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1.
Dalton Trans ; 53(34): 14272-14277, 2024 Aug 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39133065

ABSTRACT

The halogen-free synthesis of oligosilazanes has been observed upon dehydrocoupling silanes with ammonia at 25 °C using [(2,6-iPr2PhBDI)Mn(µ-H)]2. Extending this methodology to polymethylhydrosiloxanes afforded thermally robust polysiloxazane solids, and the dehydrocoupling of 1,3,5,7-tetramethylcyclotetrasiloxane with ammonia afforded a polysiloxazane having a weight-average molecular weight of 4300 g mol-1. A representative oligosilazane has been applied to a copper surface and found to afford a 20 µm thick coating that resists corrosion after 24 h under water. Addition of ammonia to [(2,6-iPr2PhBDI)Mn(µ-H)]2 allowed for characterization of the catalyst resting state, [(2,6-iPr2PhBDI)Mn(µ-NH2)]2, which has been found to mediate Si-N dehydrocoupling.

2.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 59(25): 3665-3684, 2023 Mar 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36857645

ABSTRACT

This article covers historical and recent efforts to catalyse the dehydrocoupling of amines and silanes, a direct method for Si-N bond formation that offers hydrogen as a byproduct. In some applications, this transformation can be used as a sustainable replacement for traditional aminosilane synthesis, which demands corrosive chlorosilanes while generating one equivalent of ammonium salt waste for each Si-N bond that is formed. These advantages have driven the development of Si-N dehydrocoupling catalysts that span the periodic table, affording mechanistic insight that has led to advances in efficiency and selectivity. Given the divergence in precursors being used, characterization methods being relied on, and applications being targeted, this article highlights the formation of monomeric aminosilanes separately from oligomeric and polymeric aminosilanes. A recent study that allowed for the manganese catalysed synthesis of perhydropolysilazane and commercial chemical vapor deposition precursors is featured, and key opportunities for advancing the field of Si-N dehydrocoupling catalysis are discussed.

3.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 58(77): 10793-10796, 2022 Sep 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36073243

ABSTRACT

Through the application of a redox-innocent aryl diimine chelate, the discovery and utilization of a cobalt catalyst, (Ph2PPrADI)Co, that exhibits carbonyl hydrosilylation turnover frequencies of up to 330 s-1 is described. This activity is believed to be the highest ever reported for metal-catalyzed carbonyl hydrosilylation.

4.
Inorg Chem ; 61(17): 6438-6450, 2022 May 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35438990

ABSTRACT

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.


Subject(s)
Cobalt , Iron , Cobalt/chemistry , Electronics , Iron/chemistry , Ligands , Nickel , Oxidation-Reduction , Phosphines , Pyridines/chemistry
5.
Dalton Trans ; 50(44): 15973-15977, 2021 Nov 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34679147

ABSTRACT

This article highlights the utilization of phosphine-containing redox-active ligands for efficient hydrosilylation catalysis. Manganese, iron, cobalt, and nickel precatalysts featuring these chelates have been described and leading activities for carbonyl, carboxylate, and ester C-O bond hydrosilylation have been achieved. Mechanistic studies have provided insight into the importance of phosphine hemilability.

6.
Inorg Chem ; 60(11): 7708-7718, 2021 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34008966

ABSTRACT

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.

7.
Dalton Trans ; 49(41): 14463-14474, 2020 Oct 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33034607

ABSTRACT

The electronic structure of a dimeric manganese hydride catalyst supported by ß-diketiminate ligands, [(2,6-iPr2PhBDI)Mn(µ-H)]2, was investigated with density functional theory. A triple bond between the manganese centres was anticipated from simple electron-counting rules; however, calculations revealed Mn-Mn Mayer bond orders of 0.21 and 0.27 for the ferromagnetically-coupled and antiferromagnetically-coupled extremes, respectively. In accordance with experimentally determined Heisenberg exchange coupling constants of -15 ± 0.1 cm-1 (SQUID) and -10.2 ± 0.7 cm-1 (EPR), the calculated J0 value of -10.9 cm-1 confirmed that the ground state involves antiferromagnetic coupling between high spin Mn(ii)-d5 centres. The effect of steric bulk on the bond order was examined via a model study with the least sterically-demanding version of the ß-diketiminate ligand and was found to be negligible. Mixing between metal- and ß-diketiminate-based orbitals was found to be responsible for the absence of a metal-metal multiple bond. The bridging hydrides give rise to a relatively close positioning of the metal centres, while bridging atoms possessing 2p orbitals result in longer Mn-Mn distances and more stable dimers. The synthesis and characterization of the bridging hydroxide variant, [(2,6-iPr2PhBDI)Mn(µ-OH)]2, provides experimental support for these assessments.

9.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 56(28): 3959-3962, 2020 Apr 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32149290

ABSTRACT

The manganese hydride dimer, [(2,6-iPr2PhBDI)Mn(µ-H)]2, was found to mediate nitrile dihydroboration, rendering it the first manganese catalyst for this transformation. Stoichiometric experiments revealed that benzonitrile insertion affords [(2,6-iPr2PhBDI)Mn(µ-NCHC6H5)]2 en route to N,N-diborylamine formation. Density functional theory calculations reveal the precise mechanism and demonstrate that catalysis is promoted by monomeric species.

