RESUMO
Exploration of new heterobinuclear Al/M combinations is relevant to contemporary strategies for cooperative bond activation. Here, we report the synthesis and characterization of six new Al/M heterobimetallic complexes (M = Cr, Mo, W) that exhibit end-on "isocarbonyl"-type AlâOâCâM bridges with metalloketene character rather than featuring AlâMâC≡O motifs with metal-metal bonding. The new compounds were characterized experimentally by nuclear magnetic resonance and infrared spectroscopies and theoretically using density functional theory, natural bond orbital, and quantum theory of atoms in molecules calculations. Factors influencing AlâOâCâM vs AlâMâC≡O isomerism were probed both experimentally and computationally. Crossover experiments between different group VI Al/M derivatives and regioselective epoxide ring opening indicate that the Al/M complexes act as masked frustrated Lewis pairs in solution under certain conditions. However, crossover experiments between group VI Al/M complexes and a previously studied Al-Fe complex, as well as computational modeling, imply that the same complexes can also reasonably act as masked frustrated radical pairs (FRPs). FRP reactivity with the group VI Al/M complexes was achieved under photochemical conditions, producing unsaturated metal-carbonyl dimers [(CpCr)2(CO)3]2- and [Mn2(CO)8]2-, which would otherwise be unstable under standard conditions but that are isolable here due to Al(III) coordination. The metal-metal bonding in these unsaturated metal-carbonyl dimers was also analyzed theoretically.
RESUMO
This report documents our attempts at synthesizing a terminal [WVI≡S] complex supported by a tetradentate, diamido/dithiolate ligand ([N2S2]4-). The target compound was selected because it would serve as a synthetic model for the active sites of formate dehydrogenase (FDH) enzymes. Although the desired [N2S2]WVI≡S species was observed as an NEt3 adduct by mass spectrometry in one case, generally unwanted side reactions prevented isolation and definitive characterization of the target compound. Instead, isolated products characterized by X-ray crystallography included {[N2S2]H}WVI(S2)Cl from redox chemistry of the terminal sulfide, ([N2S2]WVI)2(µ-[N2S2]) from dissociation of the terminal sulfide, ({[N2S2]H}WV)2(µ-S)2 from metal reduction and µ-sulfide bridge formation, and {[N2S2]H}2 from disulfide bond formation via thiolate redox chemistry. A product formed from adventitious exposure to air/moisture, {[N2S2]H2}WVI(O)2, was also characterized. The diverse range of products formed simply from attempted metalation of the [N2S2]4- ligand with Cl4WVI≡S highlights the synthetic challenges toward building active sites that are structurally faithful to FDH.
RESUMO
Acid anhydrides are valuable in the chemical industry for their role in synthesizing polymers, pharmaceuticals, and other commodities, but their syntheses often involve multiple steps with precious metal catalysts. The simplest anhydride, acetic anhydride, is currently produced by two Rh-catalyzed carbonylation reactions on a bulk scale for its use in synthesizing products ranging from aspirin to cellulose acetate. Here, we report a light-mediated, Cu-catalyzed process for producing aliphatic, symmetric acid anhydrides directly by carbonylation of alkyl (pseudo)halides in a single step without any precious metal additives. The transformation requires only simple Cu salts and abundant bases to generate a heterogeneous Cu0 photocatalyst in situ, maintains high efficiency and selectivity upon scale-up, and operates by a radical mechanism with several beneficial features. This discovery will enable the engineering of bulk processes for producing commodity anhydrides efficiently and sustainably.
