54 research outputs found

    Preparation and Hydrosilylation Activity of a Molybdenum Carbonyl Complex That Features a Pentadentate Bis(imino)pyridine Ligand

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    Efficient Cobalt Catalyst for Ambient-Temperature Nitrile Dihydroboration, the Elucidation of a Chelate-Assisted Borylation Mechanism, and a New Synthetic Route to Amides

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    N,N-Diborylamines have emerged as promising reagents in organic synthesis; however, their efficient preparation and full synthetic utility have yet to be realized. To address both shortcomings, an effective catalyst for nitrile dihydroboration was sought. Heating CoCl2 in the presence of (PDI)-P-PyEt afforded the six-coordinate Co(II) salt, [((PDI)-P-PyEt)CoCl][Cl]. Upon adding 2 equiv of NaEt3BH, hydride transfer to one chelate imine functionality was observed, resulting in the formation of (kappa(4)-N,N,N,N-(IPNEtPy)-I-PyEt-N-CHMe)Co. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction and density functional theory calculations revealed that this compound possesses a low-spin Co(II) ground state featuring antiferromagnetic coupling to a singly reduced imino(pyridine) moiety. Importantly, (kappa(4)-N,N,N,N-(IPNEtPy)-I-PyEt-N-CHMe)Co was found to catalyze the dihydroboration of nitriles using HBPin with turnover frequencies of up to 380 h(-1) at ambient temperature. Stoichiometric addition experiments revealed that HBPin adds across the Co-N-amide bond to generate a hydride intermediate that can react with additional HBPin or nitriles. Computational evaluation of the reaction coordinate revealed that the B-H addition and nitrile insertion steps occur on the antiferromagnetically coupled triplet spin manifold. Interestingly, formation of the borylimine intermediate was found to occur following BPin transfer from the borylated chelate arm to regenerate (kappa(4)-N,N,N,N-(IPNEtPy)-I-PyEt-N-CHMe)Co. Borylimine reduction is in turn facile and follows the same ligand-assisted borylation pathway. The independent hydroboration of alkyl and aryl imines was also demonstrated at 25 degrees C. With a series of N,N-diborylamines in hand, their addition to carboxylic acids allowed for the direct synthesis of amides at 120 degrees C, without the need for an exogenous coupling reagent. © 2019 American Chemical Society11sciescopu

    Reaction of a Molybdenum Bis(dinitrogen) Complex with Carbon Dioxide: A Combined Experimental and Computational Investigation

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    © 2021 American Chemical Society.Refluxing Mo(CO)6 in the presence of the phosphine-functionalized α-diimine ligand Ph2PPrDI allowed for substitution and formation of the dicarbonyl complex, (Ph2PPrDI)Mo(CO)2. Oxidation with I2 followed by heating resulted in further CO dissociation and isolation of the corresponding diiodide complex, (Ph2PPrDI)MoI2. Reduction of this complex under a N2 atmosphere afforded the corresponding bis(dinitrogen) complex, (Ph2PPrDI)Mo(N2)2. The solid-state structures of all three compounds were found to feature a tetradentate chelate and cis-monodentate ligands. Notably, the addition of CO2 to (Ph2PPrDI)Mo(N2)2 is proposed to result in head-to-tail CO2 coupling to generate the corresponding metallacycle and ultimately a mixture of (Ph2PPrDI)Mo(CO)2 and the bis(oxo) dimer, [(κ3-Ph2PPrDI)Mo(O)(μ-O)]2. Computational studies have been performed to gain insight into the reaction and evaluate the importance of cis-coordination sites for selective head-to-tail CO2 reductive coupling, CO deinsertion, disproportionation, and stepwise CO2 deinsertion.11Nsciescopu

    Reaction of a Molybdenum Bis(dinitrogen) Complex with Carbon Dioxide: A Combined Experimental and Computational Investigation

