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SFB 749:  Dynamics and Intermediates of Molecular Transformations

Subject Area Chemistry
Biology
Physics
Term from 2007 to 2019
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 27112786
 
The research theme of Collaborative Research Centre is located right at the border between contemporary organic chemistry and physics. Research within the Collaborative Research Centreinvolves the synthesis of molecules which act as probes, as experiments, for the analysis of mechanistic questions. The aim of the research is neither the synthetic route nor the optimization of special properties of the prepared molecules. Instead, the molecules that are prepared are molecular probes that enable to gain deeper insight into the chemical reactivity. The molecules are for example fragments of natural products or model substances with which the Collaborative Research Centre studies problems associated with enzyme chemistry, metal organic chemistry or ionic and radical reactions in solution. Isotopically labelled compounds are for example used to study unknown reaction cascades partially directly in life cells. In certain cases time resolved methods are employed to gain insight into the dynamics of special reactions. Time resolved UV-Vis and CD-spectroscopy are used to investigate fast photo-induced switching reactions or to learn about the involvement of solvent molecules in reactions and electron transfer processes. These spectroscopic methods allow the Collaborative Research Centre to study short lived reaction intermediates and the dynamics of organic reactions. In order to interpret and rationalize the spectroscopic data, Collaborative Research Centre uses theoretical chemistry at all levels. Collaborative Research Centre studies reactions which are currently of particular interest such as i) questions that are associated with the mechanisms and selectivity of suicide inhibitors in enzyme active sites, ii) mechanistic questions associated with enzymatic radical reactions, iii) mechanistic investigations of modern and novel metal organic reactions and iv) the development of new photo switches in connection with questions associated with the reactivity of organic molecules in excited states.
DFG Programme Collaborative Research Centres

Completed projects

Participating University Technische Universität München (TUM)
 
 

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