RESUMO
Formate dehydrogenase (FDH) enzymes catalyze redox interconversion of CO2 and HCO2-, with a key mechanistic step being the transfer of H- from HCO2- to an oxidized active site featuring a [MVI≡S] group in a sulfur-rich environment (M = Mo or W). Here, we report reactivity studies with HCO2- and other reducing agents of a synthetic [WVI≡S] model complex ligated by dithiocarbamate (dtc) ligands. Reactions of [WVIS(dtc)3][BF4] (1) conducted in MeOH solvent generated [WVIS(S2)(dtc)2] (2) and [WVS(µ-S)(dtc)]2 (3) products by a solvolysis pathway that was accelerated by the presence of [Me4N][HCO2] but did not require it. Under MeOH-free conditions, the reaction of 1 with [Et4N][HCO2] produced some [WIV(µ-S)(µ-dtc)(dtc)]2 (4), but predominantly [WV(dtc)4]+ (5), along with stoichiometric CO2 detected by headspace gas chromatography (GC) analysis. Stronger hydride sources such as K-selectride generated the more reduced analogue, 4, exclusively. The reaction of 1 with the electron donor, CoCp2, also produced 4 and 5 in varying amounts depending on reaction conditions. These results indicate that formates and borohydrides act as electron donors rather than hydride donors toward 1, an outcome that diverges from the behavior of FDHs. The difference is ascribed to the more oxidizing potential of [WVI≡S] complex 1 when supported by monoanionic dtc ligands that allows electron transfer to outcompete hydride transfer, as compared to the more reduced [MVI≡S] active sites supported by dianionic pyranopterindithiolate ligands in FDHs.
Assuntos
Dióxido de Carbono , Formiato Desidrogenases , Domínio Catalítico , Formiato Desidrogenases/química , Oxirredução , Compostos de Tungstênio/química , Tiocarbamatos/químicaRESUMO
Studies of multinuclear metal complexes are greatly enhanced by resonant diffraction measurements, which probe X-ray absorption profiles of crystallographically independent metal sites within a cluster. In particular, X-ray diffraction anomalous fine structure (DAFS) analysis provides data that can be interpreted akin to site-specific XANES, allowing for differences in metal K-edge resonances to be deconvoluted even for different metal sites within a homometallic system. Despite the prevalence of Cu-containing clusters in biology and energy science, DAFS has yet to be used to analyze multicopper complexes of any type until now. Here, we report an evaluation of trends using a series of strategically chosen Cu(I) and Cu(II) complexes to determine how energy dependencies of anomalous scattering factors are impacted by coordination geometry, ligand shell, cluster nuclearity, and oxidation state. This calibration data is used to analyze a formally tricopper(I) complex that was found by DAFS to be site-differentiated due to the unsymmetrical influence on different Cu sites of the electrostatic field from a proximal K+ cation.
RESUMO
Understanding the electronic structures of high-valent metal complexes aids the advancement of metal-catalyzed cross coupling methodologies. A prototypical complex with formally high valency is [Cu(CF3 )4 ]- (1), which has a formal Cu(III) oxidation state but whose physical analysis has led some to a Cu(I) assignment in an inverted ligand field model. Recent examinations of 1 by X-ray spectroscopies have led previous authors to contradictory conclusions, motivating the re-examination of its X-ray absorption profile here by a complementary method, resonant diffraction anomalous fine structure (DAFS). From analysis of DAFS measurements for a series of seven mononuclear Cu complexes including 1, here it is shown that there is a systematic trifluoromethyl effect on X-ray absorption that blue shifts the resonant Cu K-edge energy by 2-3â eV per CF3 , completely accounting for observed changes in DAFS profiles between formally Cu(III) complexes like 1 and formally Cu(I) complexes like (Ph3 P)3 CuCF3 (3). Thus, in agreement with the inverted ligand field model, the data presented herein imply that 1 is best described as containing a Cu(I) ion with dn count approaching 10.
RESUMO
Activation of inert molecules like CO2 is often mediated by cooperative chemistry between two reactive sites within a catalytic assembly, the most common form of which is Lewis acid/base bifunctionality observed in both natural metalloenzymes and synthetic systems. Here, we disclose a heterobinuclear complex with an Al-Fe bond that instead activates CO2 and other substrates through cooperative behavior of two radical intermediates. The complex Ldipp(Me)AlFp (2, Ldipp = HC{(CMe)(2,6-iPr2C6H3N)}2, Fp = FeCp(CO)2, Cp = η5-C5H5) was found to insert CO2 and cyclohexene oxide, producing LdippAl(Me)(µ:κ2-O2C)Fp (3) and LdippAl(Me)(µ-OC6H10)Fp (4), respectively. Detailed mechanistic studies indicate unusual pathways in which (i) the Al-Fe bond dissociates homolytically to generate formally AlII and FeI metalloradicals, then (ii) the metalloradicals add to substrate in a pairwise fashion initiated by O-coordination to Al. The accessibility of this unusual mechanism is aided, in part, by the redox noninnocent nature of Ldipp that stabilizes the formally AlII intermediates, instead giving them predominantly AlIII-like physical character. The redox noninnocent nature of the radical intermediates was elucidated through direct observation of LdippAl(Me)(OCPh2) (22), a metalloradical species generated by addition of benzophenone to 2. Complex 22 was characterized by X-band EPR, Q-band EPR, and ENDOR spectroscopies as well as computational modeling. The "radical pair" pathway represents an unprecedented mechanism for CO2 activation.
