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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(11): 7140-7145, 2024 Mar 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38466365

RESUMO

Molecular photocatalysis has shown tremendous success in sustainable energy and chemical synthesis. However, visualizing the transient open-shell intermediates in photocatalysis is a significant and long-standing challenge. By employing our recently developed innovative time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance technique, we directly observed all radicals and radical ions involved in the photocatalytic addition of pempidine to tert-butyl acrylate. The full picture of the photocatalytic cycle is vividly illustrated by the fine structures, chemical kinetics, and dynamic spin polarization of all open-shell intermediates directly observed in this prototypical system. Given the universality of this methodology, we believe it greatly empowers the research paradigm of direct observation in both photocatalysis and radical chemistry.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(11): 7791-7802, 2024 Mar 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38461434

RESUMO

The development of new synthetic methods for B-H bond activation has been an important research area in boron cluster chemistry, which may provide opportunities to broaden the application scope of boron clusters. Herein, we present a new reaction strategy for the direct site-selective B-H functionalization of nido-carboranes initiated by photoinduced cage activation via a noncovalent cage···π interaction. As a result, the nido-carborane cage radical is generated through a single electron transfer from the 3D nido-carborane cage to a 2D photocatalyst upon irradiation with green light. The resulting transient nido-carborane cage radical could be directly probed by an advanced time-resolved EPR technique. In air, the subsequent transformations of the active nido-carborane cage radical have led to efficient and selective B-N, B-S, and B-Se couplings in the presence of N-heterocycles, imines, thioethers, thioamides, and selenium ethers. This protocol also facilitates both the late-stage modification of drugs and the synthesis of nido-carborane-based drug candidates for boron neutron capture therapy (BNCT).

3.
Acc Chem Res ; 55(9): 1290-1300, 2022 05 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35414170

RESUMO

Cyclometalated iridium(III) complexes are frequently employed in organic light emitting diodes, and they are popular photocatalysts for solar energy conversion and synthetic organic chemistry. They luminesce from redox-active excited states that can have high triplet energies and long lifetimes, making them well suited for energy transfer and photoredox catalysis. Homoleptic tris(cyclometalated) iridium(III) complexes are typically very hydrophobic and do not dissolve well in polar solvents, somewhat limiting their application scope. We developed a family of water-soluble sulfonate-decorated variants with tailored redox potentials and excited-state energies to address several key challenges in aqueous photochemistry.First, we aimed at combining enzyme with photoredox catalysis to synthesize enantioenriched products in a cyclic reaction network. Since the employed biocatalyst operates best in aqueous solution, a water-soluble photocatalyst was needed. A new tris(cyclometalated) iridium(III) complex provided enough reducing power for the photochemical reduction of imines to racemic mixtures of amines and furthermore was compatible with monoamine oxidase (MAO-N-9), which deracemized this mixture through a kinetic resolution of the racemic amine via oxidation to the corresponding imine. This process led to the accumulation of the unreactive amine enantiomer over time. In subsequent studies, we discovered that the same iridium(III) complex photoionizes under intense irradiation to give hydrated electrons as a result of consecutive two-photon excitation. With visible light as energy input, hydrated electrons become available in a catalytic fashion, thereby allowing the comparatively mild reduction of substrates that would typically only be reactive under harsher conditions. Finally, we became interested in photochemical upconversion in aqueous solution, for which it was desirable to obtain water-soluble iridium(III) compounds with very high triplet excited-state energies. This goal was achieved through improved ligand design and ultimately enabled sensitized triplet-triplet annihilation upconversion unusually far into the ultraviolet spectral range.Studies of photoredox catalysis, energy transfer catalysis, and photochemical upconversion typically rely on the use of organic solvents. Water could potentially be an attractive alternative in many cases, but photocatalyst development lags somewhat behind for aqueous solution compared to organic solvent. The purpose of this Account is to provide an overview of the breadth of new research perspectives that emerged from the development of water-soluble fac-[Ir(ppy)]3 complexes (ppy = 2-phenylpyridine) with sulfonated ligands. We hope to inspire the use of some of these or related coordination compounds in aqueous photochemistry and to stimulate further conceptual developments at the interfaces of coordination chemistry, photophysics, biocatalysis, and sustainable chemistry.


