10 research outputs found
Arylation of Rhodium(II) Azavinyl Carbenes with Boronic Acids
A highly efficient and stereoselective arylation of in
situ-generated
azavinyl carbenes affording 2,2-diaryl enamines at ambient temperatures
has been developed. These transition-metal carbenes are directly produced
from readily available and stable 1-sulfonyl-1,2,3-triazoles in the
presence of a rhodium carboxylate catalyst. In several cases, the
enamines generated in this reaction can be cyclized into substituted
indoles employing copper catalysis
Arylation of Rhodium(II) Azavinyl Carbenes with Boronic Acids
A highly efficient and stereoselective arylation of in
situ-generated
azavinyl carbenes affording 2,2-diaryl enamines at ambient temperatures
has been developed. These transition-metal carbenes are directly produced
from readily available and stable 1-sulfonyl-1,2,3-triazoles in the
presence of a rhodium carboxylate catalyst. In several cases, the
enamines generated in this reaction can be cyclized into substituted
indoles employing copper catalysis
Stereoselective 1,3-Insertions of Rhodium(II) Azavinyl Carbenes
RhodiumÂ(II)
azavinyl carbenes, conveniently generated from 1-sulfonyl-1,2,3-triazoles,
undergo a facile, mild, and convergent formal 1,3-insertion into N–H
and O–H bonds of primary and secondary amides, various alcohols,
and carboxylic acids to afford a wide range of vicinally bisfunctionalized
(<i>Z</i>)-olefins with perfect regio- and stereoselectivity.
Utilizing the distinctive functionality installed through these reactions,
a number of subsequent rearrangements and cyclizations expand the
repertoire of valuable organic building blocks constructed by reactions
of transition-metal carbene complexes, including α-allenyl ketones
and amino-substituted heterocycles
Stereoselective 1,3-Insertions of Rhodium(II) Azavinyl Carbenes
RhodiumÂ(II)
azavinyl carbenes, conveniently generated from 1-sulfonyl-1,2,3-triazoles,
undergo a facile, mild, and convergent formal 1,3-insertion into N–H
and O–H bonds of primary and secondary amides, various alcohols,
and carboxylic acids to afford a wide range of vicinally bisfunctionalized
(<i>Z</i>)-olefins with perfect regio- and stereoselectivity.
Utilizing the distinctive functionality installed through these reactions,
a number of subsequent rearrangements and cyclizations expand the
repertoire of valuable organic building blocks constructed by reactions
of transition-metal carbene complexes, including α-allenyl ketones
and amino-substituted heterocycles
Stereoselective 1,3-Insertions of Rhodium(II) Azavinyl Carbenes
RhodiumÂ(II)
azavinyl carbenes, conveniently generated from 1-sulfonyl-1,2,3-triazoles,
undergo a facile, mild, and convergent formal 1,3-insertion into N–H
and O–H bonds of primary and secondary amides, various alcohols,
and carboxylic acids to afford a wide range of vicinally bisfunctionalized
(<i>Z</i>)-olefins with perfect regio- and stereoselectivity.
Utilizing the distinctive functionality installed through these reactions,
a number of subsequent rearrangements and cyclizations expand the
repertoire of valuable organic building blocks constructed by reactions
of transition-metal carbene complexes, including α-allenyl ketones
and amino-substituted heterocycles
Thermoreversible Folding as a Route to the Unique Shape-Memory Character in Ductile Polymer Networks
Ductile,
cross-linked films were folded as a means to program temporary
shapes without the need for complex heating cycles or specialized
equipment. Certain cross-linked polymer networks, formed here with
the thiol-isocyanate reaction, possessed the ability to be pseudoplastically
deformed below the glass transition, and the original shape was recovered
during heating through the glass transition. To circumvent the large
forces required to plastically deform a glassy polymer network, we
have utilized folding, which localizes the deformation in small creases,
and achieved large dimensional changes with simple programming procedures.
In addition to dimension changes, three-dimensional objects such as
swans and airplanes were developed to demonstrate applying origami
principles to shape memory. We explored the fundamental mechanical
properties that are required to fold polymer sheets and observed that
a yield point that does not correspond to catastrophic failure is
required. Unfolding occurred during heating through the glass transition,
indicating the vitrification of the network that maintained the temporary,
folded shape. Folding was demonstrated as a powerful tool to simply
and effectively program ductile shape-memory polymers without the
need for thermal cycling
Thermoreversible Folding as a Route to the Unique Shape-Memory Character in Ductile Polymer Networks
Ductile,
cross-linked films were folded as a means to program temporary
shapes without the need for complex heating cycles or specialized
equipment. Certain cross-linked polymer networks, formed here with
the thiol-isocyanate reaction, possessed the ability to be pseudoplastically
deformed below the glass transition, and the original shape was recovered
during heating through the glass transition. To circumvent the large
forces required to plastically deform a glassy polymer network, we
have utilized folding, which localizes the deformation in small creases,
and achieved large dimensional changes with simple programming procedures.