Assuntos
Dióxido de Carbono/química , Complexos de Coordenação/química , Cicloexenos/química , Compostos de Epóxi/química , Radicais Livres/química , Alumínio/química , Complexos de Coordenação/síntese química , Ferro/química , Modelos Químicos , TermodinâmicaRESUMO
Transition metal-catalyzed carbonylation reactions represent a direct and atom-economical approach to introduce oxygen functionality into organic compounds, with CO acting as an inexpensive and readily available C1 feedstock. Despite the long history of carbonylation catalysis, including many processes that have been industrialized at bulk scale, there remain several challenges to tackle. For example, noble metals such as Pd, Rh, and Ir are typically used as catalysts for carbonylation reactions, rather than earth-abundant alternatives. Additionally, while carbonylation of C(sp2)-hybridized substrates (e.g., aryl halides) is well-known, carbonylation of unactivated alkyl electrophiles, especially where ß-hydride elimination can compete with desired CO migratory insertion at the catalyst site, remains challenging for many systems. Recently, base metal catalysis based on Mn, Co, and other metals has enabled advances in carbonylative coupling of alkyl electrophiles, though the nucleophiles are often limited to alcohols or amines to generate esters or amides as products. Thus, we have targeted base metal-catalyzed carbonylative C-C and C-E (E = N, H, Si, B) coupling reactions as a method for approaching diverse carbonyl compounds of synthetic importance.Initially, we designed a heterobimetallic catalyst platform for carbonylative C-C coupling of alkyl halides with arylboronic esters (i.e., carbonylative Suzuki-Miyaura coupling) to generate aryl alkyl ketones. Subsequently, we developed multicomponent carbonylation reactions of alkyl halides using NHC-Cu catalysts (NHC = N-heterocyclic carbene). These reactions operate by radical mechanisms, converting alkyl halides into either acyl radical or acyl halide intermediates that undergo subsequent C-C or C-E coupling at the Cu site. This mechanistic paradigm is relatively novel in the metal-catalyzed carbonylation area, allowing us to discover a previously unexplored chemical space in carbonylative coupling catalysis. We have successfully developed the following reactions: (a) hydrocarbonylative coupling of alkynes with alkyl halides; (b) borocarbonylative coupling of alkynes with alkyl halides; (c) reductive aminocarbonylation of alkyl halides with nitroarenes; (d) reductive carbonylation of alkyl halides; (e) carbonylative silylation of alkyl halides; (f) carbonylative borylation of alkyl halides. These reactions provide a broad range of valuable products including ketones, allylic alcohols, ß-borylenones, amides, alcohols, acylsilanes, and acylborons in an efficient manner. Notably, the preparation of some of these products has previously required multistep syntheses, harsh conditions, or specialized reagents. By contrast, the multicomponent coupling platform that we have developed requires only readily available building blocks and rapidly increases molecular complexity in a single synthetic manipulation.
RESUMO
We report the preparation of potassium acyltrifluoroborates (KATs) from widely available carboxylic acids. Mixed anhydrides of carboxylic acids were prepared using isobutyl chloroformate and transformed to the corresponding KATs using a commercial copper catalyst, B2 (pin)2 , and aqueous KHF2 . This method allows for the facile preparation of aliphatic, aromatic, and amino acid-derived KATs and is compatible with a variety of functional groups including alkenes, esters, halides, nitriles, and protected amines.
