids
- Authors: Rotich, Moses Kipngeno
- Date: 2003
- Subjects: Aminobenzoic acids Aminobenzoic acids -- Stability Salicylic acid
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4347 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005012
- Description: he thermal behaviour in the solid state of various substituted aminobenzoic acids (3-aminobenzoic acid (3-ABA), 4-aminobenzoic acid (4-ABA), 3-aminosalicylic acid (3-ASA), 4-aminosalicylic acid (4-ASA), and 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA), as well as the "parent" benzoic acid (BA) and salicylic acid (SA) as reference substances, and possible decomposition products: 2-aminophenol (2-AP), 3-aminophenol (3-AP) and 4-aminophenol (4-AP), has been examined. The various sets of isomers studied showed considerable and interesting differences. Most sublimed well before melting, generally with an increasing rate of mass loss beyond their very different melting points. The existence of ranges of isomers allows for the comparison of their behaviour, including such aspects as melting, vaporisation, and the influence of products on the course of decomposition of initially-solid reactants. The differences in behaviour of 4-ASA and 5-ASA were the most remarkable, with 5-ASA being far more stable and apparently not decarboxylating readily, while 4-ASA sublimed at temperatures below the melting point, becoming less stable and decarboxylating in the liquid form. There is also a marked difference in the thermal behaviour of 3-ASA, as compared with 4-ASA and 5-ASA. It decarboxylated at higher temperatures (260°C) than 4-ASA (150°C). The addition of the possible decomposition products to these compounds showed faster decomposition for 4-ASA mixed with 3-AP. The sodium salts of 3-ASA and 4-ASA decarboxylate while that of 5-ASA did not. Binary mixtures of the substances listed above with beta-cyclodextrin (BCD), hydroxypropylbeta-cyclodextrin (HPBCD) and gamma-cyclodextrin (GCD) were prepared (by simple physical mixing or by kneading with a solvent) and were then examined for possible interactions using DSC, TG-FTIR, HSM, XRD and NMR. Generally, kneaded mixtures showed greater changes in thermal behaviour from that of the individual components than the physical mixtures, but changes in the physical mixtures were also significant. Comparison of the effects of the different CDs on the thermal behaviour of individual ASA isomers showed that HPBCD has the greatest interaction with 3-ASA and 5-ASA, followed by GCD, while BCD generally showed the least interactions. For 4-ASA, the effect of GCD is more marked than for 3-ASA and 5-ASA. GCD has the largest molecular cavity.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2003
- Authors: Rotich, Moses Kipngeno
- Date: 2003
- Subjects: Aminobenzoic acids Aminobenzoic acids -- Stability Salicylic acid
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4347 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005012
- Description: he thermal behaviour in the solid state of various substituted aminobenzoic acids (3-aminobenzoic acid (3-ABA), 4-aminobenzoic acid (4-ABA), 3-aminosalicylic acid (3-ASA), 4-aminosalicylic acid (4-ASA), and 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA), as well as the "parent" benzoic acid (BA) and salicylic acid (SA) as reference substances, and possible decomposition products: 2-aminophenol (2-AP), 3-aminophenol (3-AP) and 4-aminophenol (4-AP), has been examined. The various sets of isomers studied showed considerable and interesting differences. Most sublimed well before melting, generally with an increasing rate of mass loss beyond their very different melting points. The existence of ranges of isomers allows for the comparison of their behaviour, including such aspects as melting, vaporisation, and the influence of products on the course of decomposition of initially-solid reactants. The differences in behaviour of 4-ASA and 5-ASA were the most remarkable, with 5-ASA being far more stable and apparently not decarboxylating readily, while 4-ASA sublimed at temperatures below the melting point, becoming less stable and decarboxylating in the liquid form. There is also a marked difference in the thermal behaviour of 3-ASA, as compared with 4-ASA and 5-ASA. It decarboxylated at higher temperatures (260°C) than 4-ASA (150°C). The addition of the possible decomposition products to these compounds showed faster decomposition for 4-ASA mixed with 3-AP. The sodium salts of 3-ASA and 4-ASA decarboxylate while that of 5-ASA did not. Binary mixtures of the substances listed above with beta-cyclodextrin (BCD), hydroxypropylbeta-cyclodextrin (HPBCD) and gamma-cyclodextrin (GCD) were prepared (by simple physical mixing or by kneading with a solvent) and were then examined for possible interactions using DSC, TG-FTIR, HSM, XRD and NMR. Generally, kneaded mixtures showed greater changes in thermal behaviour from that of the individual components than the physical mixtures, but changes in the physical mixtures were also significant. Comparison of the effects of the different CDs on the thermal behaviour of individual ASA isomers showed that HPBCD has the greatest interaction with 3-ASA and 5-ASA, followed by GCD, while BCD generally showed the least interactions. For 4-ASA, the effect of GCD is more marked than for 3-ASA and 5-ASA. GCD has the largest molecular cavity.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2003
Structural and synthetic investigations of diterpenoid natural products from southern African marine invertebrates
- Authors: Gray, Christopher Anthony
- Date: 2003
- Subjects: Ethyl acetoacetate Diterpenes Limpets -- South Africa Natural products -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4349 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005014
- Description: This thesis is divided into two parts. The first part (Chapter Two) documents a bioassay guided investigation of the ethyl acetate extracts of four marine invertebrates from Mozambique (an Irciniid sponge, a Haliclona sp. sponge, an ascidian tentatively identified as Diplosoma sp., and the soft coral Cladiella kashmani). Eight known compounds [ilimaquinone (2.1), renierone (2.7), N-formyl-1,2-dihydrorenierone (2.8), 1,6-dimethyl-7-methoxy-5,8-dihydroisoquinoline-5,8-dione (2.9), mimosamycin (2.10) 7Z-allylidene-5-hydroxy-7,7a-dihydro-2H-cyclopenta[b]pyran-6-one (2.11), flaccidoxide (2.18) and 11S,12S-epoxycembra-1Z,3E,7E-trien-14S-ol (2.19)] and a new diterpene [13S,14R-diacetoxy-11S,12R-epoxycembra-1Z,3E,7E-triene (2.20)] were isolated and identified using standard spectroscopic techniques. Anomalies in the published spectral data of 2.1 and 2.8 were exposed and corrected, and the absolute stereochemistry of the cembrane diterpenes 2.18 and 2.20 established using the modified Mosher’s method. The comparative activities of the nine natural products against four cancer cell lines (A549, LOX, OVCAR3, SNB19) are reported. The second part of the thesis (Chapter Three – Chapter Six) is concerned with an ecological, structural and synthetic study of diterpenes from the endemic South African pulmonate limpet Trimusculus costatus. Two new labdane diterpenes [6b,7a-diacetoxylabda-8,13E-dien-15-ol (3.10) and 2a,6b,7a-triacetoxylabda-8,13E-dien-15-ol (3.11)] were isolated from T. costatus and evaluated for anti-feeding activity against the common predatory fish Pomadasys commersonnii. A strategy for the semi-synthesis of 3.10 from rhinocerotinoic acid (4.14), a diterpene reportedly present in the ubiquitous South African shrub Elytropappus rhinocerotis, was devised in order to allow further bioactivity tests to be performed and unequivocally assign the unknown absolute stereochemistry of the T. costatus metabolites. Attempts to isolate rhinocerotinoic acid from local specimens of Elytropappus rhinocerotis were unsuccessful, and as the repetition of a published synthesis of 4.14 from (-)-sclareol (4.15) gave rhinocerotinoic acid in unacceptably low yields with poor stereoselectivity, an improved synthesis of 4.14 is presented. Comprehensive studies using hispanone (5.1) as a model compound showed that 6,7-dioxygenated labda-8-enes could be prepared from compounds possessing a 7-oxo-labda-8-ene skeleton with some degree of stereocontrol. In the process, fourteen new hispanone analogues were prepared and most of these were tested for activity in a suite of ten agro-chemical assays. The novel compound 7b-hydroxy-9a-carbonitrile-15,16-epoxylabda-13(16),14-dien-6-one (5.34) exhibited significant activity against the crop fungus Phytophthora infestans and is currently being subjected to further agro-chemical tests. Unfortunately, the results from the oxygenation study performed on the model compound 5.1 could not be directly extrapolated to rhinocerotinoic acid. Attempts to prepare the naturally occurring 3.10 from 4.14 via an alternative route were unsuccessful but yielded an analogue of 3.10 in which the substituents at C-6 and C-7 are in a diequatorial rather than a diaxial configuration.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2003
