202 research outputs found
Unprecedented Rearrangement of 2-(2-Aminoethyl)-1-aryl-3,4-dihydropyrazino[1,2-<i>b</i>]indazole-2-ium 6-oxides to 2,3-Dihydro-1<i>H</i>-imidazo[1,2-<i>b</i>]indazoles
Easily accessible 2-(2-aminoethyl)-1-aryl-3,4-dihydropyrazino[1,2-b]indazole-2-ium 6-oxides rearranged to 2,3-dihydro-1H-imidazo[1,2-b]indazoles under mild conditions. The rearrangement appeared to be general, tolerated a wide range of functional groups, and provided access to an as yet unexplored class of heterocycles. Herein we report the characterization of these heterocycles
Unprecedented Rearrangement of 2-(2-Aminoethyl)-1-aryl-3,4-dihydropyrazino[1,2-<i>b</i>]indazole-2-ium 6-oxides to 2,3-Dihydro-1<i>H</i>-imidazo[1,2-<i>b</i>]indazoles
Easily accessible 2-(2-aminoethyl)-1-aryl-3,4-dihydropyrazino[1,2-b]indazole-2-ium 6-oxides rearranged to 2,3-dihydro-1H-imidazo[1,2-b]indazoles under mild conditions. The rearrangement appeared to be general, tolerated a wide range of functional groups, and provided access to an as yet unexplored class of heterocycles. Herein we report the characterization of these heterocycles
The Lanthanide Contraction Revisited
A complete, isostructural series of complexes with LaâLu (except Pm) with the ligand TREN-1,2-HOIQO has been synthesized and structurally characterized by means of single-crystal X-ray analysis.
All complexes are 1D-polymeric species in the solid state, with the lanthanide being in an eight-coordinate,
distorted trigonal-dodecahedral environment with a donor set of eight unique oxygen atoms. This series
constitutes the first complete set of isostructural complexes from LaâLu (without Pm) with a ligand of denticity
greater than two. The geometric arrangement of the chelating moieties slightly deviates across the lanthanide
series, as analyzed by a shape parameter metric based on the comparison of the dihedral angles along all
edges of the coordination polyhedron. The apparent lanthanide contraction in the individual LnâO bond
lengths deviates considerably from the expected quadratic decrease that was found previously in a number
of complexes with ligands of low denticity. The sum of all bond lengths around the trivalent metal cation,
however, is more regular, showing an almost ideal quadratic behavior across the entire series. The quadratic
nature of the lanthanide contraction is derived theoretically from Slater's model for the calculation of ionic
radii. In addition, the sum of all distances along the edges of the coordination polyhedron show exactly the
same quadratic dependence as the LnâX bond lengths. The universal validity of this coordination sphere
contraction, concomitant with the quadratic decrease in LnâX bond lengths, was confirmed by reexamination
of four other, previously published series of lanthanide complexes. Owing to the importance of multidentate
ligands for the chelation of rare-earth metals, this result provides a significant advance for the prediction
and rationalization of the geometric features of the corresponding lanthanide complexes, with great potential
impact for all aspects of lanthanide coordination
Stabilization and Extraction of Fluoride Anion Using a Tetralactam Receptor
A neutral
tetralactam macrocycle was prepared in a few minutes
in one pot and at high concentration using commercially available
starting materials. NMR titration studies in DMSO revealed an anion
affinity order of Fâ > AcOâ > Clâ > Brâ. The receptor
affinity for Fâ is very high due in part to formation
of a self-complementary dimer comprised of two âsaddle shapedâ
complexes. An X-ray crystal structure showed that the two Fâ ions within the dimer are separated by 3.39 Ă
. The electrostatic
penalty for this close proximity is compensated by attractive interactions
provided by the surrounding tetralactam molecules. Reactivity experiments
showed that stabilization of Fâ as a supramolecular
complex abrogated its capacity to induce elimination and substitution
chemistry. This finding raises the idea of using tetralactam macrocycles
to stabilize fluoride-containing liquid electrolytes within redox
devices such as room-temperature fluoride-ion batteries. A lipophilic
version of the tetralactam macrocycle was prepared and used to extract
Fâ from water into a chloroform layer with high
efficiency. The favorable extraction is due to the architecture of
the extracted dimeric complex, with all the polarity located within
the core of the self-associated dimer and all the nonpolar functionality
on the exterior surface
The Lanthanide Contraction Revisited
A complete, isostructural series of complexes with LaâLu (except Pm) with the ligand TREN-1,2-HOIQO has been synthesized and structurally characterized by means of single-crystal X-ray analysis.