RESUMO
Atmospheric nitrous oxide (N2O) has garnered significant attention recently due to its dual roles as an ozone depletion agent and a potent greenhouse gas. Anthropogenic N2O emissions occur primarily through agricultural disruption of nitrogen homeostasis causing N2O to build up in the atmosphere. The enzyme responsible for N2O fixation within the geochemical nitrogen cycle is nitrous oxide reductase (N2OR), which catalyzes 2H+/2e- reduction of N2O to N2 and H2O at a tetranuclear active site, CuZ. In this review, the coordination chemistry of CuZ is reviewed. Recent advances in the understanding of biological CuZ coordination chemistry is discussed, as are significant breakthroughs in synthetic modeling of CuZ that have emerged in recent years. The latter topic includes both structurally faithful, synthetic [Cu4(µ4-S)] clusters that are able to reduce N2O, as well as dicopper motifs that shed light on reaction pathways available to the critical CuI-CuIV cluster edge of CuZ. Collectively, these advances in metalloenzyme studies and synthetic model systems provide meaningful knowledge about the physiologically relevant coordination chemistry of CuZ but also open new questions that will pose challenges in the near future.
RESUMO
Transition metal-catalysed cross-coupling reactions are widely used for construction of carbon-carbon and carbon-heteroatom bonds. However, compared to aryl or alkenyl electrophiles, the cross-coupling of unactivated alkyl electrophiles containing ß hydrogens remains a challenge. Over the past few years, the use of suitable ligands such as bulky phosphines or N-heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) has enabled reactions of unactivated alkyl electrophiles not only limited to the traditional cross-coupling with Grignard reagents, but also including a diverse range of organic transformations via either SN2 or radical pathways. This review provides a comprehensive overview of the recent development in copper-catalysed C-C, C-N, C-B, C-Si and C-F bond-forming reactions using unactivated alkyl electrophiles.
RESUMO
A copper-catalyzed carbonylative borylation of unactivated alkyl halides has been developed, enabling efficient synthesis of aliphatic potassium acyltrifluoroborates (KATs) in high yields by treating the inâ situ formed tetracoordinated acylboron intermediates with aqueous KHF2 . A variety of functional groups are tolerated under the mild reaction conditions, and primary, secondary, and tertiary alkyl halides are all applicable. In addition, this method also provides facile access to N-methyliminodiacetyl (MIDA) acylboronates as well as α-methylated potassium acyltrifluoroborates in a one-pot manner. Mechanistic studies indicate a radical atom transfer carbonylation (ATC) mechanism to form acyl halide intermediates that are subsequently borylated by (NHC)CuBpin.
RESUMO
A Cu-catalyzed carbonylative silylation of unactivated alkyl halides has been developed, enabling efficient synthesis of alkyl-substituted acylsilanes in high yield. A variety of functional groups are tolerated under the mild reaction conditions, and primary, secondary, and tertiary alkyl halides are all applicable. The practical utility of this method has been demonstrated in the synthesis of acylsilanes bearing different silyl groups as well as in situ reduction of a product to the corresponding α-hydroxylsilane in one pot. Mechanistic experiments indicate that a silylcopper intermediate activates alkyl halides by single electron transfer to form alkyl radical intermediates and that carbon-halogen bond cleavage is not involved in the rate-determining step.
RESUMO
Constructing synthetic models of the Mo/Cu active site of aerobic carbon monoxide dehydrogenase (CODH) has been a long-standing synthetic challenge thought to be crucial for understanding how atmospheric concentrations of CO and CO2 are regulated in the global carbon cycle by chemolithoautotrophic bacteria and archaea. Here we report a W/Cu complex that is among the closest synthetic mimics constructed to date, enabled by a silyl protection/deprotection strategy that provided access to a kinetically stabilized complex with mixed O2-/S2- ligation between (bdt)(O)WVI and CuI(NHC) (bdt = benzene dithiolate, NHC = N-heterocyclic carbene) sites. Differences between the inorganic core's structural and electronic features outside the protein environment relative to the native CODH cofactor point to a biochemical CO oxidation mechanism that requires a strained active site geometry, with Lewis acid/base frustration enforced by the protein secondary structure. This new mechanistic insight has the potential to inform synthetic design strategies for multimetallic energy storage catalysts.
