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Diffusion transfer process metal complexes

In the traditional silver halide dye-forming and dye-bleach processes, metal complex dyes are not normally used.62,63 However, metal complex azo dyes have been claimed15 for use in color diffusion transfer photography employing non-diffusible magenta dye-releasing dyes which, upon development of the silver halide layer, release a diffusible magenta dye (Scheme 7). [Pg.574]

Similar to those observed with the cysteine-modified electrode in Cu, Zn-SOD solution [98], CVs obtained at the MPA-modified Au electrode in phosphate buffer containing Fe-SOD or Mn-SOD at different potential scan rates (v) clearly show that the peak currents obtained for each SOD are linear with v (not v 1/2) over the potential scan range from 10 to 1000 mVs-1. This observation reveals that the electron transfer of the SODs is a surface-confined process and not a diffusion-controlled one. The previously observed cysteine-promoted surface-confined electron transfer process of Cu, Zn-SOD has been primarily elucidated based on the formation of a cysteine-bridged SOD-electrode complex oriented at an electrode-solution interface, which is expected to sufficiently facilitate a direct electron transfer between the metal active site in SOD and Au electrodes. Such a model appears to be also suitable for the SODs (i.e. Cu, Zn-SOD, Fe-SOD, and Mn-SOD) with MPA promoter. The so-called... [Pg.183]

An additional condition may be imposed, even when a cofactor-independent enzyme is used, if a mediator molecule is involved in the electron transfer process, as is often the case with oxidases. Laccases, for example, may employ small-molecule diffusible mediator compounds in their redox cycle to shuttle electrons between the redox center of the enzyme and the substrate or electrode (Scheme 3.1) [1, 2]. Similarly, certain dehydrogenases utiHze pyrroloquinoline quinone. In biocatalytic systems, mediators based on metal complexes are often used. [Pg.49]

Inner sphere oxidation-reduction reactions, which cannot be faster than ligand substitution reactions, are also unlikely to occur within the excited state lifetime. On the contrary, outer-sphere electron-transfer reactions, which only involve the transfer of one electron without any bond making or bond breaking processes, can be very fast (even diffusion controlled) and can certainly occur within the excited state lifetime of many transition metal complexes. In agreement with these expectations, no example of inner-sphere excited state electron-transfer reaction has yet been reported, whereas a great number of outer-sphere excited-state electron-transfer reactions have been shown to occur, as we well see later. [Pg.9]

It is important to note for the following discussion that in electron-transfer processes the reductant s highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) should combine with the oxidant s lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) of the same symmetry to ensure proper overlap of reductant and oxidant orbitals to initiate electron transfer. That is, electron transfer will occur readily from n to n orbitals on different species or from a to a but not n to a in a linear arrangement of atoms [e.g., A-B-C in Appendix I (following references at the end of this chapter)]. In the case of outer-sphere electron-transfer processes, n- to 7r-electron transfers are favored over a to a because (1) such transfers do not require major changes in bond lengths in the precursor complex (lower activation energy) and (2) the n orbitals are more diffuse or better exposed than a orbitals. This process is well documented for transition metals. For inner-sphere electron-transfer processes, both n- to n- and a- to n-electron transfers are most favored (Purcell and Kotz, 1980). [Pg.174]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2 , Pg.30 , Pg.35 ]




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