Assuntos
Irídio , Compostos Organometálicos , Aminas , Elétrons , Transferência de Energia , Irídio/química , Ligantes , Compostos Organometálicos/química , Fotoquímica , Solventes , Água
4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(5): 2122-2127, 2019 02 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30672694

RESUMO

The hydrated electron is experiencing a renaissance as a superreductant in lab-scale reductions driven by light, both for the degradation of recalcitrant pollutants and for challenging chemical reactions. However, examples for its sustainable generation under mild conditions are scarce. By combining a water-soluble Ir catalyst with unique photochemical properties and an inexpensive diode laser as light source, we produce hydrated electrons through a two-photon mechanism previously thought to be unimportant for laboratory applications. Adding cheap sacrificial donors turns our new hydrated electron source into a catalytic cycle operating in pure water over a wide pH range. Not only is that catalytic system capable of detoxifying a chlorinated model compound with turnover numbers of up to 200, but it can also be employed for two novel hydrated electron reactions, namely, the decomposition of quaternary ammonium compounds and the conversion of trifluoromethyl to difluoromethyl groups.

5.
Chemistry ; 25(72): 16748-16754, 2019 Dec 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31674695

RESUMO

Atropisomeric 1,2-naphthylene scaffolds provide access to donor-acceptor compounds with helical oligomer-based bridges, and transient absorption studies revealed a highly unusual dependence of the electron-transfer rate on oligomer length, which is due to their well-defined secondary structure. Close noncovalent intramolecular contacts enable shortcuts for electron transfer that would otherwise have to occur over longer distances along covalent pathways, reminiscent of the behavior seen for certain proteins. The simplistic picture of tube-like electron transfer can describe this superposition of different pathways including both the covalent helical backbone, as well as noncovalent contacts, contrasting the wire-like behavior reported many times before for more conventional molecular bridges. The exquisite control over the molecular architecture, achievable with the configurationally stable and topologically defined 1,2-naphthylene-based scaffolds, is of key importance for the tube-like electron transfer behavior. Our insights are relevant for the emerging field of multidimensional electron transfer and for possible future applications in molecular electronics.

6.
J Phys Chem A ; 123(1): 96-102, 2019 Jan 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30592217

RESUMO

Photoinduced electron transfer across rigid rod-like oligo- p-phenylenes has been thoroughly investigated in the past, but their o-connected counterparts are yet entirely unexplored in this regard. We report on three molecular dyads comprised of a triarylamine donor and a Ru(bpy)32+ (bpy =2,2'-bipyridine) acceptor connected covalently by 2 to 6 o-phenylene units. Pulsed excitation of the Ru(II) sensitizer at 532 nm leads to the rapid formation of oxidized triarylamine and reduced ruthenium complex via intramolecular electron transfer. The subsequent thermal reverse charge-shift reaction to reinstate the electronic ground-state occurs on a time scale of 120-220 ns in deaerated CH3CN at 25 °C. The conformational flexibility of the o-phenylene bridges causes multiexponential transient absorption kinetics for the photoinduced forward process, but the thermal reverse reaction produces single-exponential transient absorption decays. The key finding is that the flexible o-phenylene bridges permit rapid formation of photoproducts storing ca. 1.7 eV of energy with lifetimes on the order of hundreds of nanoseconds, similar to what is possible with rigid rod-like donor-acceptor compounds. Thus, the conformational flexibility of the o-phenylenes represents no disadvantage with regard to the photoproduct lifetimes, and this is relevant in the greater context of light-to-chemical energy conversion.

