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Author

Iwao Tabushi

Other affiliations: Kyushu University
Bio: Iwao Tabushi is an academic researcher from Kyoto University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cyclodextrin & Electron transfer. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 260 publications receiving 5122 citations. Previous affiliations of Iwao Tabushi include Kyushu University.


Papers
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TL;DR: As a channel forming compound, β-cyclodextrin having four hydrophobic tails and three metal binding sites, 1, [A,C,D,F,T,6-(6-n-butyrylamino-nhexylsulfenyl)-β-cyclodesxtrin] was synthesized as a "half channel".

179 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the rate constants for formation and dissociation of the l-bromonaphthalene/s-cyclodextrin complex were evaluated from an analysis of the dependence of phosphorescence lifetimes on nitrite concentration.
Abstract: — The phosphorescence of 1-bromonaphthalene and 1-chloronaphthalene is readily observable in nitrogen purged aqueous solutions containing s-cyclodextrin. Addition of acetonitrile increases both the phosphorescence intensity and lifetime. The quenching of halonaphthalene phosphorescence in aqueous solution by nitrite is substantially inhibited upon addition of s-cyclodextrin, as a result of a guest-host complex. The rate constants for formation and dissociation of the l-bromonaphthalene/s-cyclodextrin complex are evaluated from an analysis of the dependence of phosphorescence lifetimes on nitrite concentration.

152 citations


Cited by
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TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the same alkylhydridoplatinum(IV) complex is the intermediate in the reaction of ethane with platinum(II) σ-complexes.
Abstract: ion. The oxidative addition mechanism was originally proposed22i because of the lack of a strong rate dependence on polar factors and on the acidity of the medium. Later, however, the electrophilic substitution mechanism also was proposed. Recently, the oxidative addition mechanism was confirmed by investigations into the decomposition and protonolysis of alkylplatinum complexes, which are the reverse of alkane activation. There are two routes which operate in the decomposition of the dimethylplatinum(IV) complex Cs2Pt(CH3)2Cl4. The first route leads to chloride-induced reductive elimination and produces methyl chloride and methane. The second route leads to the formation of ethane. There is strong kinetic evidence that the ethane is produced by the decomposition of an ethylhydridoplatinum(IV) complex formed from the initial dimethylplatinum(IV) complex. In D2O-DCl, the ethane which is formed contains several D atoms and has practically the same multiple exchange parameter and distribution as does an ethane which has undergone platinum(II)-catalyzed H-D exchange with D2O. Moreover, ethyl chloride is formed competitively with H-D exchange in the presence of platinum(IV). From the principle of microscopic reversibility it follows that the same ethylhydridoplatinum(IV) complex is the intermediate in the reaction of ethane with platinum(II). Important results were obtained by Labinger and Bercaw62c in the investigation of the protonolysis mechanism of several alkylplatinum(II) complexes at low temperatures. These reactions are important because they could model the microscopic reverse of C-H activation by platinum(II) complexes. Alkylhydridoplatinum(IV) complexes were observed as intermediates in certain cases, such as when the complex (tmeda)Pt(CH2Ph)Cl or (tmeda)PtMe2 (tmeda ) N,N,N′,N′-tetramethylenediamine) was treated with HCl in CD2Cl2 or CD3OD, respectively. In some cases H-D exchange took place between the methyl groups on platinum and the, CD3OD prior to methane loss. On the basis of the kinetic results, a common mechanism was proposed to operate in all the reactions: (1) protonation of Pt(II) to generate an alkylhydridoplatinum(IV) intermediate, (2) dissociation of solvent or chloride to generate a cationic, fivecoordinate platinum(IV) species, (3) reductive C-H bond formation, producing a platinum(II) alkane σ-complex, and (4) loss of the alkane either through an associative or dissociative substitution pathway. These results implicate the presence of both alkane σ-complexes and alkylhydridoplatinum(IV) complexes as intermediates in the Pt(II)-induced C-H activation reactions. Thus, the first step in the alkane activation reaction is formation of a σ-complex with the alkane, which then undergoes oxidative addition to produce an alkylhydrido complex. Reversible interconversion of these intermediates, together with reversible deprotonation of the alkylhydridoplatinum(IV) complexes, leads to multiple H-D exchange

2,505 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The effects of substitution on various cyclodextrins properties and the forces involved in the drug-cyclodextrin complex formation are discussed, and methods which are useful in the optimization of complexation efficacy are reviewed.

2,124 citations