7 research outputs found
Phenanthridine-Containing Pincer-like Amido Complexes of Nickel, Palladium, and Platinum
Proligands based
on bisÂ(8-quinolinyl)Âamine (<b>L1</b>) were prepared containing
one (<b>L2</b>) and two (<b>L3</b>) benzo-fused N-heterocyclic
phenanthridinyl (3,4-benzoquinolinyl) units. Taken as a series, <b>L1</b>â<b>L3</b> provides a ligand template for exploring
systematic Ď-extension in the context of tridentate pincer-like
amido complexes of group 10 metals (<b>1-M</b>, <b>2-M</b>, and <b>3-M</b>; <b>M</b> = Ni, Pd, Pt). Inclusion of
phenanthridinyl units was enabled by development of a cross-coupling/condensation
route to 6-unsubstituted, 4-substituted phenanthridines (<b>4-Br</b>, <b>4-NO</b><sub><b>2</b></sub>, <b>4-NH</b><sub><b>2</b></sub>) suitable for elaboration into the target ligand
frameworks. Complexes <b>1-M</b>, <b>2-M</b>, and <b>3-M</b> are redox-active; electrochemistry and UVâvis absorption
spectroscopy were used to investigate the impact of Ď-extension
on the electronic properties of the metal complexes. Unlike what is
typically observed for benzannulated ligandâmetal complexes,
extending the Ď-system in metal complexes <b>1-M</b> to <b>2-M</b> to <b>3-M</b> led to only a moderate red shift in
the relative highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO)âlowest
unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) gap as estimated by electrochemistry
and similarly subtle changes to the onset of the lowest-energy absorption
observed by UVâvis spectroscopy. Time-dependent density functional
theory calculations revealed that benzannulation significantly impacts
the atomic contributions to the LUMO and LUMO+1 orbitals, altering
the orbital contributions to the lowest-energy transition but leaving
the energy of this transition essentially unchanged
Site-Selective Benzannulation of <i>N</i>âHeterocycles in Bidentate Ligands Leads to Blue-Shifted Emission from [(<i>P^N</i>)Cu]<sub>2</sub>(Îź-X)<sub>2</sub> Dimers
Benzannulated
bidentate pyridine/phosphine (<i>P^N</i>) ligands bearing
quinoline or phenanthridine (3,4-benzoquinoline) units have been prepared,
along with their halide-bridged, dimeric CuÂ(I) complexes of the form
[(<i>P^N</i>)ÂCu]<sub>2</sub>(Îź-X)<sub>2</sub>. The
copper complexes are phosphorescent in the orange-red region of the
spectrum in the solid-state under ambient conditions. Structural characterization
in solution and the solid-state reveals a flexible conformational
landscape, with both diamond-like and butterfly motifs available to
the Cu<sub>2</sub>X<sub>2</sub> cores. Comparing the photophysical
properties of complexes of (quinolinyl)Âphosphine ligands with those
of Ď-extended (phenanthridinyl)Âphosphines has revealed a counterintuitive
impact of site-selective benzannulation. Contrary to conventional
assumptions regarding Ď-extension and a bathochromic shift in
the lowest energy absorption maxima, a blue shift of nearly 40 nm
in the emission wavelength is observed for the complexes with larger
ligand Ď-systems, which is assigned as phosphorescence on the
basis of emission energies and lifetimes. Comparison of the ground-state
and triplet excited state structures optimized from DFT and TD-DFT
calculations allows attribution of this effect to a greater rigidity
for the benzannulated complexes resulting in a higher energy emissive
triplet state, rather than significant perturbation of orbital energies.
This study reveals that ligand structure can impact photophysical
properties for emissive molecules by influencing their structural
rigidity, in addition to their electronic structure
Cross-trienamines in Asymmetric Organocatalysis
Cross-conjugated trienamines are introduced as a new
concept in
asymmetric organocatalysis. These intermediates are applied in highly
enantioselective DielsâAlder and addition reactions, providing
functionalized bicyclo[2.2.2]Âoctane compounds and Îłâ˛-addition
products, respectively. The nature of the transformations and the
intermediates involved are investigated by computational calculations
and NMR analysis
Cross-trienamines in Asymmetric Organocatalysis
Cross-conjugated trienamines are introduced as a new
concept in
asymmetric organocatalysis. These intermediates are applied in highly
enantioselective DielsâAlder and addition reactions, providing
functionalized bicyclo[2.2.2]Âoctane compounds and Îłâ˛-addition
products, respectively. The nature of the transformations and the
intermediates involved are investigated by computational calculations
and NMR analysis
Asymmetric Organocatalytic Formal [2 + 2]-Cycloadditions via Bifunctional H-Bond Directing Dienamine Catalysis
A new concept in organocatalysis allowing for the construction
of cyclobutanes with four contiguous stereocenters with complete diastereo-
and enantiomeric control by a formal [2 + 2]-cycloaddition is presented.
The concept is based on simultaneous dual activation of ι,β-unsaturated
aldehydes and nitroolefins by amino- and hydrogen-bonding catalysis,
respectively. A new bifunctional squaramide-based aminocatalyst has
been designed and synthesized in order to enable such an activation
strategy. The potential and scope of the reaction are demonstrated,
and computational studies which account for the stereochemical outcome
are presented
CarbonâCarbon Bond-Forming Reactions of Îą-Thioaryl Carbonyl Compounds for the Synthesis of Complex Heterocyclic Molecules
Strategies for the formation of carbonâcarbon
bonds from
the Îą-thioaryl carbonyl products of substituted lactams are
described. Although direct functionalization is possible, a two step
process of oxidation and magnesium-sulfoxide exchange has proven optimal.
The oxidation step results in the formation of two diastereomers that
exhibit markedly different levels of stability toward elimination,
which is rationalized on the basis of quantum mechanical calculations
and X-ray crystallography. Treatment of the sulfoxide with <i>i</i>-PrMgCl results in the formation of a magnesium enolate
that will undergo an intramolecular Michael addition reaction to form
two new stereogenic centers. The relationship between the substitution
patterns of the sulfoxide substrate and the efficiency of the magnesium
exchange reaction are also described
CarbonâCarbon Bond-Forming Reactions of Îą-Thioaryl Carbonyl Compounds for the Synthesis of Complex Heterocyclic Molecules
Strategies for the formation of carbonâcarbon
bonds from
the Îą-thioaryl carbonyl products of substituted lactams are
described. Although direct functionalization is possible, a two step
process of oxidation and magnesium-sulfoxide exchange has proven optimal.
The oxidation step results in the formation of two diastereomers that
exhibit markedly different levels of stability toward elimination,
which is rationalized on the basis of quantum mechanical calculations
and X-ray crystallography. Treatment of the sulfoxide with <i>i</i>-PrMgCl results in the formation of a magnesium enolate
that will undergo an intramolecular Michael addition reaction to form
two new stereogenic centers. The relationship between the substitution
patterns of the sulfoxide substrate and the efficiency of the magnesium
exchange reaction are also described