Assuntos
Aldeído Oxirredutases/metabolismo , Monóxido de Carbono/metabolismo , Cobre/metabolismo , Ácidos de Lewis/metabolismo , Molibdênio/metabolismo , Complexos Multienzimáticos/metabolismo , Tungstênio/metabolismo , Aldeído Oxirredutases/química , Pareamento de Bases , Monóxido de Carbono/química , Cobre/química , Teoria da Densidade Funcional , Ácidos de Lewis/química , Modelos Moleculares , Estrutura Molecular , Molibdênio/química , Complexos Multienzimáticos/química , Oxirredução , Tungstênio/químicaRESUMO
Model compounds have been widely utilized in understanding the structure and function of the unusual Cu4(µ4-S) active site (CuZ) of nitrous oxide reductase (N2OR). However, only a limited number of model compounds that mimic both structural and functional features of CuZ are available, limiting insights about CuZ that can be gained from model studies. Our aim has been to construct Cu4(µ4-S) clusters with tailored redox activity and chemical reactivity via modulating the ligand environment. Our synthetic approach uses dicopper(I) precursor complexes (Cu2L2) that assemble into a Cu4(µ4-S)L4 cluster with the addition of an appropriate sulfur source. Here, we summarize the features of the ligands L that stabilize precursor and Cu4(µ4-S) clusters, along with the alternative products that form with inappropriate ligands. The precursors are more likely to rearrange to Cu4(µ4-S) clusters when the Cu(I) ions are supported by bidentate ligands with 3-atom bridges, but steric and electronic features of the ligand also play crucial roles. Neutral phosphine donors have been found to stabilize Cu4(µ4-S) clusters in the 4Cu(I) oxidation state, while neutral nitrogen donors could not stabilize Cu4(µ4-S) clusters. Anionic formamidinate ligands have been found to stabilize Cu4(µ4-S) clusters in the 2Cu(I):2Cu(II) and 3Cu(I):1Cu(II) states, with both the formation of the dicopper(I) precursors and subsequent assembly of clusters being governed by the steric factor at the ortho positions of the N-aryl substituents. Phosphaamidinates, which combine a neutral phosphine donor and an anionic nitrogen donor in the same ligand, form multinuclear Cu(I) clusters unless the negative charge is valence-trapped on nitrogen, in which case the resulting dicopper precursor is unable to rearrange to a multinuclear cluster. Taken together, the results presented in this study provide design criteria for successful assembly of synthetic model clusters for the CuZ active site of N2OR, which should enable future insights into the chemical behavior of CuZ.
Assuntos
Complexos de Coordenação/metabolismo , Cobre/metabolismo , Oxirredutases/metabolismo , Enxofre/metabolismo , Domínio Catalítico , Complexos de Coordenação/química , Cobre/química , Ligantes , Conformação Molecular , Oxirredução , Oxirredutases/química , Eletricidade Estática , Enxofre/químicaRESUMO
The model complex [Cu4 (µ4 -S)(dppa)4 ]2+ (1, dppa=µ2 -(Ph2 P)2 NH) has N2 O reductase activity in methanol solvent, mediating 2 H+ /2 e- reduction of N2 O to N2 +H2 O in the presence of an exogenous electron donor (CoCp2 ). A stoichiometric product with two deprotonated dppa ligands was characterized, indicating a key role of second-sphere N-H residues as proton donors during N2 O reduction. The activity of 1 towards N2 O was suppressed in solvents that are unable to provide hydrogen bonding to the second-sphere N-H groups. Structural and computational data indicate that second-sphere hydrogen bonding induces structural distortion of the [Cu4 S] active site, accessing a strained geometry with enhanced reactivity due to localization of electron density along a dicopper edge site. The behavior of 1 mimics aspects of the CuZ catalytic site of nitrous oxide reductase: activity in the 4CuI :1S redox state, use of a second-sphere proton donor, and reactivity dependence on both primary and secondary sphere effects.
