Publications by authors named "Ribal Jabbour"

Dynamic Nuclear Polarization (DNP) is a technique that leverages the quantum sensing capability of electron spins to enhance the sensitivity of nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) signals, especially for insensitive samples. Glassing agents play a crucial role in the DNP process by facilitating the transfer of polarization from the unpaired electron spins to the nuclear spins along with cryoprotection of biomolecules. DNPjuice comprising of glycerol-d/DO/HO has been extensively used for this purpose over the past two decades.

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A Surface OrganoMetallic Chemistry (SOMC) approach is used to prepare a novel hafnium-iridium catalyst immobilized on silica, HfIr/SiO, featuring well-defined [≡SiOHf(CH Bu)(μ-H)IrCp*] surface sites. Unlike the monometallic analogous materials Hf/SiO and Ir/SiO, which promote n-pentane deuterogenolysis through C-C bond scission, we demonstrate that under the same experimental conditions (1 bar D, 250 °C, 3 h, 0.5 mol %), the heterobimetallic catalyst HfIr/SiO is highly efficient and selective for the perdeuteration of alkanes with D, exemplified on n-pentane, without substantial deuterogenolysis (<2 % at 95 % conversion).

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Dynamic nuclear polarization can improve the sensitivity of magic-angle spinning solid-state NMR experiments by 1-2 orders of magnitude. In aqueous media, experiments are usually performed using the so-called DNP juice, a glycerol-/DO/HO mixture (60/30/10, v/v/v) that can form a homogeneous glass at cryogenic temperatures. This acts as a cryoprotectant and prevents phase separation of the paramagnetic polarizing agents (PAs) that are added to the mixture to provide the source of electron spin polarization required for DNP.

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The catalytic activity of multifunctional, microporous materials is directly linked to the spatial arrangement of their structural building blocks. Despite great achievements in the design and incorporation of isolated catalytically active metal complexes within such materials, a detailed understanding of their atomic-level structure and the local environment of the active species remains a fundamental challenge, especially when these latter are hosted in non-crystalline organic polymers. Here, we show that by combining computational chemistry with pair distribution function analysis, Xe NMR, and Dynamic Nuclear Polarization enhanced NMR spectroscopy, a very accurate description of the molecular structure and confining surroundings of a catalytically active Rh-based organometallic complex incorporated inside the cavity of amorphous bipyridine-based porous polymers is obtained.

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N-Heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) are widely used ligands in transition metal catalysis. Notably, they are increasingly encountered in heterogeneous systems. While a detailed knowledge of the possibly multiple metal environments would be essential to understand the activity of metal-NHC-based heterogeneous catalysts, only a few techniques currently have the ability to describe with atomic-resolution structures dispersed on a solid support.

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The structural characterization of supported molecular catalysts is challenging due to the low density of active sites and the presence of several organic/organometallic surface groups resulting from the often complex surface chemistry associated with support functionalization. Here, we provide a complete atomic-scale description of all surface sites in an N-heterocyclic carbene based on iridium and supported on silica, at all stages of its synthesis. By combining a suitable isotope labeling strategy with the implementation of multinuclear dipolar recoupling DNP-enhanced NMR experiments, the 3D structure of the Ir-NHC sites, as well as that of the synthesis intermediates were determined.

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The molecular level characterization of heterogeneous catalysts is challenging due to the low concentration of surface sites and the lack of techniques that can selectively probe the surface of a heterogeneous material. Here, we report the joint application of room temperature proton-detected NMR spectroscopy under fast magic angle spinning (MAS) and dynamic nuclear polarization surface enhanced NMR spectroscopy (DNP-SENS), to obtain the Pt solid-state NMR spectra of a prototypical example of highly dispersed Pt sites (single site or single atom), here prepared via surface organometallic chemistry, by grafting [(COD)Pt(OSi(OBu))] (, COD = 1,5-cyclooctadiene) on partially dehydroxylated silica (). Compound has a Pt loading of 3.

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The addition of aluminum-based adjuvants in vaccines enhances the immune response to antigens. The strength of antigen adsorption on adjuvant gels is known to modulate vaccine efficacy. However, a detailed understanding of the mechanisms of interaction between aluminum gels and antigens is still missing.

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Dynamic Nuclear Polarization (DNP) has recently emerged as a key method to increase the sensitivity of solid-state NMR spectroscopy under Magic Angle Spinning (MAS). While efficient binitroxide polarizing agents such as AMUPol have been developed for MAS DNP NMR at magnetic fields up to 9.4 T, their performance drops rapidly at higher fields due to the unfavorable field dependence of the cross-effect (CE) mechanism and AMUPol-like radicals were so far disregarded in the context of the development of polarizing agents for very high-field DNP.

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Article Synopsis
  • A novel tantalum/iridium hydrido complex, [{Ta(CHBu)}{IrH(Cp*)}], was created using a unique alkane elimination method, leading to the discovery of a short metal-metal bond.
  • This complex was then used to produce silica-supported low-coordinate heterobimetallic species through surface organometallic chemistry (SOMC), which avoids unwanted dimerization seen in solution chemistry.
  • The resulting Ta/Ir species show significantly improved catalytic activity in H/D exchange reactions, achieving high turnover numbers and frequencies under mild conditions without additives.
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