All complexes are 1D-polymeric species in the solid state, with the lanthanide being in an eight-coordinate,
distorted trigonal-dodecahedral environment with a donor set of eight unique oxygen atoms. This series
constitutes the first complete set of isostructural complexes from LaâLu (without Pm) with a ligand of denticity
greater than two. The geometric arrangement of the chelating moieties slightly deviates across the lanthanide
series, as analyzed by a shape parameter metric based on the comparison of the dihedral angles along all
edges of the coordination polyhedron. The apparent lanthanide contraction in the individual LnâO bond
lengths deviates considerably from the expected quadratic decrease that was found previously in a number
of complexes with ligands of low denticity. The sum of all bond lengths around the trivalent metal cation,
however, is more regular, showing an almost ideal quadratic behavior across the entire series. The quadratic
nature of the lanthanide contraction is derived theoretically from Slater's model for the calculation of ionic
radii. In addition, the sum of all distances along the edges of the coordination polyhedron show exactly the
same quadratic dependence as the LnâX bond lengths. The universal validity of this coordination sphere
contraction, concomitant with the quadratic decrease in LnâX bond lengths, was confirmed by reexamination
of four other, previously published series of lanthanide complexes. Owing to the importance of multidentate
ligands for the chelation of rare-earth metals, this result provides a significant advance for the prediction
and rationalization of the geometric features of the corresponding lanthanide complexes, with great potential
impact for all aspects of lanthanide coordination
The Lanthanide Contraction Revisited
A complete, isostructural series of complexes with LaâLu (except Pm) with the ligand TREN-1,2-HOIQO has been synthesized and structurally characterized by means of single-crystal X-ray analysis.
All complexes are 1D-polymeric species in the solid state, with the lanthanide being in an eight-coordinate,
distorted trigonal-dodecahedral environment with a donor set of eight unique oxygen atoms. This series
constitutes the first complete set of isostructural complexes from LaâLu (without Pm) with a ligand of denticity
greater than two. The geometric arrangement of the chelating moieties slightly deviates across the lanthanide
series, as analyzed by a shape parameter metric based on the comparison of the dihedral angles along all
edges of the coordination polyhedron. The apparent lanthanide contraction in the individual LnâO bond
lengths deviates considerably from the expected quadratic decrease that was found previously in a number
of complexes with ligands of low denticity. The sum of all bond lengths around the trivalent metal cation,
however, is more regular, showing an almost ideal quadratic behavior across the entire series. The quadratic
nature of the lanthanide contraction is derived theoretically from Slater's model for the calculation of ionic
radii. In addition, the sum of all distances along the edges of the coordination polyhedron show exactly the
same quadratic dependence as the LnâX bond lengths. The universal validity of this coordination sphere
contraction, concomitant with the quadratic decrease in LnâX bond lengths, was confirmed by reexamination
of four other, previously published series of lanthanide complexes. Owing to the importance of multidentate
ligands for the chelation of rare-earth metals, this result provides a significant advance for the prediction
and rationalization of the geometric features of the corresponding lanthanide complexes, with great potential
impact for all aspects of lanthanide coordination
Stabilization and Extraction of Fluoride Anion Using a Tetralactam Receptor
A neutral
tetralactam macrocycle was prepared in a few minutes
in one pot and at high concentration using commercially available
starting materials. NMR titration studies in DMSO revealed an anion
affinity order of Fâ > AcOâ > Clâ > Brâ. The receptor
affinity for Fâ is very high due in part to formation
of a self-complementary dimer comprised of two âsaddle shapedâ
complexes. An X-ray crystal structure showed that the two Fâ ions within the dimer are separated by 3.39 Ă
. The electrostatic
penalty for this close proximity is compensated by attractive interactions
provided by the surrounding tetralactam molecules. Reactivity experiments
showed that stabilization of Fâ as a supramolecular
complex abrogated its capacity to induce elimination and substitution
chemistry. This finding raises the idea of using tetralactam macrocycles
to stabilize fluoride-containing liquid electrolytes within redox
devices such as room-temperature fluoride-ion batteries. A lipophilic
version of the tetralactam macrocycle was prepared and used to extract
Fâ from water into a chloroform layer with high
efficiency. The favorable extraction is due to the architecture of
the extracted dimeric complex, with all the polarity located within
the core of the self-associated dimer and all the nonpolar functionality
on the exterior surface
The Lanthanide Contraction Revisited
A complete, isostructural series of complexes with LaâLu (except Pm) with the ligand TREN-1,2-HOIQO has been synthesized and structurally characterized by means of single-crystal X-ray analysis.
