45 research outputs found

    A catalytic cycle for oxidation of tert-butyl methyl ether by a double C−H activation-group transfer process

    Get PDF
    A square-planar, iridium(I) carbene complex is shown to effect atom and group transfer from nitrous oxide and organic azides, releasing the corresponding formate or formimidate and an iridium(I)−dinitrogen adduct. The dinitrogen complex performs C−H activation upon photolysis or thermolysis, regenerating the carbene from tert-butyl methyl ether with loss of H_2. Taken together, these reactions represent a net catalytic cycle for C−H functionalization by double C−H activation to generate metal−carbon multiple bonds. Additionally, the unusual group transfer from diazo reagents underscores the unique nature of the reactivity observed for nucleophilic-at-metal carbene complexes

    Complexes of iron and cobalt with new tripodal amido-polyphosphine hybrid ligands

    Get PDF
    Divalent complexes of iron and cobalt with new, monoanionic tripodal amido-polyphosphine ligands have been thoroughly characterized, and XRD analysis reveals geometries that are distinct for this class of ligand

    Probing the C-H Activation of Linear and Cyclic Ethers at (PNP)Ir

    Get PDF
    Interaction of the amido/bis(phosphine)-supported (PNP)Ir fragment with a series of linear and cyclic ethers is shown to afford, depending on substrate, products of α,α-dehydrogenation (carbenes), α,β-dehydrogenation (vinyl ethers), or decarbonylation. While carbenes are exclusively obtained from tert-amyl methyl ether, sec-butyl methyl ether (SBME), n-butyl methyl ether (NBME), and tetrahydrofuran (THF), vinyl ethers or their adducts are observed upon reaction with diethyl ether and 1,4-dioxane. Decarbonylation occurs upon interaction of (PNP)Ir with benzyl methyl ether, and a mechanism is proposed for this unusual transformation, which occurs via a series of C−H, C−O, and C−C bond cleavage events. The intermediates characterized for several of these reactions as well as the α,α-dehydrogenation of tert-butyl methyl ether (MTBE) are used to outline a reaction pathway for the generation of PNP-supported iridium(I) carbene complexes, and it is shown that the long-lived, observable intermediates are substrate-dependent and differ for the related cases of MTBE and THF. Taken together, these findings highlight the variety of pathways utilized by the electron-rich, unsaturated (PNP)Ir fragment to stabilize itself by transferring electron density to ethereal substrates through oxidative addition and/or the formation of π-acidic ligands

    Oxygen-Atom Transfer from Carbon Dioxide to a Fischer Carbene at (PNP)Ir

    Full text link

    Singlet and Triplet Excitation Management in a Bichromophoric Near-Infrared-Phosphorescent BODIPY-Benzoporphyrin Platinum Complex

    Get PDF
    Multichromophoric arrays provide one strategy for assembling molecules with intense absorptions across the visible spectrum but are generally focused on systems that efficiently produce and manipulate singlet excitations and therefore are burdened by the restrictions of (a) unidirectional energy transfer and (b) limited tunability of the lowest molecular excited state. In contrast, we present here a multichromophoric array based on four boron dipyrrins (BODIPY) bound to a platinum benzoporphyrin scaffold that exhibits intense panchromatic absorption and efficiently generates triplets. The spectral complementarity of the BODIPY and porphryin units allows the direct observation of fast bidirectional singlet and triplet energy transfer processes (k_(ST)(^1BDP→^1Por) = 7.8 × 10^(11) s^(−1), k_(TT)(^3Por→^3BDP) = 1.0 × 10^(10) s^(−1), k_(TT)(^3BDP→^3Por) = 1.6 × 10^(10) s^(−1)), leading to a long-lived equilibrated [^3BDP][Por]⇔[BDP][^3Por] state. This equilibrated state contains approximately isoenergetic porphyrin and BODIPY triplets and exhibits efficient near-infrared phosphorescence (λ_(em) = 772 nm, Φ = 0.26). Taken together, these studies show that appropriately designed triplet-utilizing arrays may overcome fundamental limitations typically associated with core−shell chromophores by tunable redistribution of energy from the core back onto the antennae
    corecore