7.
Chemistry ; 24(53): 14084-14087, 2018 Sep 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30091488

RESUMO

Photoinduced electron transfer in donor-sensitizer-acceptor compounds usually leads to simple electron-hole pairs, and photoredox catalysis typically relies on single-electron transfer (SET) events. This work reports on a molecular triad able to accumulate two electrons on a central dibenzo[1,2]dithiin moiety flanked by two peripheral RuII photosensitizers. Under continuous illumination, the doubly reduced form of the dibenzo[1,2]dithiin undergoes thiolate-disulfide exchange with an aliphatic disulfide substrate, thereby acting as a two-electron catalyst after two initial SET events with triethylamine at the RuII sensitizers. The use of a relatively simple triad for coupling two separate SET processes to a subsequent two-electron reduction is an important conceptual advance from photoinduced SET and light-driven charge accumulation towards multi-electron photoredox catalysis. This is relevant for artificial photosynthesis and light-driven multi-electron chemistry in general.

8.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 57(9): 2469-2473, 2018 02 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29240269

RESUMO

The excitation of a RuII photosensitizer in the presence of ascorbic acid leads to the reduction of iminium ions to electron-rich α-aminoalkyl radical intermediates, which are rapidly converted into reductive amination products by thiol-mediated hydrogen atom transfer (HAT). As a result, the reductive amination of carbonyl compounds with amines by photoredox catalysis proceeds in good to excellent yields and with broad substrate scope and good functional group tolerance. The three key features of this work are 1) the rapid interception of electron-rich α-aminoalkyl radical intermediates by polarity-matched HAT in a photoredox reaction, 2) the method of reductive amination by photoredox catalysis itself, and 3) the application of this new method for temporally and spatially controlled reactions on a solid support, as demonstrated by the attachment of a fluorescent dye on an activated cellulose support by photoredox-catalyzed reductive amination.

9.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 57(36): 11688-11691, 2018 Sep 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29985557

RESUMO

Two phenothiazine (PTZ) moieties were connected via naphthalene spacers to a central arene to result in stacked PTZ-arene-PTZ structure elements. Benzene and tetramethoxybenzene units served as central arenes mediating electronic communication between the two PTZ units. Based on cyclic voltammetry, UV/Vis-NIR absorption, EPR spectroscopy, and computational studies, the one-electron oxidized forms of the resulting compounds behave as class II organic mixed-valence species in which the unpaired electron is partially delocalized over both PTZ units. The barrier for intramolecular electron transfer depends on the nature of the central arene sandwiched between the two PTZ moieties. These are the first examples of rigid organic mixed-valent triple-decker compounds with possible electron-transfer pathways directly across a stacked structure, and they illustrate the potential of oligo-naphthalene building blocks for long-range electron transfer and a future molecular electronics technology.

10.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(2): 985-992, 2017 01 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28054486

RESUMO

A meta-terphenyl unit was substituted with an isocyanide group on each of its two terminal aryls to afford a bidentate chelating ligand (CNtBuAr3NC) that is able to stabilize chromium in its zerovalent oxidation state. The homoleptic Cr(CNtBuAr3NC)3 complex luminesces in solution at room temperature, and its excited-state lifetime (2.2 ns in deaerated THF at 20 °C) is nearly 2 orders of magnitude longer than the current record lifetime for isoelectronic Fe(II) complexes, which are of significant interest as earth-abundant sensitizers in dye-sensitized solar cells. Due to its chelating ligands, Cr(CNtBuAr3NC)3 is more robust than Cr(0) complexes with carbonyl or monodentate isocyanides, manifesting in comparatively slow photodegradation. In the presence of excess anthracene in solution, efficient energy transfer and subsequent triplet-triplet annihilation upconversion is observed. With an excited-state oxidation potential of -2.43 V vs Fc+/Fc, the Cr(0) complex is a very strong photoreductant. The findings presented herein are relevant for replacement of precious metals in dye-sensitized solar cells and in luminescent devices by earth-abundant elements.