- Authors: Gray, Christopher Anthony
- Date: 2003
- Subjects: Ethyl acetoacetate Diterpenes Limpets -- South Africa Natural products -- South Africa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4349 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005014
- Description: This thesis is divided into two parts. The first part (Chapter Two) documents a bioassay guided investigation of the ethyl acetate extracts of four marine invertebrates from Mozambique (an Irciniid sponge, a Haliclona sp. sponge, an ascidian tentatively identified as Diplosoma sp., and the soft coral Cladiella kashmani). Eight known compounds [ilimaquinone (2.1), renierone (2.7), N-formyl-1,2-dihydrorenierone (2.8), 1,6-dimethyl-7-methoxy-5,8-dihydroisoquinoline-5,8-dione (2.9), mimosamycin (2.10) 7Z-allylidene-5-hydroxy-7,7a-dihydro-2H-cyclopenta[b]pyran-6-one (2.11), flaccidoxide (2.18) and 11S,12S-epoxycembra-1Z,3E,7E-trien-14S-ol (2.19)] and a new diterpene [13S,14R-diacetoxy-11S,12R-epoxycembra-1Z,3E,7E-triene (2.20)] were isolated and identified using standard spectroscopic techniques. Anomalies in the published spectral data of 2.1 and 2.8 were exposed and corrected, and the absolute stereochemistry of the cembrane diterpenes 2.18 and 2.20 established using the modified Mosher’s method. The comparative activities of the nine natural products against four cancer cell lines (A549, LOX, OVCAR3, SNB19) are reported. The second part of the thesis (Chapter Three – Chapter Six) is concerned with an ecological, structural and synthetic study of diterpenes from the endemic South African pulmonate limpet Trimusculus costatus. Two new labdane diterpenes [6b,7a-diacetoxylabda-8,13E-dien-15-ol (3.10) and 2a,6b,7a-triacetoxylabda-8,13E-dien-15-ol (3.11)] were isolated from T. costatus and evaluated for anti-feeding activity against the common predatory fish Pomadasys commersonnii. A strategy for the semi-synthesis of 3.10 from rhinocerotinoic acid (4.14), a diterpene reportedly present in the ubiquitous South African shrub Elytropappus rhinocerotis, was devised in order to allow further bioactivity tests to be performed and unequivocally assign the unknown absolute stereochemistry of the T. costatus metabolites. Attempts to isolate rhinocerotinoic acid from local specimens of Elytropappus rhinocerotis were unsuccessful, and as the repetition of a published synthesis of 4.14 from (-)-sclareol (4.15) gave rhinocerotinoic acid in unacceptably low yields with poor stereoselectivity, an improved synthesis of 4.14 is presented. Comprehensive studies using hispanone (5.1) as a model compound showed that 6,7-dioxygenated labda-8-enes could be prepared from compounds possessing a 7-oxo-labda-8-ene skeleton with some degree of stereocontrol. In the process, fourteen new hispanone analogues were prepared and most of these were tested for activity in a suite of ten agro-chemical assays. The novel compound 7b-hydroxy-9a-carbonitrile-15,16-epoxylabda-13(16),14-dien-6-one (5.34) exhibited significant activity against the crop fungus Phytophthora infestans and is currently being subjected to further agro-chemical tests. Unfortunately, the results from the oxygenation study performed on the model compound 5.1 could not be directly extrapolated to rhinocerotinoic acid. Attempts to prepare the naturally occurring 3.10 from 4.14 via an alternative route were unsuccessful but yielded an analogue of 3.10 in which the substituents at C-6 and C-7 are in a diequatorial rather than a diaxial configuration.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2003
Synthesis of zinc phthalocyanine derivatives for possible use in photodynamic therapy
- Authors: Matlaba, Pulane Maseleka
- Date: 2003
- Subjects: Photochemotherapy , Electrochemistry , Phthalocyanines , Zinc
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4374 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005039 , Photochemotherapy , Electrochemistry , Phthalocyanines , Zinc
- Description: The synthesis of symmetrically and unsymmetrically substituted zinc phthalocyanines (ZnPc) derivatives is done according to reported procedures. The unsymmetrical ZnPc derivatives are synthesized by ring expansion of sub-phthalocyanine complexes. Ring substitution is effected with tert-butyl phenol, naphthol, and hydroxybenzoic acid. Comparison of the redox potentials for the complexes substituted with varying numbers of tert-butyl phenol: 1, 2, 3, 6 and 8 show that the complex with the highest number of substituents are more difficult to oxidize and easier to reduce. Water soluble sulphonated ZnPc (ZnPcSn) was prepared. The possibility of using axial ligation to increase the solubility and the photochemical activity of sulphotnated ZnPc in aqueous solutions was investigated. Pyridine, aminopyridyl and bipyridyl were used as axial ligands. When bipyridyl was used as the axial ligand, solubility of the ZnPcSn increased, shown by the increase in the Q-band of the monomer species in solution and the singlet oxygen quantum yields was relatively higher than that of the unligated ZnPcSn. The singlet oxygen quantum yields by the various complexes in DMF using diphenylisobenzofuran as a chemical quencher for organic solvent were determined. Singlet oxygen quantum yields for the unsymmetrically ring substituted complexes range from 0.22 to 0.68. Photobleaching quantum yields are in the order of 10-5, which means that the complexes are relatively photostable.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2003
- Authors: Matlaba, Pulane Maseleka
- Date: 2003
- Subjects: Photochemotherapy , Electrochemistry , Phthalocyanines , Zinc
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4374 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005039 , Photochemotherapy , Electrochemistry , Phthalocyanines , Zinc
- Description: The synthesis of symmetrically and unsymmetrically substituted zinc phthalocyanines (ZnPc) derivatives is done according to reported procedures. The unsymmetrical ZnPc derivatives are synthesized by ring expansion of sub-phthalocyanine complexes. Ring substitution is effected with tert-butyl phenol, naphthol, and hydroxybenzoic acid. Comparison of the redox potentials for the complexes substituted with varying numbers of tert-butyl phenol: 1, 2, 3, 6 and 8 show that the complex with the highest number of substituents are more difficult to oxidize and easier to reduce. Water soluble sulphonated ZnPc (ZnPcSn) was prepared. The possibility of using axial ligation to increase the solubility and the photochemical activity of sulphotnated ZnPc in aqueous solutions was investigated. Pyridine, aminopyridyl and bipyridyl were used as axial ligands. When bipyridyl was used as the axial ligand, solubility of the ZnPcSn increased, shown by the increase in the Q-band of the monomer species in solution and the singlet oxygen quantum yields was relatively higher than that of the unligated ZnPcSn. The singlet oxygen quantum yields by the various complexes in DMF using diphenylisobenzofuran as a chemical quencher for organic solvent were determined. Singlet oxygen quantum yields for the unsymmetrically ring substituted complexes range from 0.22 to 0.68. Photobleaching quantum yields are in the order of 10-5, which means that the complexes are relatively photostable.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2003
