128 research outputs found

    Gold-alkynyls in catalysis : Alkyne activation, gold cumulenes and nuclearity

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    The use of cationic gold(i) species in the activation of substrates containing CC bonds has become a valuable tool for synthetic chemists. Despite the seemingly simple label of 'alkyne activation', numerous patterns of reactivity and product structure are observed in systems employing related substrates and catalysts. The complications of mechanistic determination are compounded as the number of implicated gold(i) centres involved in catalysis increases and debate about the bonding in proposed intermediates clouds the number and importance of potential reaction pathways. This perspective aims to illustrate some of the principles underpinning gold-alkynyl interactions whilst highlighting some of the contentious areas in the field and offering some insight into other, often ignored, mechanistic possibilities based on recent findings

    DFT Studies of Au(I) Catalysed Reactions : Anion Effects and Reaction Selectivity

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    Density functional theory (DFT) is a powerful tool that can aid in the exploration and development of synthetic chemistry, and its use is often applied in the chemistry of gold(I) catalysis. In this review, we discuss two different facets of these calculations – namely, the exploration and explanation of anion effects, and the regioselectivity and speciation of gold(I)-catalysed reactions. The research described herein clearly shows the importance of including the anion in DFT studies of Au(I)-catalysed reactions, especially when using low polarity solvents, or where hydrogen-bonding is prevalent. Additionally, we show that whilst using DFT to study the selectivity of reactions can be successful, benchmarking the computational results against experimental data is vitally important for ensuring that the model is accurately describing the observed results

    Metallomimetic C–F Activation Catalysis by Simple Phosphines

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    Delivering metallomimetic reactivity from simple p-block compounds is highly desirable in the search to replace expensive, scarce precious metals by cheap and abundant elements in catalysis. This contribution demonstrates that metallomimetic catalysis, involving facile redox cycling between the P(III) and P(V) oxidation states, is possible using only simple, cheap, and readily available trialkylphosphines without the need to enforce unusual geometries at phosphorus or use external oxidizing/reducing agents. Hydrodefluorination and aminodefluorination of a range of fluoroarenes was realized with good to very good yields under mild conditions. Experimental and computational mechanistic studies show that the phosphines undergo oxidative addition of the fluoroaromatic substrate via a Meisenheimer-like transition state to form a fluorophosphorane. This undergoes a pseudotransmetalation step with a silane, via initial fluoride transfer from P to Si, to give experimentally observed phosphonium ions. Hydride transfer from a hydridosilicate counterion then leads to a hydridophosphorane, which undergoes reductive elimination of the product to reform the phosphine catalyst. This behavior is analogous to many classical transition-metal-catalyzed reactions and so is a rare example of both functional and mechanistically metallomimetic behavior in catalysis by a main-group element system. Crucially, the reagents used are cheap, readily available commercially, and easy to handle, making these reactions a realistic prospect in a wide range of academic and industrial settings

    Bioactive properties of iron-containing carbon monoxide-releasing molecules

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    Carbon monoxide-releasing molecules (CO-RMs) are compounds capable of delivering controlled amounts of CO within a cellular environment. Ruthenium-based carbonyls [tricarbonyldichloro ruthenium(II) dimer and tricarbonylchloro-(glycinato)ruthenium(II)] and boronacorbonates (sodium boranocarbonate) have been shown to promote vasodilatory, cardioprotective, and anti-inflammatory activities in a variety of experimental models. Here, we extend our previous studies by showing that η-4-(4-bromo-6-methyl-2-pyrone)tricarbonyl iron (0) (CORM-F3), an irontricarbonyl complex that contains a 2-pyrone motif, liberates CO in vitro and exerts pharmacological actions that are typical of CO gas. Specifically, CORM-F3 caused vasorelaxation in isolated aortic rings and inhibited the inflammatory response (e.g., nitrite production) of RAW264.7 macrophages stimulated with endotoxin in a dose-dependent fashion. By

    "Back-to-Front" Indole Synthesis using Silver(I) Catalysis : Unexpected C-3 Pyrrole Activation Mode Supported by DFT