11.
Inorg Chem ; 56(5): 2432-2439, 2017 Mar 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28230991

RESUMO

In a molecular triad comprised of a central naphthalene diimide (NDI) unit flanked by two [Ru(bpy)3]2+ (bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine) sensitizers, NDI2- is formed after irradiation with visible light in deaerated CH3CN in the presence of excess triethylamine. The mechanism for this electron accumulation involves a combination of photoinduced and thermal elementary steps. In a structurally related molecular pentad with two peripheral triarylamine (TAA) electron donors attached covalently to a central [Ru(bpy)3]2+-NDI-[Ru(bpy)3]2+ core but no sacrificial reagents present, photoexcitation only leads to NDI- (and TAA+), whereas NDI2- is unattainable due to rapid electron transfer events counteracting charge accumulation. For solar energy conversion, this finding means that fully integrated systems with covalently linked photosensitizers and catalysts are not necessarily superior to multicomponent systems, because the fully integrated systems can suffer from rapid undesired electron transfer events that impede multielectron reactions on the catalyst.

12.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 55(37): 11247-50, 2016 09 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27461452

RESUMO

We report the first homoleptic Mo(0) complex with bidentate isocyanide ligands, which exhibits metal-to-ligand charge transfer ((3) MLCT) luminescence with quantum yields and lifetimes similar to Ru(bpy)3 (2+) (bpy=2,2'-bipyridine). This Mo(0) complex is a very strong photoreductant, which manifests in its capability to reduce acetophenone with essentially diffusion-limited kinetics as shown by time-resolved laser spectroscopy. The application potential of this complex for photoredox catalysis was demonstrated by the rearrangement of an acyl cyclopropane to a 2,3-dihydrofuran, which is a reaction that requires a reduction potential so negative that even the well-known and strongly reducing Ir(2-phenylpyridine)3 photosensitizer cannot catalyze it. Our study thus provides the proof-of-concept for the use of chelating isocyanides to obtain Mo(0) complexes with long-lived (3) MLCT excited states that are applicable to unusually challenging photoredox chemistry.

13.
J Am Chem Soc ; 136(32): 11499-512, 2014 Aug 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25053179

RESUMO

Kinetics and mechanisms of the reactions of p-quinone, 2,5-dichloro-p-quinone, 2,3,4,5-tetrachloro-p-quinone (chloranil), 2,3,4,5-tetrafluoro-p-quinone (fluoranil), and 3,4,5,6-tetrachloro-o-quinone with π-nucleophiles (siloxyalkenes, enamines) and amines have been investigated. Products arising from nucleophilic attack at all conceivable sites, that is, at C and O of the carbonyl groups (pathways a, b) as well as at halogenated and nonhalogenated conjugate positions (pathways c, d), were observed. The partial rate constants for the C-attack pathways (a, c, d), which are derived from the photometrically determined second-order rate constants and the product ratios followed the linear free energy relationship log k (20 °C) = sN(E + N) ( Mayr , H.; J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2001 , 123 , 9500 - 9512 ). It was, therefore, possible to calculate the electrophilicity parameters E of the different positions of the quinones from log k (20 °C) and the N and sN parameters of the nucleophilic reaction partners, which have previously been derived from their reactions with benzhydrylium ions. Almost all rate constants for the C-attack pathways (a, c, d) were considerably larger than those calculated for the corresponding SET processes, indicating the operation of polar mechanisms. SET mechanisms may only account for the formation of the products formed via O-attack. With the E parameters determined in this work, it is now possible to predict rate constants for the reactions of these quinones with a large variety of nucleophiles and, thus, envisage unprecedented reactions of quinones.