Thermal and photostability studies of triprolidine hydrochloride and its mixtures with cyclodextrin and glucose
- Authors: Ndlebe, Vuyelwa Jacqueline
- Date: 2004
- Subjects: Antihistamines , Glucose , Cyclodextrins
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4387 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005052 , Antihistamines , Glucose , Cyclodextrins
- Description: Triprolidine hydrochloride (C₁₉H₂₂N₂.HCl.H₂O) (TPH) is a well-known antihistamine drug. It melts between 118°C and 122°C and the amount of water present is 4.5 mass percent. TPH is reported as being photosensitive and must be stored in sealed, light-tight containers. The thermal stabilities of TPH and of 1:1 molar and 1:1 mass ratio physical mixtures of TPH with beta-cyclodextrin (BCD) and with glucose have been examined using DSC, TG and TG-FTIR, complemented by X-ray powder diffraction (XRD) and infrared spectroscopic (IR) studies. Thermal studies of the solid TPH/BCD mixtures indicated that interaction between the components occurs and it is possible that the TPH molecule may be least partially accommodated in the cavity of the BCD host molecule. XRD results support this indication of inclusion. The results for mixtures of TPH/glucose also suggest that there is interaction between the two components. The results of molecular modelling suggest that TPH is most likely to be accommodated in the BCD cavity as a neutral triprolidine molecule with the toluene portion of the molecule entering first. There is also an indication that the Z-isomer should be accommodated slightly more readily than the E-isomer. Photostability studies were done by irradiating thin layers of solid samples of TPH and its mixtures for various times at 40°C using an Atlas Sun test CPS lamp operating at 550 W h m⁻². An analytical method using HPLC was developed and validated to determine the amounts of any photodegradants. DSC, TG, FTIR, XRD and IR were also used examine the irradiated samples. XRD results showed that changes in the TPH crystal structure occurred during irradiation and that these changes increased with the time of irradiation. Irradiation for 20 hours with UV or exposure to sunlight showed the presence of degradants. The results obtained illustrate the general stability of TPH, especially in the solid state. Although the potential for isomerization to the pharmaceutically inactive Z-isomer exists, this transformation would require extreme light conditions. The study has also shown TPH to be compatible with both glucose and BCD, which are potential excipients both in solid and liquid dosage forms. The presents of these excipients in dosage forms will thus not adversely affect the stability and the therapeutic efficacy of TPH. . An analytical method using HPLC was developed and validated to determine the amounts of any photodegradants. DSC, TG, FTIR, XRD and IR were also used examine the irradiated samples. XRD results showed that changes in the TPH crystal structure occurred during irradiation and that these changes increased with the time of irradiation. Irradiation for 20 hours with UV or exposure to sunlight showed the presence of degradants.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2004
- Authors: Ndlebe, Vuyelwa Jacqueline
- Date: 2004
- Subjects: Antihistamines , Glucose , Cyclodextrins
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4387 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005052 , Antihistamines , Glucose , Cyclodextrins
- Description: Triprolidine hydrochloride (C₁₉H₂₂N₂.HCl.H₂O) (TPH) is a well-known antihistamine drug. It melts between 118°C and 122°C and the amount of water present is 4.5 mass percent. TPH is reported as being photosensitive and must be stored in sealed, light-tight containers. The thermal stabilities of TPH and of 1:1 molar and 1:1 mass ratio physical mixtures of TPH with beta-cyclodextrin (BCD) and with glucose have been examined using DSC, TG and TG-FTIR, complemented by X-ray powder diffraction (XRD) and infrared spectroscopic (IR) studies. Thermal studies of the solid TPH/BCD mixtures indicated that interaction between the components occurs and it is possible that the TPH molecule may be least partially accommodated in the cavity of the BCD host molecule. XRD results support this indication of inclusion. The results for mixtures of TPH/glucose also suggest that there is interaction between the two components. The results of molecular modelling suggest that TPH is most likely to be accommodated in the BCD cavity as a neutral triprolidine molecule with the toluene portion of the molecule entering first. There is also an indication that the Z-isomer should be accommodated slightly more readily than the E-isomer. Photostability studies were done by irradiating thin layers of solid samples of TPH and its mixtures for various times at 40°C using an Atlas Sun test CPS lamp operating at 550 W h m⁻². An analytical method using HPLC was developed and validated to determine the amounts of any photodegradants. DSC, TG, FTIR, XRD and IR were also used examine the irradiated samples. XRD results showed that changes in the TPH crystal structure occurred during irradiation and that these changes increased with the time of irradiation. Irradiation for 20 hours with UV or exposure to sunlight showed the presence of degradants. The results obtained illustrate the general stability of TPH, especially in the solid state. Although the potential for isomerization to the pharmaceutically inactive Z-isomer exists, this transformation would require extreme light conditions. The study has also shown TPH to be compatible with both glucose and BCD, which are potential excipients both in solid and liquid dosage forms. The presents of these excipients in dosage forms will thus not adversely affect the stability and the therapeutic efficacy of TPH. . An analytical method using HPLC was developed and validated to determine the amounts of any photodegradants. DSC, TG, FTIR, XRD and IR were also used examine the irradiated samples. XRD results showed that changes in the TPH crystal structure occurred during irradiation and that these changes increased with the time of irradiation. Irradiation for 20 hours with UV or exposure to sunlight showed the presence of degradants.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2004
Bioactive 4-methoxypyrrolic natural products from two South African marine invertebrates
- Authors: Rapson, Trevor Douglas
- Date: 2005
- Subjects: Natural products -- South Africa , Marine invertebrates -- South Africa , Bryozoa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4412 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1006766 , Natural products -- South Africa , Marine invertebrates -- South Africa , Bryozoa