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    An efficient silver(I)-catalyzed method is reported for the synthesis of substituted indoles, most notably 5-hydroxy-derivatives, via π-acidic alkyne activation. Most methods for the preparation of indoles involve annulation of a benzene precursor, but the method reported herein is unusual in that pyrrole precursors are used. Density Functional Theory (DFT) studies suggest that these reactions proceed via initial activation of the pyrrole C-3 position before undergoing subsequent rearrangement, contradicting the conventional wisdom that pyrroles are more nucleophilic through C-2

    Direct Measurement of the Visible to UV Photodissociation Processes for the PhotoCORM TryptoCORM

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    PhotoCORMs are light‐triggered compounds that release CO for medical applications. Here, we apply laser spectroscopy in the gas phase to TryptoCORM, a known photoCORM that has been shown to destroy Escherichia coli upon visible‐light activation. Our experiments allow us to map TryptoCORM’s photochemistry across a wide wavelength range by using novel laser‐interfaced mass spectrometry (LIMS). LIMS provides the intrinsic absorption spectrum of the photoCORM along with the production spectra of all of its ionic photoproducts for the first time. Importantly, the photoproduct spectra directly reveal the optimum wavelengths for maximizing CO ejection, and the extent to which CO ejection is compromised at redder wavelengths. A series of comparative studies were performed on TryptoCORM‐CH3CN which exists in dynamic equilibrium with TryptoCORM in solution. Our measurements allow us to conclude that the presence of the labile CH3CN facilitates CO release over a wider wavelength range. This work demonstrates the potential of LIMS as a new methodology for assessing active agent release ( e.g. CO, NO, H2S) from light‐activated prodrugs

    Observation of a frustrated nematic phase in amphiphilic, disc-like complexes of gold(III) containing hydrocarbon and semiperfluorocarbon terminal chains

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    The mesomorphism is reported of a discotic complex of gold(III) that is amphiphilic on account of the presence of both hydrocarbon and fluorocarbon chains. The all-hydrocarbon analogue of the complex shows only a columnar hexagonal phase between the melting and clearing points, whereas this new, amphiphilic example shows a nematic phase between a columnar rectangular phase and a columnar hexagonal phase. The nature and formation of the nematic phase are discussed and it is proposed to be a columnar nematic formed as a result of frustration driven by the amphiphilic nature of the complex

    Mapping Out the Role of σ-Silane Complexes in the Ruthenium-Catalyzed Hydrosilylation of Nitriles

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    A combined synthetic, mechanistic, and computational study is reported, which provides unique insight into the role of σ-silane complexes in the catalytic hydrosilylation of nitriles. A novel, highly efficient, highly active, and regioselective catalytic monohydrosilylation of aromatic nitriles with secondary silanes using a ruthenium dihydrogen catalyst is reported along with a novel mechanism for hydrosilylation of nitriles. Investigations into the mechanism of this transformation have revealed the influence of σ-Si-H complexes in fine-tuning the selectivity of this hydrosilylation reaction. Displacement of the dihydrogen ligand on the ruthenium precatalyst, ruthenium bis-(dihydrogen) complex [RuH2(η2-H2)2(PCy3)2], 1, by diphenylsilane leads to the formation of new ruthenium σ-Si-H complexes, [RuH2(η2-H2)(η2-HSiHPh2)(PCy3)2], 2, and [RuH2(η3-H2SiPh2)(PCy3)2], 3. Complex 3 reacts readily with benzonitrile leading to hydrosilylation of the nitrile and coordination of the silylimine formed to the ruthenium as a σ-H-Si-N-silylimine complex, [RuH2(η2-HSiPh2NCHPh)(PCy3)2] (4). This systematic investigation of this reactivity led to the discovery of the first direct evidence of an N-silylimine-coordinated ruthenium complex and its involvement in a catalytic hydrosilylation reaction. This led to the discovery of a catalytic protocol for the efficient and selective coupling of secondary silanes with a range of nitriles using 1 as the catalyst. It is proposed that complexes 3 and 4 are key intermediates on the catalytic reaction coordinate, which leads to hydrosilylation of the nitrile. This is supported by DFT calculations along with the observation that 3 and 4 are catalytically active. The Si-N bond formation was found to proceed via direct attack of the nitrile at the silicon atom in 3. Through carefully chosen structural studies and tests of the new ruthenium complexes, along with DFT calculations, the mechanism of the catalytic hydrosilylation of nitriles has been successfully explained
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