Asymmetric hydrogenation of conjugated enones is one of the most efficient and straightforward methods to prepare optically active ketones. In this study, chiral bidentate Ir-N,P complexes were utilized to access these scaffolds for ketones bearing the stereogenic center at both the α- and β-positions. Excellent enantiomeric excesses, of up to 99%, were obtained, accompanied with good to high isolated yields. Challenging dialkyl substituted substrates, which are difficult to hydrogenate with satisfactory chiral induction, were hydrogenated in a highly enantioselective fashion.The field of micromotors has been growing exponentially with increased emphasis on biomedical applications, with various in vivo demonstrations of targeted drug delivery, biosensing, and gene delivery, among others. In parallel, these micromotors have been recently used for probing the rheological properties of both intra- and extracellular environments. Here, we demonstrate the application of magnetic micromotors for investigation of rheological properties of human blood. While there are several techniques to sense mechanical properties of blood, such as deformability of the red blood cells, this is the first experimental observation of using micromotors for these biophysical investigations. We hope that this will lead to a better understanding of the nature of interactions of micromotors with biological systems and expand the scope of micromotors for probing other related systems, such as interstitial fluids and other complex biological fluids.We previously described BCLConf, a knowledge-based conformation sampling algorithm utilizing a small molecule fragment rotamer library derived from the Cambridge Structural Database (CSD, license required), as a component of the BioChemical Library (BCL) cheminformatics toolkit. This paper describes substantial improvements made to the BCLConf algorithm and a transition to a rotamer library derived from molecules in the Crystallography Open Database (COD, no license required). We demonstrate the performance of the new BCLConf on native conformer recovery in the Platinum dataset of high-quality protein-ligand complexes. This set of 2859 structures has previously been used to assess the performance of over a dozen conformer generation algorithms, including the Conformator, Balloon, RDKit DG, ETKDG, Confab, Frog2, MultiConf-DOCK, CSD conformer generator, ConfGenX-OPSL3 force field, Omega, excalc, iCon, and MOE. These benchmarks suggest that the CSD conformer generator is at the state of the art of reported conformer generators. Our results indicate that the improved BCLConf significantly outperforms the CSD conformer generation algorithm at binding conformer recovery across a range of ensemble sizes and with similarly fast rates of conformer generation. BCLConf is now distributed with the COD-derived rotamer library and is free for academic use. The BCL can be downloaded at http//meilerlab.org/bclcommons for Windows, Linux, or Apple operating systems. BCLConf can now also be accessed via webserver at http//meilerlab.org/bclconf.UV-vis absorption and magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectra of octakis thioethyl "free base" porphyrazine H2OESPz and its metal complexes MOESPz (M = Mg, Zn, Ni, Pd, Cu), as well as of [MnOESPz(SH)] were recorded. In the last case, MCD proved to have quite good sensitivity to the coordination of this complex with 1-methylimidazole (1-mim) in benzene. Time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) calculations were carried out for the considered porphyrazine complexes and showed good performance on comparing with MCD and UV-vis experimental spectra, even in the open-shell Cu and Mn cases. Calculations accounted for the red shift observed in the thioalkyl compounds and allowed us to reveal the role of sulfur atoms in spectroscopically relevant molecular orbitals and to highlight the importance of the conformations of the thioethyl external groups. Calculated MCD spectra of [MnOESPz(SH)] confirm the Mn(III) → Mn(II) redox process, which leads to the [Mn(OESPz)(1-mim)2] species, and the relevance of the spin state for MCD is revealed.Stimulating tunable room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) is still a challenge in photochromic systems, which is vital for multifunctional coordination materials. Herein, we synthesized two new photochromic chain complexes through self-assembly of the nonphotochromic 1,3,5-tris(4-pyridyl)benzene ligand, diphosphonate, and Ln(III) ions (1 for Ln(III) = Dy and 2 for Ln(III) = Gd). Both compounds showed fast photoresponses with the color turning from yellow to dark gray with a reversible decoloration by heating or storage in the dark. The electron transfer photochromic behavior with the generated stable radicals was further confirmed by the room-temperature UV-vis and electron paramagnetic resonance spectra. Furthermore, via tuning the generation and disappearance of stable radicals, reversible room-temperature fluorescence and phosphorescence for both compounds were switched by light irradiation and a thermal treatment, with an enhanced intensity for RTP and a decrease in fluorescence during the duration of Xe-lamp light irradiation. This work provides a new strategy that photogenerated radicals could promote and enhance RTP properties in functional materials.To meet various requirements for electron transfer (ET) at the substrate/electrolyte interface, mixed redox couples assigned to different functions have been applied. While in all studies the mixed redox species had different redox potentials, such redox systems inherently lose energy by ET between the species. We report interfacial ET kinetics employing mixed-ligand electrolytes based on Co2+/3+ complexes with mixtures of dimethyl- and dinonyl-substituted bipyridyl (bpy) ligands with the same redox potential. The ET rates of the mixed electrolytes decrease with the increasing ratio of the dinonyl-bpy ligand, with substrates adsorbed by molecules without alkyl chains due to a blocking effect. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/amg-perk-44.html However, when the molecules on substrates have four alkyl chains, the ET rate between the molecules and the electrolytes with increasing ratio of the dinonyl-bpy ligand is enhanced. The substrate-dependent behavior is explained by selective intermolecular interactions. The results open design flexibility for mixed-redox electrolyte systems to control ET at multi-substrate interfaces and provide a novel means to tune ET rates simultaneously for various ET processes in a system without losing energy by the ET.