- Description: This thesis presents an investigation of the 4-methoxypyrrolic constituents of two South African marine invertebrates, the nudibranch Tambja capensis and the bryozoan Bugula dentata. Three known compounds tambjamine A (7), tambjamine E (13) and the tetrapyrrole (15) were isolated during this investigation. All three compounds were shown to be active against oesophageal cancer in accordance with the general anticancer and immunosuppressive properties observed for 4-methoxypyrrolic natural products. Tambjamine A (7), tambjamine E (13) and the tetrapyrrole (15), together with tambjamine K (21) and L (22) (previously isolated in our laboratory) were used as standards to quantitatively assess the presence of these tambjamines in T. capensis and B. dentata collected from three different sites along the South African coast. This study confirmed that B. dentata is the source of the 4-methoxypyrrolic natural products sequestered by T. capensis and eliminated the closely related bryozoan B. neritina as a source of these metabolites. The paucity of tambjamine L (21) and K (22) obtained in previous investigations of the sequestered chemistry of T. capensis prompted an attempt at the development of synthetic methodology that could be used to synthesize tambjamines in sufficient yield for in depth bioactivity studies. In order to by pass the extensively reported problems associated with the synthesis of this group of compound 3-methoxy-2-formylpyrrole (47), readily accessible from 3-methoxypyridine N-oxide (48), was used as the starting material in a singlet oxygen induced 2,2’ bipyrrole coupling reaction. Although 47 proved unreactive in this coupling reaction, when the N-Boc protected analogue of 47 was used, and the reaction worked up in the dark, the novel methyl 4-aza-5-oxo-6,6-di-(2-pyrrolyl)-2(Z)-hexenoate (57) was obtained in low yield. The physical properties of tambjamine (E) (13) and the tetrapyrrole (15) were investigated to further the understanding of the proposed oxidative DNA cleavage mechanism and to determine the potential of the 4-methoxypyrrolic natural products as photodynamic therapy agents.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2005
- Authors: Rapson, Trevor Douglas
- Date: 2005
- Subjects: Natural products -- South Africa , Marine invertebrates -- South Africa , Bryozoa
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4412 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1006766 , Natural products -- South Africa , Marine invertebrates -- South Africa , Bryozoa
- Description: This thesis presents an investigation of the 4-methoxypyrrolic constituents of two South African marine invertebrates, the nudibranch Tambja capensis and the bryozoan Bugula dentata. Three known compounds tambjamine A (7), tambjamine E (13) and the tetrapyrrole (15) were isolated during this investigation. All three compounds were shown to be active against oesophageal cancer in accordance with the general anticancer and immunosuppressive properties observed for 4-methoxypyrrolic natural products. Tambjamine A (7), tambjamine E (13) and the tetrapyrrole (15), together with tambjamine K (21) and L (22) (previously isolated in our laboratory) were used as standards to quantitatively assess the presence of these tambjamines in T. capensis and B. dentata collected from three different sites along the South African coast. This study confirmed that B. dentata is the source of the 4-methoxypyrrolic natural products sequestered by T. capensis and eliminated the closely related bryozoan B. neritina as a source of these metabolites. The paucity of tambjamine L (21) and K (22) obtained in previous investigations of the sequestered chemistry of T. capensis prompted an attempt at the development of synthetic methodology that could be used to synthesize tambjamines in sufficient yield for in depth bioactivity studies. In order to by pass the extensively reported problems associated with the synthesis of this group of compound 3-methoxy-2-formylpyrrole (47), readily accessible from 3-methoxypyridine N-oxide (48), was used as the starting material in a singlet oxygen induced 2,2’ bipyrrole coupling reaction. Although 47 proved unreactive in this coupling reaction, when the N-Boc protected analogue of 47 was used, and the reaction worked up in the dark, the novel methyl 4-aza-5-oxo-6,6-di-(2-pyrrolyl)-2(Z)-hexenoate (57) was obtained in low yield. The physical properties of tambjamine (E) (13) and the tetrapyrrole (15) were investigated to further the understanding of the proposed oxidative DNA cleavage mechanism and to determine the potential of the 4-methoxypyrrolic natural products as photodynamic therapy agents.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2005
Ligand isotope vibrational spectroscopic and DFT studies of Pt(II) and Cu(I) complexes
- Authors: Medina, Gerardo Juan
- Date: 2005
- Subjects: Ligands Spectrum analysis Vibrational spectra Infrared spectroscopy
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4324 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004982
- Description: Ligand-isotope labelling studies were performed on Zeise’s salt derivatives with pyridine N-oxide and quinoline N-oxide, their perdeuterated and O-18 isotopomers, C₂D₄ and ¹³CO, and the results of the vibrational analyses are reported. The isotopomers are modelled utilizing DFT calculations at the B3LYP level with the 6-31 G** basis set, and a pseudopotential level for the Pt atom. The calculated and observed structure and vibrational spectra correlate well. The crystal structures of [Pt(C₂2H₄)(pyO)Cl₂] and [Pt(CO)(quinO)Br₂] are reported. The frequency for the νPt-O vibration, ambiguously assigned in the literature, is here assigned unequivocally at 400 cm⁻¹. Previously observed, but inadequately described phenomena are addressed: the νN-O vibration in substituted quinoline N-oxides has been assigned previously at significantly different frequencies, depending on the nature of the substituent. This suggests that there is no specific mid-ir band associated with a high N-O character. A suitable explanation is presented for this phenomenon, showing that in low symmetry systems (eg. quinO) the N-O stretch is dispersed among several modes, whereas in high symmetry systems (eg. pyO) only a few limited modes have a high N-O character. A theoretical study of Cu(I) carbonyl compounds with macrocyclic ligands is presented. Local and global HSAB parameters applied to the donor and Cu atoms are used to explain the observed reactivities and the available spectroscopic data. Extended to [Cu(CO){H₂N(CH₂)[subscript n]NH(CH₂)[subscript m] NH₂}] BPh₄ (where n = 2, m = 2, 3 and n =3, m = 3, 4) and their -d₅ and ¹³CO isotopomers, subtle differences obtained experimentally for the CO stretching frequency in this series have been reproduced in the DFT calculations at the B3LYP level, using the 6-31 G* and 6-31 G** basis sets. Several properties (ligand pK[subscript a] values, νCO frequencies, etc.) correlate with some HSAB descriptors. Vibrational analyses are presented of Cu(I) carbonyl Schiff-base derivatives of N-Benzylidene-N’-[2-(benzyilidene-amino)-ethyl]-ethane-1,2-diamine, {2,2N3(C₆H₄R)₂}, and their -d₅ and ¹³CO isotopomers. The crystal structure of [Cu(CO){2,2N3(C₆H₅)₂}]BPh₄ is reported. From geometry optimizations and the HSAB descriptors, spectroscopic trends ([n]Cu-N and [nu]CO) are related to calculated global hardness and the Hammett substituent parameters, and are discussed in terms of σ-donation and π-backbonding of Cu- CO.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2005
- Authors: Medina, Gerardo Juan
- Date: 2005
- Subjects: Ligands Spectrum analysis Vibrational spectra Infrared spectroscopy
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4324 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1004982