In addition to dimension changes, three-dimensional objects such as
swans and airplanes were developed to demonstrate applying origami
principles to shape memory. We explored the fundamental mechanical
properties that are required to fold polymer sheets and observed that
a yield point that does not correspond to catastrophic failure is
required. Unfolding occurred during heating through the glass transition,
indicating the vitrification of the network that maintained the temporary,
folded shape. Folding was demonstrated as a powerful tool to simply
and effectively program ductile shape-memory polymers without the
need for thermal cycling
Stereoselective 1,3-Insertions of Rhodium(II) Azavinyl Carbenes
RhodiumÂ(II)
azavinyl carbenes, conveniently generated from 1-sulfonyl-1,2,3-triazoles,
undergo a facile, mild, and convergent formal 1,3-insertion into N–H
and O–H bonds of primary and secondary amides, various alcohols,
and carboxylic acids to afford a wide range of vicinally bisfunctionalized
(<i>Z</i>)-olefins with perfect regio- and stereoselectivity.
Utilizing the distinctive functionality installed through these reactions,
a number of subsequent rearrangements and cyclizations expand the
repertoire of valuable organic building blocks constructed by reactions
of transition-metal carbene complexes, including α-allenyl ketones
and amino-substituted heterocycles
Benzimidazoles as Metal-Free and Recyclable Hydrides for CO2 Reduction to Formate
We report a novel metal-free chemical reduction of CO2 by a recyclable benzimidazole-based organo-hydride, whose choice was guided by quantum chemical calculations. Notably, benzimidazole-based hydride donors rival the hydride-donating abilities of noble metal-based hydrides such as [Ru(tpy)(bpy)H]+ and [Pt(depe)2H]+. Chemical CO2 reduction to the formate anion (HCOO) was carried out in the absence of biological enzymes, a sacrificial Lewis acid, or a base to activate the substrate or reductant. 13CO2 experiments confirmed the formation of H13COO by CO2 reduction with the formate product characterized by 1H-NMR and 13C-NMR spectroscopies, and ESI-MS. The highest formate yield of 66% was obtained in the presence of potassium tetrafluoroborate under mild conditions. The likely role of exogenous salt additives in this reaction is to stabilize and shift the equilibrium towards the ionic products. After CO2 reduction, the benzimidazole-based hydride donor was quantitatively oxidized to its aromatic benzimidazolium cation, establishing its recyclability. In addition, we electrochemically reduced the benzimidazolium cation to its organo-hydride form in quantitative yield, demonstrating its potential for electrocatalytic CO2 reduction. These results serve as a proof of concept for the electrocatalytic reduction of CO2 by sustainable, recyclable and metal-free organo-hydrides
Amine Induced Retardation of the Radical-Mediated Thiol–Ene Reaction via the Formation of Metastable Disulfide Radical Anions
The
effect of amines on the kinetics and efficacy of radical-mediated
thiol–ene coupling (TEC) reactions was investigated. By varying
the thiol reactant and amine additive, it was shown that amines retard
thiyl radical-mediated reactions when the amine is adequately basic
enough to deprotonate the thiol affording the thiolate anion, e.g.,
when the weakly basic amine tetramethylethylenediamine was incorporated
in the TEC reaction between butyl 2-mercaptoacetate and an allyl ether
at 5 mol %, the final conversion was reduced from quantitative to <40%.
Alternatively, no effect is observed when the less acidic thiol butyl
3-mercaptopropionate is employed. The thiolate anion was established
as the retarding species through the introduction of ammonium and
thiolate salt additives into TEC formulations. The formation of a
two-sulfur three-electron bonded disulfide radical anion (DRA) species
by the reaction of a thiyl radical with a thiolate anion was determined
as the cause for the reduction in catalytic radicals and the TEC rate.
Thermodynamic and kinetic trends in DRA formations were computed using
density functional theory and by modeling the reaction as an associative
electron transfer process. These trends correlate well with the experimental
retardation trends of various thiolate anions in TEC reactions