All complexes are 1D-polymeric species in the solid state, with the lanthanide being in an eight-coordinate,
distorted trigonal-dodecahedral environment with a donor set of eight unique oxygen atoms. This series
constitutes the first complete set of isostructural complexes from LaâLu (without Pm) with a ligand of denticity
greater than two. The geometric arrangement of the chelating moieties slightly deviates across the lanthanide
series, as analyzed by a shape parameter metric based on the comparison of the dihedral angles along all
edges of the coordination polyhedron. The apparent lanthanide contraction in the individual LnâO bond
lengths deviates considerably from the expected quadratic decrease that was found previously in a number
of complexes with ligands of low denticity. The sum of all bond lengths around the trivalent metal cation,
however, is more regular, showing an almost ideal quadratic behavior across the entire series. The quadratic
nature of the lanthanide contraction is derived theoretically from Slater's model for the calculation of ionic
radii. In addition, the sum of all distances along the edges of the coordination polyhedron show exactly the
same quadratic dependence as the LnâX bond lengths. The universal validity of this coordination sphere
contraction, concomitant with the quadratic decrease in LnâX bond lengths, was confirmed by reexamination
of four other, previously published series of lanthanide complexes. Owing to the importance of multidentate
ligands for the chelation of rare-earth metals, this result provides a significant advance for the prediction
and rationalization of the geometric features of the corresponding lanthanide complexes, with great potential
impact for all aspects of lanthanide coordination
The Lanthanide Contraction Revisited
A complete, isostructural series of complexes with LaâLu (except Pm) with the ligand TREN-1,2-HOIQO has been synthesized and structurally characterized by means of single-crystal X-ray analysis.
All complexes are 1D-polymeric species in the solid state, with the lanthanide being in an eight-coordinate,
distorted trigonal-dodecahedral environment with a donor set of eight unique oxygen atoms. This series
constitutes the first complete set of isostructural complexes from LaâLu (without Pm) with a ligand of denticity
greater than two. The geometric arrangement of the chelating moieties slightly deviates across the lanthanide
series, as analyzed by a shape parameter metric based on the comparison of the dihedral angles along all
edges of the coordination polyhedron. The apparent lanthanide contraction in the individual LnâO bond
lengths deviates considerably from the expected quadratic decrease that was found previously in a number
of complexes with ligands of low denticity. The sum of all bond lengths around the trivalent metal cation,
however, is more regular, showing an almost ideal quadratic behavior across the entire series. The quadratic
nature of the lanthanide contraction is derived theoretically from Slater's model for the calculation of ionic
radii. In addition, the sum of all distances along the edges of the coordination polyhedron show exactly the
same quadratic dependence as the LnâX bond lengths. The universal validity of this coordination sphere
contraction, concomitant with the quadratic decrease in LnâX bond lengths, was confirmed by reexamination
of four other, previously published series of lanthanide complexes. Owing to the importance of multidentate
ligands for the chelation of rare-earth metals, this result provides a significant advance for the prediction
and rationalization of the geometric features of the corresponding lanthanide complexes, with great potential
impact for all aspects of lanthanide coordination
The Lanthanide Contraction Revisited
A complete, isostructural series of complexes with LaâLu (except Pm) with the ligand TREN-1,2-HOIQO has been synthesized and structurally characterized by means of single-crystal X-ray analysis.
All complexes are 1D-polymeric species in the solid state, with the lanthanide being in an eight-coordinate,
distorted trigonal-dodecahedral environment with a donor set of eight unique oxygen atoms. This series
constitutes the first complete set of isostructural complexes from LaâLu (without Pm) with a ligand of denticity
greater than two. The geometric arrangement of the chelating moieties slightly deviates across the lanthanide
series, as analyzed by a shape parameter metric based on the comparison of the dihedral angles along all
edges of the coordination polyhedron. The apparent lanthanide contraction in the individual LnâO bond
lengths deviates considerably from the expected quadratic decrease that was found previously in a number
of complexes with ligands of low denticity. The sum of all bond lengths around the trivalent metal cation,
however, is more regular, showing an almost ideal quadratic behavior across the entire series. The quadratic
nature of the lanthanide contraction is derived theoretically from Slater's model for the calculation of ionic
radii. In addition, the sum of all distances along the edges of the coordination polyhedron show exactly the
same quadratic dependence as the LnâX bond lengths. The universal validity of this coordination sphere
contraction, concomitant with the quadratic decrease in LnâX bond lengths, was confirmed by reexamination
of four other, previously published series of lanthanide complexes. Owing to the importance of multidentate
ligands for the chelation of rare-earth metals, this result provides a significant advance for the prediction
and rationalization of the geometric features of the corresponding lanthanide complexes, with great potential
impact for all aspects of lanthanide coordination
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