- Description: Ligand-isotope labelling studies were performed on Zeise’s salt derivatives with pyridine N-oxide and quinoline N-oxide, their perdeuterated and O-18 isotopomers, C₂D₄ and ¹³CO, and the results of the vibrational analyses are reported. The isotopomers are modelled utilizing DFT calculations at the B3LYP level with the 6-31 G** basis set, and a pseudopotential level for the Pt atom. The calculated and observed structure and vibrational spectra correlate well. The crystal structures of [Pt(C₂2H₄)(pyO)Cl₂] and [Pt(CO)(quinO)Br₂] are reported. The frequency for the νPt-O vibration, ambiguously assigned in the literature, is here assigned unequivocally at 400 cm⁻¹. Previously observed, but inadequately described phenomena are addressed: the νN-O vibration in substituted quinoline N-oxides has been assigned previously at significantly different frequencies, depending on the nature of the substituent. This suggests that there is no specific mid-ir band associated with a high N-O character. A suitable explanation is presented for this phenomenon, showing that in low symmetry systems (eg. quinO) the N-O stretch is dispersed among several modes, whereas in high symmetry systems (eg. pyO) only a few limited modes have a high N-O character. A theoretical study of Cu(I) carbonyl compounds with macrocyclic ligands is presented. Local and global HSAB parameters applied to the donor and Cu atoms are used to explain the observed reactivities and the available spectroscopic data. Extended to [Cu(CO){H₂N(CH₂)[subscript n]NH(CH₂)[subscript m] NH₂}] BPh₄ (where n = 2, m = 2, 3 and n =3, m = 3, 4) and their -d₅ and ¹³CO isotopomers, subtle differences obtained experimentally for the CO stretching frequency in this series have been reproduced in the DFT calculations at the B3LYP level, using the 6-31 G* and 6-31 G** basis sets. Several properties (ligand pK[subscript a] values, νCO frequencies, etc.) correlate with some HSAB descriptors. Vibrational analyses are presented of Cu(I) carbonyl Schiff-base derivatives of N-Benzylidene-N’-[2-(benzyilidene-amino)-ethyl]-ethane-1,2-diamine, {2,2N3(C₆H₄R)₂}, and their -d₅ and ¹³CO isotopomers. The crystal structure of [Cu(CO){2,2N3(C₆H₅)₂}]BPh₄ is reported. From geometry optimizations and the HSAB descriptors, spectroscopic trends ([n]Cu-N and [nu]CO) are related to calculated global hardness and the Hammett substituent parameters, and are discussed in terms of σ-donation and π-backbonding of Cu- CO.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2005
Photophysical and photochemical studies of non-transition metal phthalocyanine derivatives
- Ogunsipe, Abimbola Olukayode
- Authors: Ogunsipe, Abimbola Olukayode
- Date: 2005
- Subjects: Photochemotherapy Phthalocyanines Spectrum analysis
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4445 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007721
- Description: A detailed photophysicochemical study of some non-transition metal (AI, Zn, Si, Ge, and Sn) metallophthalocyanine (MPc) derivatives is presented. The effects of substituents, central metal ions and solvents on the photophysical and photochemical properties are investigated and rationalized accordingly. The presence of peripheral substituents on the macrocycle enhances the yield of the triplet state. Near infra-red absorptions of the solvents reveal that solvents which absorb around 1100 nm and around 1270 nm, quench the triplet state of the MPc derivative and singlet oxygen, respectively. Although water has a high singlet oxygen quenching effect, the singlet oxygen quantum yield (Φ∆) value for sulphonated zinc phthalocyanine in water is still reasonably high at 0.48, which may provide an explanation for the efficient photosensitization by this molecule in photodynamic studies. The lowering of Φ∆ following protonation of the MPc macrocycle is attributed to the lowering of triplet energy to the level where energy transfer to ground state oxygen is no longer favourable. MPc inclusion complexes with cyclodextrins showed larger Φ∆ values when compared to the complexes before inclusion. Job's plots show that 2:1 and 4:1 (CD:MPc) complexes may be formed. Fluorescence quenching by electron donors and acceptors were analysed by StemVolmer relationship and the results used in determining fluorescence lifetimes of the complexes. Qualitative and quantitative interpretations of the interaction of sulphonated MPcs with bovine serum albumin (BSA) are provided in this thesis. 1:1 adducts were formed with BSA, but the binding feasibilities varied markedly. Spectral, photophysical and photochemical properties of the complexes are altered in the presence of BSA.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2005
- Authors: Ogunsipe, Abimbola Olukayode
- Date: 2005
- Subjects: Photochemotherapy Phthalocyanines Spectrum analysis
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4445 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007721
- Description: A detailed photophysicochemical study of some non-transition metal (AI, Zn, Si, Ge, and Sn) metallophthalocyanine (MPc) derivatives is presented. The effects of substituents, central metal ions and solvents on the photophysical and photochemical properties are investigated and rationalized accordingly. The presence of peripheral substituents on the macrocycle enhances the yield of the triplet state. Near infra-red absorptions of the solvents reveal that solvents which absorb around 1100 nm and around 1270 nm, quench the triplet state of the MPc derivative and singlet oxygen, respectively. Although water has a high singlet oxygen quenching effect, the singlet oxygen quantum yield (Φ∆) value for sulphonated zinc phthalocyanine in water is still reasonably high at 0.48, which may provide an explanation for the efficient photosensitization by this molecule in photodynamic studies. The lowering of Φ∆ following protonation of the MPc macrocycle is attributed to the lowering of triplet energy to the level where energy transfer to ground state oxygen is no longer favourable. MPc inclusion complexes with cyclodextrins showed larger Φ∆ values when compared to the complexes before inclusion. Job's plots show that 2:1 and 4:1 (CD:MPc) complexes may be formed. Fluorescence quenching by electron donors and acceptors were analysed by StemVolmer relationship and the results used in determining fluorescence lifetimes of the complexes. Qualitative and quantitative interpretations of the interaction of sulphonated MPcs with bovine serum albumin (BSA) are provided in this thesis. 1:1 adducts were formed with BSA, but the binding feasibilities varied markedly. Spectral, photophysical and photochemical properties of the complexes are altered in the presence of BSA.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2005
Synthesis and electrocatalytic properties of polymerizable metallophthalocyanines
- Authors: Obirai, Joseph Chinye
- Date: 2005
- Subjects: Phthalocyanines Electrochemistry
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4447 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007733
- Description: The syntheses, spectral and electrochemical characterization of new family electropolymerizable pyrrole, thiophene and mercaptopyrimidin substituted metallophthalocyanine (MPc) complexes are described. Tetraamino substituted chromium and manganese phthalocyanine complexes were also synthesized and characterized. The spectral and electrochemical results are comparable to literature reports. The complexes formed stable films when deposited on electrode surfaces. The MPc films were formed by electropolymerization, drop-dry method and self-assembling. Nickel hydroxide-like electrodes were formed by electrotransformation of nickel-tetra-4- (pyrrol-1-yl)phenoxy phthalocyanine polymer films to the corresponding PcNi-O-NiPc modified electrodes in alkaline solution. The thiophene, mercaptopyrimidine functionalized MPcs and amino group containing complexes formed good self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) on gold electrode. The electrode modification processes were reproducible. The conductivities of the electrode were dependent on the surface concentrations of the complexes as a function of electropolymerization scan numbers. The electrodes showed good catalytic responses toward L-cysteine, nitrite, nitric oxide (NO), glycine, phenol and its derivative and oxygen. The results also suggest that the presence of thio groups on the ring substituents lowers the oxidation potential of Lcysteine more compared to literature values. The stability of the amperometric responses toward the various analytes is used to diagnose the applicability of the materials for electroanalytical purposes. The limits of detection for L-cysteine, nitrite, NO and glycine were in the range of ~10⁻⁷ to 10⁻⁵ mol dm⁻³.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2005
