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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(17): 11622-11633, 2024 May 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38639470

RESUMO

The design of efficient electrocatalysts is limited by scaling relationships governing trade-offs between thermodynamic and kinetic performance metrics. This ″iron law″ of electrocatalysis arises from synthetic design strategies, where structural alterations to a catalyst must balance nucleophilic versus electrophilic character. Efforts to circumvent this fundamental impasse have focused on bioinspired applications of extended coordination spheres and charged sites proximal to a catalytic center. Herein, we report evidence for breaking a molecular scaling relationship involving electrocatalysis of the oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) by leveraging ligand design. We achieve this using a binuclear catalyst (a diiron porphyrin), featuring a macrocyclic ligand with extended electronic conjugation. This ligand motif delocalizes electrons across the molecular scaffold, improving the catalyst's nucleophilic and electrophilic character. As a result, our binuclear catalyst exhibits low overpotential and high catalytic turnover frequency, breaking the traditional trade-off between these two metrics.

2.
IUCrJ ; 11(Pt 1): 7-8, 2024 Jan 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38131390

RESUMO

This commentary describes a novel method for serial electron diffraction data collection in electron crystallography, utilizing a scanning transmission electron microscope to rapidly obtain patterns with low radiation dose. This approach, demonstrated with zeolite samples, has the potential to provide highly automated and rapid structures from nanocrystalline materials.

3.
J Struct Biol X ; 9: 100102, 2024 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38962493

RESUMO

Microcrystal electron diffraction (MicroED) has emerged as a powerful technique for unraveling molecular structures from microcrystals too small for X-ray diffraction. However, a significant hurdle arises with plate-like crystals that consistently orient themselves flat on the electron microscopy grid. If the normal of the plate correlates with the axes of the crystal lattice, the crystal orientations accessible for measurement are restricted because the crystal cannot be arbitrarily rotated. This limits the information that can be acquired, resulting in a missing cone of information. We recently introduced a novel crystallization strategy called suspended drop crystallization and proposed that crystals in a suspended drop could effectively address the challenge of preferred crystal orientation. Here we demonstrate the success of the suspended drop approach in eliminating the missing cone in two samples that crystallize as thin plates: bovine liver catalase and the SARS­CoV­2 main protease (Mpro). This innovative solution proves indispensable for crystals exhibiting systematic preferred orientations, unlocking new possibilities for structure determination by MicroED.

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