Assuntos
Cobre/química , Oxirredutases/química , Ligação de Hidrogênio , Modelos Moleculares , Oxirredução , PrótonsRESUMO
Cooperative Sn-H bond activation of hydrostannanes (Bu3SnH) by tunable heterobimetallic (NHC)Cu-[MCO] catalysts ([MCO] = FeCp(CO)2 or Mn(CO)5) enables the catalytic hydrostannylation of terminal alkynes under mild conditions, with Markovnikov/anti-Markovnikov selectivity controlled by the Cu/M pairing. By using the MeIMesCu-FeCp(CO)2 catalyst, a variety of α-vinylstannanes were produced from simple alkyl-substituted alkynes and Bu3SnH in high yield and good regioselectivity; these products are challenging to access under mononuclear metal-catalyzed hydrostannylation conditions. In addition, reversed regioselectivity was observed for aryl-substituted alkynes under the Cu/Fe-catalyzed conditions, affording the ( E)-ß -vinylstannanes as major products. On the other hand, by using the IMesCu-Mn(CO)5 catalyst, a variety of ( E)- ß-vinylstannanes were produced from primary, secondary, and tertiary alkyl-substituted alkynes, thus demonstrating divergent regioselectivity for alkyne hydrostannylation controlled by Cu/Fe vs Cu/Mn pairing. Both methods are amenable to gram-scale vinylstannane synthesis as well as late-stage hydrostannylation in a natural-product setting. Mechanistic experiments indicate the syn addition of Bu3SnH to the alkynes and imply the involvement of Sn-H bond activation in the rate-determining step. Two distinct catalytic cycles were proposed for the Cu/Fe and Cu/Mn catalysis based on stoichiometric reactivity experiments.
RESUMO
We have developed a modular procedure to synthesize allylic alcohols from tertiary, secondary, and primary alkyl halides and alkynes via a Cu-catalyzed hydrocarbonylative coupling and 1,2-reduction tandem sequence. The use of tertiary alkyl halides as electrophiles was found to enable the synthesis of various allylic alcohols bearing α-quaternary carbon centers in good yield with high 1,2-reduction selectivity. Mechanistic studies that suggested a different pathway was operative with tertiary alkyl halides compared with primary and secondary alkyl halides for generating the key copper(III) oxidative adduct. For tertiary electrophiles, an acyl halide likely forms via radical atom transfer carbonylation. The preference for 1,2-reduction over 1,4-reduction of α,ß-unsaturated ketones bearing tertiary substituents was rationalized using density functional theory transition state analysis. On the basis of this computational model, the coupling method was extended to primary and secondary alkyl iodide electrophiles by using internal alkynes with aryl substituents, providing trisubstituted allylic alcohols in high yield with good regioselectivity.
RESUMO
Phosphabenzamidine [mes-NH-C(Ph)âP-mes) (1) and phosphaformamidine (mes-NH-CHâP-mes) (4) ligands have been synthesized and characterized. The conjugate bases of 1 and 4 coordinate by each bridging three Cu(I) ions, forming hexa- and tetranuclear clusters Cu6[mes-NâC(Ph)-P-mes]3Cl4Li(THF)2 (3) and Cu4[mes-NâCH-P-mes]4 (5), respectively. Both clusters have been fully characterized using 1H NMR, 31P NMR, and X-ray crystallography. Complexes 3 and 5 exhibit a previously unknown coordination mode of phosphaamidinates, which are far less studied than their well-known amidinate counterparts.
RESUMO
We have developed a reductive carbonylation method by which unactivated alkyl iodides can be hydroxymethylated to provide one-carbon-extended alcohol products under Cu-catalyzed conditions. The method is tolerant of alkyl ß-hydrogen atoms, is robust towards a wide variety of functional groups, and was applied to primary, secondary, and tertiary alkyl iodide substrates. Mechanistic experiments indicate that the transformation proceeds by atom-transfer carbonylation (ATC) of the alkyl iodide followed in tandem by two CuH-mediated reductions in rapid succession. This radical mechanism renders the Cu-catalyzed system complementary to precious-metal-catalyzed reductive carbonylation reactions.