- Authors: Obirai, Joseph Chinye
- Date: 2005
- Subjects: Phthalocyanines Electrochemistry
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4447 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007733
- Description: The syntheses, spectral and electrochemical characterization of new family electropolymerizable pyrrole, thiophene and mercaptopyrimidin substituted metallophthalocyanine (MPc) complexes are described. Tetraamino substituted chromium and manganese phthalocyanine complexes were also synthesized and characterized. The spectral and electrochemical results are comparable to literature reports. The complexes formed stable films when deposited on electrode surfaces. The MPc films were formed by electropolymerization, drop-dry method and self-assembling. Nickel hydroxide-like electrodes were formed by electrotransformation of nickel-tetra-4- (pyrrol-1-yl)phenoxy phthalocyanine polymer films to the corresponding PcNi-O-NiPc modified electrodes in alkaline solution. The thiophene, mercaptopyrimidine functionalized MPcs and amino group containing complexes formed good self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) on gold electrode. The electrode modification processes were reproducible. The conductivities of the electrode were dependent on the surface concentrations of the complexes as a function of electropolymerization scan numbers. The electrodes showed good catalytic responses toward L-cysteine, nitrite, nitric oxide (NO), glycine, phenol and its derivative and oxygen. The results also suggest that the presence of thio groups on the ring substituents lowers the oxidation potential of Lcysteine more compared to literature values. The stability of the amperometric responses toward the various analytes is used to diagnose the applicability of the materials for electroanalytical purposes. The limits of detection for L-cysteine, nitrite, NO and glycine were in the range of ~10⁻⁷ to 10⁻⁵ mol dm⁻³.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2005
Synthesis, photochemical and photophysical properties of phthalocyanine derivatives
- Authors: Maqanda, Weziwe Theorine
- Date: 2005 , 2013-06-18
- Subjects: Photochemotherapy , Phthalocyanines , Zinc , Magnesium
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4436 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007472 , Photochemotherapy , Phthalocyanines , Zinc , Magnesium
- Description: Substituted zinc and magnesium phthalocyanine and porphyrazine derivatives were synthesized according to the reported procedures. The magnesium and zinc phthalocyanine and porphyrazine derivatives were synthesized by ring enlargement of subphthalocyanine and statistical condensation of the two phthalonitrile derivatives. Characterization of the complexes involved the use of infrared spectroscopy, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, ultraviolet and visible spectroscopy, and Maldi-TOF spectroscopy (for selected compounds) and elemental analysis. Photochemical and photophysical properties of the complexes in non-aqueous solution was then investigated. Photobleaching quantum yields are in order of 10⁻⁵ indicating their relative photostability. Complexes containing more electron-donating substituents were more easily oxidized. For complexes 66 and 69 (as these complexes have the same number of substituents but differ in the metal center) photobleaching quantum yield for the ZincPc complex 69 was slightly less than that of the MgPc complex 66. Singlet oxygen quantum yields of the various complexes in DMSO using diphenylisobenzofuran (DPBF) as a quencher in organic solvents were determined. Singlet oxygen quantum yields of the complexes range from 0.23 to 0.67. High values of Φ[subscript]Δ ZnPc complexes was observed compared to the corresponding MgPc, complexes. This was evidenced by complexes 66 and 69 with Φ[subscript]Δ values of Φ[subscript]Δ = 0.26 and 0.40, respectively. Varying number of phenoxy substituents, complex 71 gave significantly large value of Φ[subscript]Δ compared to 70 (that is, the presence of more electron-donating substituted group, gave higher singlet oxygen quantum yields (0 .67 and 0.25 for 71 and 70 repectively). The triplet quantum yields and triplet lifetimes were determined by laser flash photolysis for selected compounds. The triplet quantum yields increase as the number of substituents increases e.g 68 > 67 > 66. Comparing porphyrazine complexes (63, 64 and 65), 63 with benzene attached to the ring, has higher triplet state lifetime (420 μs) compared to 64 and 65 containing long alkyl chain and tertbutyl substituents, 350 and 360 μs,respectively). The observed Φ[subscript]f values for 68 and 63 were quiet suprising, since low values are observed compared to the rest of the complexes (e.g 0.03 and 0.02 respectively). Although these values seem so low, they are sufficient for fluorescence imaging applications. The Φ[subscript]f values for the complexes under study are within the range reported for complexes currently used for PDT. , KMBT_363 , Adobe Acrobat 9.54 Paper Capture Plug-in
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2005
- Authors: Maqanda, Weziwe Theorine
- Date: 2005 , 2013-06-18
- Subjects: Photochemotherapy , Phthalocyanines , Zinc , Magnesium
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4436 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007472 , Photochemotherapy , Phthalocyanines , Zinc , Magnesium
- Description: Substituted zinc and magnesium phthalocyanine and porphyrazine derivatives were synthesized according to the reported procedures. The magnesium and zinc phthalocyanine and porphyrazine derivatives were synthesized by ring enlargement of subphthalocyanine and statistical condensation of the two phthalonitrile derivatives. Characterization of the complexes involved the use of infrared spectroscopy, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, ultraviolet and visible spectroscopy, and Maldi-TOF spectroscopy (for selected compounds) and elemental analysis. Photochemical and photophysical properties of the complexes in non-aqueous solution was then investigated. Photobleaching quantum yields are in order of 10⁻⁵ indicating their relative photostability. Complexes containing more electron-donating substituents were more easily oxidized. For complexes 66 and 69 (as these complexes have the same number of substituents but differ in the metal center) photobleaching quantum yield for the ZincPc complex 69 was slightly less than that of the MgPc complex 66. Singlet oxygen quantum yields of the various complexes in DMSO using diphenylisobenzofuran (DPBF) as a quencher in organic solvents were determined. Singlet oxygen quantum yields of the complexes range from 0.23 to 0.67. High values of Φ[subscript]Δ ZnPc complexes was observed compared to the corresponding MgPc, complexes. This was evidenced by complexes 66 and 69 with Φ[subscript]Δ values of Φ[subscript]Δ = 0.26 and 0.40, respectively. Varying number of phenoxy substituents, complex 71 gave significantly large value of Φ[subscript]Δ compared to 70 (that is, the presence of more electron-donating substituted group, gave higher singlet oxygen quantum yields (0 .67 and 0.25 for 71 and 70 repectively). The triplet quantum yields and triplet lifetimes were determined by laser flash photolysis for selected compounds. The triplet quantum yields increase as the number of substituents increases e.g 68 > 67 > 66. Comparing porphyrazine complexes (63, 64 and 65), 63 with benzene attached to the ring, has higher triplet state lifetime (420 μs) compared to 64 and 65 containing long alkyl chain and tertbutyl substituents, 350 and 360 μs,respectively). The observed Φ[subscript]f values for 68 and 63 were quiet suprising, since low values are observed compared to the rest of the complexes (e.g 0.03 and 0.02 respectively). Although these values seem so low, they are sufficient for fluorescence imaging applications. The Φ[subscript]f values for the complexes under study are within the range reported for complexes currently used for PDT. , KMBT_363 , Adobe Acrobat 9.54 Paper Capture Plug-in