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    © 2021 American Chemical Society.Refluxing Mo(CO)6 in the presence of the phosphine-functionalized α-diimine ligand Ph2PPrDI allowed for substitution and formation of the dicarbonyl complex, (Ph2PPrDI)Mo(CO)2. Oxidation with I2 followed by heating resulted in further CO dissociation and isolation of the corresponding diiodide complex, (Ph2PPrDI)MoI2. Reduction of this complex under a N2 atmosphere afforded the corresponding bis(dinitrogen) complex, (Ph2PPrDI)Mo(N2)2. The solid-state structures of all three compounds were found to feature a tetradentate chelate and cis-monodentate ligands. Notably, the addition of CO2 to (Ph2PPrDI)Mo(N2)2 is proposed to result in head-to-tail CO2 coupling to generate the corresponding metallacycle and ultimately a mixture of (Ph2PPrDI)Mo(CO)2 and the bis(oxo) dimer, [(κ3-Ph2PPrDI)Mo(O)(μ-O)]2. Computational studies have been performed to gain insight into the reaction and evaluate the importance of cis-coordination sites for selective head-to-tail CO2 reductive coupling, CO deinsertion, disproportionation, and stepwise CO2 deinsertion.11Nsciescopu

    Comparing the Electronic Structure of Iron, Cobalt, and Nickel Compounds That Feature a Phosphine-Substituted Bis(imino)pyridine Chelate

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    © It was recently discovered that (Ph2PPrPDI)Mn (PDI = pyridine diimine) exists as a superposition of low-spin Mn(II) that is supported by a PDI dianion and intermediate-spin Mn(II) that is antiferromagnetically coupled to a triplet PDI dianion, a finding that encouraged the synthesis and electronic structure evaluation of late first row metal variants that feature the same chelate. The addition of Ph2PPrPDI to FeBr2 resulted in bromide dissociation and the formation of [(Ph2PPrPDI)FeBr][Br]. Reduction of this precursor using excess sodium amalgam afforded (Ph2PPrPDI)Fe, which possesses an Fe(II) center that is supported by a dianionic PDI ligand. Similarly, reduction of a premixed solution of Ph2PPrPDI and CoCl2 yielded the cobalt analog, (Ph2PPrPDI)Co. EPR spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations revealed that this compound features a high-spin Co(I) center that is antiferromagnetically coupled to a PDI radical anion. The addition of Ph2PPrPDI to Ni(COD)2 resulted in ligand displacement and the formation of (Ph2PPrPDI)Ni, which was found to possess a pendent phosphine group. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction, CASSCF calculations, and EPR spectroscopy indicate that (Ph2PPrPDI)Ni is best described as having a Ni(II)-PDI2- configuration. The electronic differences between these compounds are highlighted, and a computational analysis of Ph2PPrPDI denticity has revealed the thermodynamic penalties associated with phosphine dissociation from 5-coordinate (Ph2PPrPDI)Mn, (Ph2PPrPDI)Fe, and (Ph2PPrPDI)Co.11Nsciescopu

    A New Spin on Cyclooctatetraene (COT) Redox Activity: Low-Spin Iron(I) Complexes That Exhibit Antiferromagnetic Coupling to a Singly Reduced η<sup>4</sup>‑COT Ligand

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    Formally zerovalent (κ<sup>3</sup>-phosphine)­Fe­(η<sup>4</sup>-COT) complexes supported by either Triphos (PhP­(CH<sub>2</sub>CH<sub>2</sub>PPh<sub>2</sub>)<sub>2</sub>) or Triphos* (H<sub>3</sub>CC­(CH<sub>2</sub>PPh<sub>2</sub>)<sub>3</sub>) have been prepared following chelate addition to (COT)<sub>2</sub>Fe (COT = 1,3,5,7-cyclooctatetraene) and by reduction of the respective dibromide complexes in the presence of excess COT. The solid-state structure of each complex was determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction, and close inspection of the metrical parameters revealed significant COT ligand reduction, independent of the coordination geometry about iron. While the neutral and dianionic forms of the redox-active COT ligand have historically received a great deal of attention, a dearth of information regarding the often-evoked radical monoanion form of this ligand prompted the full electronic structure investigation of these complexes using a range of techniques. Comparison of the Mössbauer spectroscopic data collected for both (Triphos)­Fe­(η<sup>4</sup>-COT) complexes with data obtained for two appropriate reference compounds indicated that they possess a low-spin Fe­(I) center that is antiferromagnetically coupled to a COT radical monoanion. Further evidence for this electronic structure determination by EPR spectroscopy and cyclic voltammetry is presented. A comparison of the solid-state metrical parameters determined in this study to those of related first-row transition-metal complexes has provided insight into the electronic structure analysis of related organometallic complexes
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