The search for batteries with high energy density has highlighted lithium-rich manganese-based layered oxides due to their exceptionally high capacity. Although it is clear that both cationic and anionic redox are present in the charge compensation mechanism, the microstructural evolution of the Li2MnO3-like phase during anionic redox and its role in battery performance and structural stability are still not fully understood. Here, we systematically probe microstructural evolution using spatially resolved synchrotron X-ray measurements and reveal an underlying interaction between the Li2MnO3-like domains and bulk rhombohedral structure. Mn ion activation and a previously unobserved structural distortion are discovered at high voltages, and can be related to structural strain present in the Li2MnO3-like phase upon substantial lithium ion extraction. Moreover, we elucidate a correlation between this structural distortion and irreversible phase transitions by thermally perturbing delithiated samples. These insights highlight a pathway toward achieving high capacity cathode materials required for future commercial applications.The inherent atomic level structural control of synthetic chemistry enables the creation of qubits, the base units of a quantum information science system, designed for a target application. For quantum sensing applications, enabling optical read-out of spin in tunable molecular systems, akin to defect-based systems, would be transformative. This approach would bring together molecular tunability with optical read-out technology. In theory, nickel ions in octahedral symmetry meet all the criteria for optical readout of spin. Yet, to the best of our knowledge, there are no pulse EPR studies on Ni2+ molecules. We identified two compounds featuring highly symmetric Ni2+ centers, thereby engendering weak zero-field splitting to enable EPR addressability [Ni(phen)3](BF4)2 (1) and [Ni(pyr3)2](BF4)2 (2) (phen = 1,10-phenanthroline; pyr3 = tris-2-pyridyl-methane). Crucially, these complexes feature the requisite strong field ligands to enable emission for optical addressability. We extracted axial zero-field splitting parameters of D = +0.9 cm-1 and +2.7 cm-1 for 1 and 2, respectively, enabling pulse EPR measurements. Both compounds produce emission at λmax = 938-944 nm. The aggregate of these results expands the catalogue of qubit materials to Ni2+-based compounds and offers a future pathway for optical readout of these molecules.Despite their ubiquity, self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of thiols on coinage metals are difficult to study and are still not completely understood, particularly with respect to the nature of thiol-metal bonding. Recent advances in molecular electronics have highlighted this deficiency due to the sensitivity of tunneling charge-transport to the subtle differences in the overall composition of SAMs and the chemistry of their attachment to surfaces. These advances have also challenged assumptions about the spontaneous formation of covalent thiol-metal bonds. This paper describes a series of experiments that correlate changes in the physical properties of SAMs to photoelectron spectroscopy to unambiguously assign binding energies of noncovalent interactions to physisorbed disulfides. These disulfides can be converted to covalent metal-thiolate bonds by exposure to free thiols, leading to the remarkable observation of the total loss and recovery of length-dependent tunneling charge-transport. The identification and assignment of physisorbed disulfides solve a long-standing mystery and reveal new, dynamic properties in SAMs of thiols.The oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) is central in carbon-neutral energy devices. While platinum group materials have shown high activities for ORR, their practical uses are hampered by concerns over deactivation, slow kinetics, exorbitant cost, and scarce nature reserve. The low cost yet high tunability of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) provide a unique platform for tailoring their characteristic properties as new electrocatalysts. Herein, we report a new concept of design and present stable Zr-chain-based MOFs as efficient electrocatalysts for ORR. The strategy is based on using Zr-chains to promote high chemical and redox stability and, more importantly, tailor the immobilization and packing of redox active-sites at a density that is ideal to improve the reaction kinetics. The obtained new electrocatalyst, PCN-226, thereby shows high ORR activity. We further demonstrate PCN-226 as a promising electrode material for practical applications in rechargeable Zn-air batteries, with a high peak power density of 133 mW cm-2. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/VX-770.html Being one of the very few electrocatalytic MOFs for ORR, this work provides a new concept by designing chain-based structures to enrich the diversity of efficient electrocatalysts and MOFs.The first acceptor-free heavier germanium analogue of an acylium ion, [RGe(O)(NHC)2]X (R = MesTer = 2,6-(2,4,6-Me3C6H2)2C6H3; NHC = IMe4 = 1,3,4,5-tetramethylimidazol-2-ylidene; X = (Cl or BArF = (3,5-(CF3)2C6H5)4B), was isolated by reacting [RGe(NHC)2]X with N2O. Conversion of the germa-acylium ion to the first solely donor-stabilized germanium ester [(NHC)RGe(O)(OSiPh3)] and corresponding heavier analogues ([RGe(S)(NHC)2]X and [RGe(Se)(NHC)2]X) demonstrated its classical acylium-like behavior. The polarized terminal GeO bond in the germa-acylium ion was utilized to activate CO2 and silane, with the former found to be an example of reversible activation of CO2, thus mimicking the behavior of transition metal oxides. Furthermore, its transition-metal-like nature is demonstrated as it was found to be an active catalyst in both CO2 hydrosilylation and reductive N-functionalization of amines using CO2 as the C1 source. Mechanistic studies were undertaken both experimentally and computationally, which revealed that the reaction proceeds via an N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) siloxygermylene [(NHC)RGe(OSiHPh2)].The physics of proteins interacting with surfaces can differ significantly from those seen when the same proteins are free in bulk solution. As an example, we describe here the extent to which site-specific attachment to a chemically well-defined macroscopic surface alters the ability of several stabilizing and destabilizing cosolutes to modulate protein folding thermodynamics. We determined this via guanidinium denaturations performed in the presence of varying concentrations of cosolutes when proteins were either site-specifically attached to self-assembled monolayers on gold or free in bulk solution. Doing this we found that the extent to which guanidinium (a destabilizing Hofmeister cation), sulfate (a stabilizing Hofmeister anion), and urea (a neutral denaturant) alter the folding free energy remains indistinguishable whether proteins are surface-attached or free in bulk solution. In sharp contrast, however, neutral osmolytes sucrose and glycerol, which significantly stabilize proteins in bulk solution, do not measurably affect their stability when they are attached to a hydroxyl-terminated surface.