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2005
Application of the Baylis-Hillman reaction in the preparation of quinoline derivatives
- Authors: Pakade, Vusumzi Emmanuel
- Date: 2006 , 2013-06-11
- Subjects: Heterocyclic compounds -- Derivatives , Quinoline
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4442 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007669 , Heterocyclic compounds -- Derivatives , Quinoline
- Description: The reaction of various 2-nitrobenzaldehyde derivatives with methyl vinyl ketone (MVK) in the presence of 1,4-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]octane (DABCO) has afforded the Baylis-Hillman adducts in moderate to good yield. Dissolution of the catalyst in the solvent before the addition of the aldehyde was observed to improve the yield. Reduction of the Baylis-Hillman adducts was effected by catalytic hydrogenation using a 10% palladium-on- carbon catalyst in ethanol to give quinoline and quinoline-N-oxide derivatives and, in some cases, acyclic reduction products. All products were characterised using NMR and, where appropriate, HRMS methods. Selected quinoline-N-oxides were successfully converted to their corresponding quinoline derivatives using phosphorus tribromide (PBr₃) and DMF as solvent. Conjugate addition of the benzylamine and piperidine nucleophiles to the Baylis-Hillman adducts was also investigated but proved problematic, with one of the substrates undergoing a retro-Baylis-Hillman reaction to afford the aldehyde in ca. 40% yield, but seemingly only traces of the required product. Perkin-type coupling of two 2-methylquinolines with benzaldehyde was successfully effected to afford the desired styrylquinoline derivatives confirming the potential of the Baylis-Hillman approach to the construction of the analogues of known HIV-1 integrase inhibitors. Three ¹³C NMR chemical shift prediction programmes, viz., Chem Window, neural network and HOSE (hierarchically ordered spherical description of environment) methods were applied to selected representative compounds prepared in the project. The results from the three programmes correlated reasonably well with the experimental carbon-13 chemical shift data for each of the selected compounds.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2006
- Authors: Pakade, Vusumzi Emmanuel
- Date: 2006 , 2013-06-11
- Subjects: Heterocyclic compounds -- Derivatives , Quinoline
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Masters , MSc
- Identifier: vital:4442 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1007669 , Heterocyclic compounds -- Derivatives , Quinoline
- Description: The reaction of various 2-nitrobenzaldehyde derivatives with methyl vinyl ketone (MVK) in the presence of 1,4-diazabicyclo[2.2.2]octane (DABCO) has afforded the Baylis-Hillman adducts in moderate to good yield. Dissolution of the catalyst in the solvent before the addition of the aldehyde was observed to improve the yield. Reduction of the Baylis-Hillman adducts was effected by catalytic hydrogenation using a 10% palladium-on- carbon catalyst in ethanol to give quinoline and quinoline-N-oxide derivatives and, in some cases, acyclic reduction products. All products were characterised using NMR and, where appropriate, HRMS methods. Selected quinoline-N-oxides were successfully converted to their corresponding quinoline derivatives using phosphorus tribromide (PBr₃) and DMF as solvent. Conjugate addition of the benzylamine and piperidine nucleophiles to the Baylis-Hillman adducts was also investigated but proved problematic, with one of the substrates undergoing a retro-Baylis-Hillman reaction to afford the aldehyde in ca. 40% yield, but seemingly only traces of the required product. Perkin-type coupling of two 2-methylquinolines with benzaldehyde was successfully effected to afford the desired styrylquinoline derivatives confirming the potential of the Baylis-Hillman approach to the construction of the analogues of known HIV-1 integrase inhibitors. Three ¹³C NMR chemical shift prediction programmes, viz., Chem Window, neural network and HOSE (hierarchically ordered spherical description of environment) methods were applied to selected representative compounds prepared in the project. The results from the three programmes correlated reasonably well with the experimental carbon-13 chemical shift data for each of the selected compounds.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2006
Metathesis catalysts : an integrated computational, mechanistic and synthetic study
- Authors: Sabbagh, Ingrid Theresa
- Date: 2006
- Subjects: Metathesis (Chemistry) Catalysis Metal catalysts Chemical kinetics
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4397 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1006208
- Description: An integrated approach to the design of potential rutheniun-based metathesis catalysts is described, in which closely defined synthetic forays provide the focus and rationale for detailed computational and mechanistic studies. The ground-state geometry of a 1st-generation Grubbs catalyst has been explored at the molecular mechanics, semi-empirical and DFT levels, and the resulting structures have been shown to compare favourably with literature data and with the structure of a known crystalline analogue. The DMol³ DFT code has also been shown to represent accurately both the geometry of the corresponding co-ordinatively unsaturated monophosphine derivative, and the ligand dissociation energy associated with its formation. A DFT free-energy profile of the degenerate metathesis of ethylene has been generated, using a truncated model of the 1st-generation Grubbs catalyst, permitting location, for the first time, of the three expected transition states and providing new information regarding the rate-determining step. DFT methods have been used to facilitate the design of a tridentate camphor-derived ligand for use in the construction of a novel Grubbs-type catalyst. The phosphine ligand dissociation energy of the putative catalyst and the ethylene metathesis energy profile of a truncated model have also been studies at the DFT level. The attempted synthesis of the proposed ligand proceeded via a novel 8-bromocamphoric anhydride intermediate and afforded several unexpected and novel products, including a cisfused γ-Iactone, and a bromo camphoric acid derivative. Single crystal X-ray analysis of the latter reveals a chiral, polymeric H-bonded packing arrangement, rendering it suitable for chiral inclusion studies. Computational methods, including the GAUSSIAN-based GIAO NMR prediction technique, were used to support the structural characterisation of the novel camphor derivatives. DFT-Ievel computational analysis of the C-8- and C-9 bromination of camphor has afforded theoretical insights which permit the reconciliation of two earlier empirical explanations regarding the regioselectivity of these transformations; moreover, the theoretical results suggest that a third, previously disregarded factor, plays a significant role. A coset analysis, in conjunction with DFT-Ievel energy profiling, has also been used to resolve conflicting opinions regarding the origin of the major byproduct. Computed electronic parameters (CEP's) have been calculated for the anionic ligands involved in a series of 2nd-generation Grubbs-Hoveyda-type catalysts, and used to explain some apparently anomalous trends in catalyst activity. A linear relationship between ligand CEP's and selected ¹H NMR chemical shifts has also been demonstrated and used to identify a transient ruthenium complex in solution. The ability of the malonate di-anion to bind to ruthenium in a bidentate manner has been explored and demonstrated, under suitable conditions. DFT methods have been used to design and assess the ruthenium-chelating potential of a novel tridentate malonate derivative. A synthetic pathway to this ligand has been designed and several novel heterocyclic intermediates have been isolated and characterised. An NMR-based kinetic study of the Grubbs-catalysed self-metathesis of l-octene has been completed, and the effects of temperature, concentration and solvent variations on the kinetic parameters have been studied. Application of the Guggenheim method and a simplified mechanistic model has permitted the accurate calculation of pseudorate constants for the initiation and, for the first time, the propagation phase of the reaction. Theoretical studies of this reaction at the DFT and molecular mechanics levels have been shown to support previous assumptions regarding the selectivity and temperature-dependence of metallacycle formation.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2006
