20 research outputs found

    Counterion Effect in Cobaltate‐Catalyzed Alkene Hydrogenation

    Get PDF
    We show that countercations exert a remarkable influence on the ability of anionic cobaltate salts to catalyze challenging alkene hydrogenations. An evaluation of the catalytic properties of [Cat][Co(η4-cod)2] (Cat=K (1), Na (2), Li (3), (Depnacnac)Mg (4), and N(nBu)4 (5); cod=1,5-cyclooctadiene, Depnacnac={2,6-Et2C6H3NC(CH3)}2CH)]) demonstrated that the lithium salt 3 and magnesium salt 4 drastically outperform the other catalysts. Complex 4 was the most active catalyst, which readily promotes the hydrogenation of highly congested alkenes under mild conditions. A plausible catalytic mechanism is proposed based on density functional theory (DFT) investigations. Furthermore, combined molecular dynamics (MD) simulation and DFT studies were used to examine the turnover-limiting migratory insertion step. The results of these studies suggest an active co-catalytic role of the counterion in the hydrogenation reaction through the coordination to cobalt hydride intermediates

    Cobalt-Catalyzed Hydrogenations via Olefin Cobaltate and Hydride Intermediates

    Get PDF
    Redox noninnocent ligands are a promising tool to moderate electron transfer processes within base-metal catalysts. This report introduces bis(imino)acenaphthene (BIAN) cobaltate complexes as hydrogenation catalysts. Sterically hindered trisubstituted alkenes, imines, and quinolines underwent clean hydrogenation under mild conditions (2-10 bar, 20-80 degrees C) by use of the stable catalyst precursor [((Dipp)BIAN)CoBr2] and the cocatalyst LiEt3BH. Mechanistic studies support a homogeneous catalysis pathway involving alkene and hydrido cobaltates as active catalyst species. Furthermore, considerable reaction acceleration by alkali cations and Lewis acids was observed. The dinuclear hydridocobaltate anion with bridging hydride ligands was isolated and fully characterized

    Olefin-Stabilized Cobalt Nanoparticles for C=C, C=O, and C=N Hydrogenations

    No full text
    The development of cobalt catalysts that combine easy accessibility and high selectivity constitutes a promising approach to the replacement of noble-metal catalysts in hydrogenation reactions. This report introduces a user-friendly protocol that avoids complex ligands, hazardous reductants, special reaction conditions, and the formation of highly unstable pre-catalysts. Reduction of CoBr2 with LiEt3BH in the presence of alkenes led to the formation of hydrogenation catalysts that effected clean conversions of alkenes, carbonyls, imines, and heteroarenes at mild conditions (3 mol% cat., 2–10 bar H2, 20– 808C). Poisoning studies and nanoparticle characterization by TEM, EDX, and DLS supported the notion of a heterotopic catalysis mechanism

    Dichromatic Photocatalytic Substitutions of Aryl Halides with a Small Organic Dye

    No full text
    Photocatalytic bond activations are generally limited by the photon energy and the efficiency of energy and electron transfer processes. Direct two-photon processes provide sufficient energy but the ultra-short lifetimes of the excited states prohibit chemical reactions. The commercial dye 9,10-dicyanoanthracene enabled photocatalytic aromatic substitutions of non-activated aryl halides. This reaction operates under VIS-irradiation via sequential photonic, electronic, and photonic activation of the simple organic dye. The resultant highly reducing excited photocatalyst anion readily effected C-H, C-C, C-P, C-S, and C-B bond formations. Detailed synthetic, spectroscopic, and theoretical studies support a biphotonic catalytic mechanism

    Counterion effect in cobaltate-catalyzed alkene hydrogenation

    No full text
    We show that countercations exert a remarkable influence on the ability of anionic cobaltate salts to catalyze challenging alkene hydrogenations. An evaluation of the catalytic properties of [Cat][Co(?4-cod)2] (Cat=K (1), Na (2), Li (3), (Depnacnac)Mg (4), and N(nBu)4 (5); cod=1,5-cyclooctadiene, Depnacnac={2,6-Et2C6H3NC(CH3)}2CH)]) demonstrated that the lithium salt 3 and magnesium salt 4 drastically outperform the other catalysts. Complex 4 was the most active catalyst, which readily promotes the hydrogenation of highly congested alkenes under mild conditions. A plausible catalytic mechanism is proposed based on density functional theory (DFT) investigations. Furthermore, combined molecular dynamics (MD) simulation and DFT studies were used to examine the turnover-limiting migratory insertion step. The results of these studies suggest an active co-catalytic role of the counterion in the hydrogenation reaction through the coordination to cobalt hydride intermediates

    Bimetallic Co/Al nanoparticles in an ionic liquid: synthesis and application in alkyne hydrogenation

    No full text
    Herein, we report the microwave-induced decomposition of various organometallic cobalt and aluminum precursors in an ionic liquid (IL), 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide ([BMIm]NTf2), resulting in Co/Al nanoalloys with different molar Co/Al ratios. The dual-source precursor system of dicobalt octacarbonyl (Co2(CO)8) and pentamethylcyclopentadienyl aluminum ([AlCp*]4) in [BMIm]NTf2 afforded CoAl nanoparticles (CoAl-NPs) with a molar Co/Al ratio of 1 : 1. Their size and size distribution were determined via transmission electron microscopy (TEM) to be an average diameter of 3.0 ± 0.5 nm. Furthermore, the dual-source precursor system of cobalt amidinate ([Co(iPr2-MeAMD)2]) and aluminum amidinate [Me2Al(iPr2-MeAMD)] in molar ratios of 1 : 1 and 3 : 1 resulted in CoAl- and Co3Al-NPs with an average diameter of 3 ± 1 and 2.0 ± 0.2 nm, respectively. All the obtained materials were characterized via TEM, energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDX), selected area electron diffraction (SAED), together with high-angle annular dark-field scanning transmission electron microscopy (HAADF-STEM) and (high-resolution) X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy ((HR-)XPS). Phase-pure Co/Al-NPs were not obtained since the concomitant formation of Co-NPs and Al2O3 occurred in this wet-chemical synthesis. The as-prepared Co/Al nanoalloys were evaluated as catalysts in the hydrogenation of phenylacetylene under mild conditions (2 bar H2, 30 °C in THF). In comparison to the monometallic Co-NPs, the Co/Al-NPs showed a significantly higher catalytic hydrogenation activity. The Co- and Co/Al-NPs were also active under harsher reaction conditions (80 bar H2, 80 °C) without the addition of the activating co-catalyst DIBAL-H
    corecore