14.
J Am Chem Soc ; 136(39): 13863-73, 2014 Oct 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25196576

RESUMO

The kinetics of the hydride abstractions by 2,3-dichloro-5,6-dicyano-p-benzoquinone (DDQ) from 13 C-H hydride donors (acyclic 1,4-dienes, cyclohexa-1,4-dienes, dihydropyridines), tributylstannane, triphenylstannane, and five borane complexes (amine-boranes, carbene-boranes) have been studied photometrically in dichloromethane solution at 20 °C. Analysis of the resulting second-order rate constants by the correlation log k2(20 °C) = sN(E + N) ( J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2001 , 123 , 9500 ) showed that the hydride abstractions from the C-H donors on one side and the Sn-H and B-H hydride donors on the other follow separate correlations, indicating different mechanisms for the two reaction series. The interpretation that the C-H donors transfer hydrogen to the carbonyl oxygen of DDQ while Sn-H and B-H hydride donors transfer hydride to a cyano-substituted carbon of DDQ is supported by quantum-chemical intrinsic reaction coordinate calculations and isotope labeling experiments of the reactions of D8-cyclohexa-1,4-diene, Bu3SnD, and pyridine·BD3 with 2,5-dichloro-p-benzoquinone. The second-order rate constants of the reactions of tributylstannane with different quinones correlate linearly with the electrophilicity parameters E of the quinones, which have previously been derived from the reactions of quinones with π-nucleophiles. The fact that the reactions of Bu3SnH with quinones and benzhydrylium ions are on the same log k2 vs E (electrophilicity) correlation shows that both reaction series proceed by the same mechanism and illustrates the general significance of the reactivity parameters E, N, and sN for predicting rates of polar organic reactions.


Assuntos
Quinonas/química , Cinética , Estrutura Molecular , Teoria Quântica
15.
J Am Chem Soc ; 135(33): 12377-87, 2013 Aug 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23937562

RESUMO

Reactions of 2,3-dichloro-5,6-dicyano-p-benzoquinone (DDQ) with silyl enol ethers, silyl ketene acetals, allylsilanes, enamino esters, and diazomethanes have been studied in CH3CN and CH2Cl2 solutions. The second-order rate constants for C attack at DDQ (log k(C)) correlate linearly with the nucleophile-specific parameters N and s(N) and are 2-5 orders of magnitude larger than expected for SET processes, which strongly supports the polar mechanism for C-C bond formation. The second-order rate constants for O attack agree well with the calculated rate constants for rate-determining single electron transfer (SET). As a radical clock experiment ruled out outer sphere electron transfer, an inner sphere electron transfer mechanism is suggested for O attack.

16.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 94(8)2023 Aug 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37540121

RESUMO

A time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance (TREPR) method with 40 ns time resolution and a high sensitivity suitable for the detection of short-lived radicals under thermal equilibrium is developed. The key is the introduction of a new detection technique named ultrawide single sideband phase sensitive detection (U-PSD) to the conventional continuous-wave EPR, which remarkably enhanced the sensitivity for the detection of broadband transient signals compared with the direct detection protocol. By repeatedly triggering a transient kinetic event f(t) (e.g., by laser flash photolysis) under a 100 kHz magnetic field modulation with precise phase control, this technique can build an ultrawide single sideband modulated signal. After single sideband demodulation, the flicker noise-suppressed signal f(t) with wide bandwidth is recovered. A U-PSD TREPR spectrometer prototype has been built, which integrated timing sequence control, laser flash excitation, data acquisition systems, and the U-PSD algorithm with a conventional continuous-wave EPR. It exhibited excellent performance in monitoring a model transient radical system, laser flash photolysis of benzophenone in isopropanol. Both the intense chemically induced dynamic electron polarization signals and the much weaker thermal equilibrium EPR signals of the generated acetone ketyl radical and benzophenone ketyl radical were clearly observed within a wide timescale ranging from sub-microsecond to milliseconds. This prototype validated the feasibility of the U-PSD technique and demonstrated its superior performance in studying complex photochemical systems containing various transient radicals, which complements the established TREPR techniques and provides a powerful tool for deep mechanistic understandings, such as in photoredox catalysis and artificial photosynthesis.