- Authors: Sabbagh, Ingrid Theresa
- Date: 2006
- Subjects: Metathesis (Chemistry) Catalysis Metal catalysts Chemical kinetics
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , PhD
- Identifier: vital:4397 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1006208
- Description: An integrated approach to the design of potential rutheniun-based metathesis catalysts is described, in which closely defined synthetic forays provide the focus and rationale for detailed computational and mechanistic studies. The ground-state geometry of a 1st-generation Grubbs catalyst has been explored at the molecular mechanics, semi-empirical and DFT levels, and the resulting structures have been shown to compare favourably with literature data and with the structure of a known crystalline analogue. The DMol³ DFT code has also been shown to represent accurately both the geometry of the corresponding co-ordinatively unsaturated monophosphine derivative, and the ligand dissociation energy associated with its formation. A DFT free-energy profile of the degenerate metathesis of ethylene has been generated, using a truncated model of the 1st-generation Grubbs catalyst, permitting location, for the first time, of the three expected transition states and providing new information regarding the rate-determining step. DFT methods have been used to facilitate the design of a tridentate camphor-derived ligand for use in the construction of a novel Grubbs-type catalyst. The phosphine ligand dissociation energy of the putative catalyst and the ethylene metathesis energy profile of a truncated model have also been studies at the DFT level. The attempted synthesis of the proposed ligand proceeded via a novel 8-bromocamphoric anhydride intermediate and afforded several unexpected and novel products, including a cisfused γ-Iactone, and a bromo camphoric acid derivative. Single crystal X-ray analysis of the latter reveals a chiral, polymeric H-bonded packing arrangement, rendering it suitable for chiral inclusion studies. Computational methods, including the GAUSSIAN-based GIAO NMR prediction technique, were used to support the structural characterisation of the novel camphor derivatives. DFT-Ievel computational analysis of the C-8- and C-9 bromination of camphor has afforded theoretical insights which permit the reconciliation of two earlier empirical explanations regarding the regioselectivity of these transformations; moreover, the theoretical results suggest that a third, previously disregarded factor, plays a significant role. A coset analysis, in conjunction with DFT-Ievel energy profiling, has also been used to resolve conflicting opinions regarding the origin of the major byproduct. Computed electronic parameters (CEP's) have been calculated for the anionic ligands involved in a series of 2nd-generation Grubbs-Hoveyda-type catalysts, and used to explain some apparently anomalous trends in catalyst activity. A linear relationship between ligand CEP's and selected ¹H NMR chemical shifts has also been demonstrated and used to identify a transient ruthenium complex in solution. The ability of the malonate di-anion to bind to ruthenium in a bidentate manner has been explored and demonstrated, under suitable conditions. DFT methods have been used to design and assess the ruthenium-chelating potential of a novel tridentate malonate derivative. A synthetic pathway to this ligand has been designed and several novel heterocyclic intermediates have been isolated and characterised. An NMR-based kinetic study of the Grubbs-catalysed self-metathesis of l-octene has been completed, and the effects of temperature, concentration and solvent variations on the kinetic parameters have been studied. Application of the Guggenheim method and a simplified mechanistic model has permitted the accurate calculation of pseudorate constants for the initiation and, for the first time, the propagation phase of the reaction. Theoretical studies of this reaction at the DFT and molecular mechanics levels have been shown to support previous assumptions regarding the selectivity and temperature-dependence of metallacycle formation.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2006
Reactions in the solid state
- Authors: Brown, Michael Ewart
- Date: 2006
- Subjects: Solid state chemistry , Thermal analysis , Chemistry, Analytic
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , DSc
- Identifier: vital:4529 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1015762
- Description: I have chosen the title for this thesis, "Reactions in the Solid State", for two reasons: Firstly, it is broad enough to cover all of my areas of research, which have been: • Effects of irradiation on solids (PhD topic) • Silver refining (while at the Chamber of Mines) • Kinetics of decomposition of solids (with Dr A.K. Galwey and various others) • Techniques of thermal analysis • Pyrotechnic delay systems (with support from AECI Explosives) • Thermal and photostability of drugs (with Prof B.D. Glass) and, secondly, it was the title of the very successful book co-authored by Drs Andrew Galwey, David Dollimore and me. A large part of my research has been involved in the writing and editing of books, so these are covered in a separate commentary, while commentary on the more than 100 papers to which I have contributed forms the main part of this compilation. It is hoped that the electronic format will enable ready access of to all aspects of my research, including electronic versions of the original papers. The reader will need a copy of Adobe Acrobat Reader to access these.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2006
- Authors: Brown, Michael Ewart
- Date: 2006
- Subjects: Solid state chemistry , Thermal analysis , Chemistry, Analytic
- Language: English
- Type: Thesis , Doctoral , DSc
- Identifier: vital:4529 , http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1015762
- Description: I have chosen the title for this thesis, "Reactions in the Solid State", for two reasons: Firstly, it is broad enough to cover all of my areas of research, which have been: • Effects of irradiation on solids (PhD topic) • Silver refining (while at the Chamber of Mines) • Kinetics of decomposition of solids (with Dr A.K. Galwey and various others) • Techniques of thermal analysis • Pyrotechnic delay systems (with support from AECI Explosives) • Thermal and photostability of drugs (with Prof B.D. Glass) and, secondly, it was the title of the very successful book co-authored by Drs Andrew Galwey, David Dollimore and me. A large part of my research has been involved in the writing and editing of books, so these are covered in a separate commentary, while commentary on the more than 100 papers to which I have contributed forms the main part of this compilation. It is hoped that the electronic format will enable ready access of to all aspects of my research, including electronic versions of the original papers. The reader will need a copy of Adobe Acrobat Reader to access these.
- Full Text:
- Date Issued: 2006