10 research outputs found
Trichloro(Dinitrogen)platinate(II)
Zeise’s salt, [PtCl3(H2C=CH2)]–,
is the oldest known organometallic complex, featuring ethylene strongly bound
to a platinum salt. Many derivatives are known, but none involving dinitrogen,
and indeed dinitrogen complexes are unknown for both platinum and palladium.
Electrospray ionization mass spectrometry of K2[PtCl4]
solutions generate strong ions corresponding to [PtCl3(N2)]–,
whose identity was confirmed through ion mobility spectroscopy and MS/MS
experiments that proved it to be distinct from its isobaric counterparts [PtCl3(C2H4)]–
and [PtCl3(CO)]–. Computational analysis established a
gas-phase platinum-dinitrogen bond strength of 116 kJ mol-1,
substantially weaker than the ethylene and carbon monoxide analogues but stronger
than for polar solvents such as water, methanol and dimethylformamide, and
strong enough that the calculated N-N bond length of 1.119 Ã… represents weakening
to a degree typical of isolated dinitrogen complexes. </p
An Information-Rich Graphical Representation of Catalytic Cycles
Catalytic reactions are limited in their turnover by certain steps in the
cycle. We present a free, open-source, web-based interface to generate
visualizations of the rate constants of various steps in the cycle. Population
of a web form using known data will generate a highly customizable graphic for
annotation by the user to represent their chemistry.</p
Gas-Phase Oxidation of Reactive Organometallic Ions
Analysis of highly
reactive compounds at very low concentration in solution using electrospray
ionization mass spectrometry requires the use of exhaustively purified
solvents. It has generally been assumed that desolvation gas purity needs to be
similarly high, and so most chemists working in this space have relied upon
high purity gas. However, the increasingly competitiveness of nitrogen
generators, which provide gas purity levels that vary inversely with flow rate,
prompted an investigation of the effect of gas-phase oxygen on the speciation
of ions. For moderately oxygen sensitive species such as phosphines, no
gas-phase oxidation was observed. Even the most reactive species studied, the
reduced titanium complex [Cp2Ti(NCMe)2]+[ZnCl3]–
and the olefin polymerization precatalyst [Cp2Zr(µ-Me)2AlMe2]+
[B(C6F5)4]–, only exhibited
detectable oxidation when they were rendered coordinatively unsaturated through
in-source fragmentation. Computational chemistry allowed us to find the most
plausible pathways for the observed chemistry in the absence of observed
intermediates. The results provide insight into the gas-phase oxidation of
reactive species and should assure experimentalists that evidence of
significant oxidation is likely a solution rather than a gas-phase process,
even when relatively low-purity nitrogen is used for desolvation
PythoMS: A Python Framework To Simplify and Assist in the Processing and Interpretation of Mass Spectrometric Data
Mechanistic study of the atomic layer deposition of cobalt: A combined mass spectrometric and computational approach
Cobaltcarbonyl-tert-butylacetylene (CCTBA) is a conventional precursor for the selective atomic layer deposition of Co onto silica surfaces. However, the limited understanding of the deposition mechanism of such cobalt precursors curbs rational improvements on their design for increased efficiency and tuneable selectivity. The impact of using a less reactive internal alkyne to a terminal alkyne was investigated using experimental and computational methods. Electrospray-ionization mass spectrometry was used to monitor the formation of CCTBA analogs and study their gas phase decomposition pathways. Gas phase analysis show that an internal alkyne dissociates at slightly lower energies than a terminal alkyne, suggesting that an internal alkynyl ligand may be more suited to low temperature ALD. Furthermore, the less reactive internal alkyne will result in fewer carbon impurities embedded in surfaces, in particular due to its reduced reactivity with Si-H bonds on the surface of Si wafers. Computational analysis also predicts increased surface binding in the metal centers of the internal alkynyl complex