17.
Nat Commun ; 14(1): 3927, 2023 Jul 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37400475

RESUMO

The 3rd-Gen OLED materials employing thermally-activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) combine advantages of first two for high-efficiency and low-cost devices. Though urgently needed, blue TADF emitters have not met stability requirement for applications. It is essential to elucidate the degradation mechanism and identify the tailored descriptor for material stability and device lifetime. Here, via in-material chemistry, we demonstrate chemical degradation of TADF materials involves critical role of bond cleavage at triplet state rather than singlet, and disclose the difference between bond dissociation energy of fragile bonds and first triplet state energy (BDE-ET1) is linearly correlated with logarithm of reported device lifetime for various blue TADF emitters. This significant quantitative correlation strongly reveals the degradation mechanism of TADF materials have general characteristic in essence and BDE-ET1 could be the shared "longevity gene". Our findings provide a critical molecular descriptor for high-throughput-virtual-screening and rational design to unlock the full potential of TADF materials and devices.

18.
IEEE Trans Haptics ; PP2022 Dec 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37015395

RESUMO

Electroadhesion displays provide controllable friction between the fingertip and screen. However, the change of contact condition causes variability in the produced friction. In this paper, we demonstrate a novel method for closed-loop control using current regulation to improve the precision of the electroadhesion force regardless of contact conditions. The current sensor obtains static current (when the finger is stationary) and dynamic current (when the finger is sliding). The static current is used to estimate the apparent contact area. The estimated contact area modulates the driving voltage along with the dynamic current. To verify the proposed method, we measured electroadhesion forces under open-loop control and closed-loop control. The benefit of using this closed-loop control is shown by comparing the relative static error of open-loop control and closed-loop control. The relative error reductions achieved over 34 % (max 112 %) for four changing contact conditions.

19.
J Colloid Interface Sci ; 626: 68-76, 2022 Nov 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35780553

RESUMO

Electrochemical water splitting is a promising approach to produce hydrogen gas, but sluggish four-electron transfer of the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) severely limits the overall energy conversion efficiency of water splitting. Herein, as an excellent OER electrocatalyst, a technique of synthesizing Fe doped CoNiSe2 nanosheet (Fe-CoNiSe2) whole series using CoFe prussian blue analog produced by Co-ZIF-L reaction as a template is proposed here. The introduction of iron ions promotes the redistribution of the cobalt-nickel charge density, which enhances the OER kinetics. In view of the abovementioned points, Fe-CoNiSe2/NF has excellent activity, electrocatalytic properties and excellent stability in alkaline media, which only demands a lower overpotential of 244 mV and 271 mV to deliver a current density of 10 mA cm-2 and 50 mA cm-2, respectively. The material also exhibits excellent stability for at least 24 h during the OER process. This work may provide some new insights into the assembly of advanced and highly-active materials for a variety of other energy conversion applications.

20.
Dalton Trans ; 51(45): 17283-17291, 2022 Nov 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36317563

RESUMO

Developing efficient, environmentally friendly and cost-effective non-precious metal electrocatalysts for the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) is essential to alleviate the energy crisis and environmental pollution. Herein, we report a simple and practical method to prepare non-precious metal catalysts, namely iron-modulated Ni3S2 (Fe-Ni3S2/NF) on nickel foam, by growing a Ni-MOF directly on 3D porous conductive nickel foam, followed by the formation of Ni-MOF-based Prussian blue analogs (Ni-MOF@PBA) via in situ cation exchange reactions, which are further sulfidated to iron-modulated Ni3S2. Based on a series of characterization results, it is confirmed that iron acts as a modulator at the Ni active site, leading to electron depletion, thereby modulating the electron spin state and optimizing the binding energy of key reaction intermediates, resulting in highly exposed active sites and acceleration of OER reaction kinetics. The synthesized Fe-Ni3S2/NF exhibits excellent activity in alkaline media, which needs overpotentials of only 232 mV and 287 mV to drive current densities of 10 mA cm-2 and 50 mA cm-2, respectively. Additionally, Fe-Ni3S2/NF exhibits excellent stability for at least 24 h during the OER process. This work presents a rational design and synthesis of transition metal-based catalysts with nanocone structures, providing a new strategy for assembling advanced materials and insights for exploring various energy storage and conversion systems.

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