10.
ACS Omega ; 5(4): 1949-1955, 2020 Feb 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32039331

ABSTRACT

The addition of lead to diphenyl diselenide in ethylenediamine (en) or pyridine (py) allowed for the observation of the solvento complexes, (en)Pb(SePh)2 or (py)2Pb(SePh)2, respectively. Performing this reaction in dimethyl sulfoxide and subsequent crystallization was found to afford Pb(SePh)2. Inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy revealed a 1:2 lead to selenium ratio for all three complexes. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy confirms that Pb(SePh)2 is readily solubilized by ethylenediamine, and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry supports the presence of Pb(SePh)2 moieties in solution. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis of the pyridine adduct, (py)2Pb(SePh)2, revealed a seesaw molecular geometry featuring equatorial phenylselenolate ligands. Crystals of Pb(SePh)2 grown from dimethyl sulfoxide revealed one-dimensional polymeric chains of Pb(SePh)2. We believe that the lead(II) phenylselenolate complexes form via an oxidative addition reaction.

11.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(38): 15230-15239, 2019 09 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31479257

ABSTRACT

Catalysis is the second largest application for V after its use as an additive to improve steel production. Molecular complexes of vanadium(V) are particularly useful and efficient catalysts for oxidation processes; however, their ability to catalyze reductive transformations has yet to be fully explored. Here we report the first examples of polar organic functionality reduction mediated by V. Open-shell VIII complexes that feature a π-radical monoanionic 2,2':6',2″-terpyridine ligand (Rtpy•)- functionalized at the 4'-position (R = (CH3)3SiCH2, C6H5) catalyze mild and chemoselective hydroboration and hydrosilylation of functionalized ketones, aldehydes, imines, esters, and carboxamides with turnover numbers (TONs) of up to ∼1000 and turnover frequencies (TOFs) of up to ∼500 h-1. Computational evaluation of the precatalyst synthesis and activation has revealed underappreciated complexity associated with the redox-active tpy chelate.

12.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(38): 15327-15337, 2019 09 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31462037

ABSTRACT

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 PyEtPDI afforded the six-coordinate Co(II) salt, [(PyEtPDI)CoCl][Cl]. Upon adding 2 equiv of NaEt3BH, hydride transfer to one chelate imine functionality was observed, resulting in the formation of (κ4-N,N,N,N-PyEtIPCHMeNEtPy)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, (κ4-N,N,N,N-PyEtIPCHMeNEtPy)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-Namide 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 (κ4-N,N,N,N-PyEtIPCHMeNEtPy)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 °C. With a series of N,N-diborylamines in hand, their addition to carboxylic acids allowed for the direct synthesis of amides at 120 °C, without the need for an exogenous coupling reagent.

13.
Dalton Trans ; 48(2): 461-467, 2019 Jan 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30488914

ABSTRACT

The phosphine-substituted α-diimine Ni precursor, (Ph2PPrDI)Ni, has been found to catalyze alkene hydrosilylation in the presence of Ph2SiH2 with turnover frequencies of up to 124 h-1 at 25 °C (990 h-1 at 60 °C). Moreover, the selective hydrosilylation of allylic and vinylic ethers has been demonstrated, even though (Ph2PPrDI)Ni is known to catalyze allyl ester C-O bond hydrosilylation. At 70 °C, this catalyst has been found to mediate the hydrosilylation of ten different gem-olefins, with turnover numbers of up to 740 under neat conditions. Prior and current mechanistic observations suggest that alkene hydrosilylation takes place though a Chalk-Harrod mechanism following phosphine donor dissociation.

14.
Chem Sci ; 9(39): 7673-7680, 2018 Oct 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30393528

ABSTRACT

The dimeric ß-diketiminate manganese hydride compound, [(2,6-iPr2PhBDI)Mn(µ-H)]2, was prepared by treating [(2,6-iPr2PhBDI)Mn(µ-Cl)]2 with NaEt3BH. This compound was characterized by single crystal X-ray diffraction and found to feature high-spin Mn centres that exhibit strong magnetic coupling by EPR spectroscopy. Once characterized, [(2,6-iPr2PhBDI)Mn(µ-H)]2 was found to mediate the hydrosilylation of a broad scope of alkenes at elevated temperature. Aliphatic alkenes were found to undergo anti-Markovnikov hydrosilylation, while the hydrosilylation of styrenes using [(2,6-iPr2PhBDI)Mn(µ-H)]2 afforded Markovnikov's product. Importantly, this catalyst has also been employed for the cross-linking of industrially-relevant silicones derived from vinyl-terminated poly(dimethylsiloxane) and 1,2,4-trivinylcyclohexane with catalyst loadings as low as 0.05 mol%. To gain a mechanistic understanding of [(2,6-iPr2PhBDI)Mn(µ-H)]2-catalyzed olefin hydrosilylation, 4-tert-butylstyrene was added to [(2,6-iPr2PhBDI)Mn(µ-H)]2 and conversion to the monomeric Mn alkyl complex, (2,6-iPr2PhBDI)Mn(CH(CH3)(4- t BuPh)), was observed. Isolation of this secondary alkyl intermediate confirms that olefin insertion into the Mn-H bond dictates the observed regioselectivities. The importance of our mechanistic findings as they relate to recent advances in Mn hydrosilylation catalysis is described herein.

15.
Dalton Trans ; 47(26): 8807-8816, 2018 Jul 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29922802

ABSTRACT

The synthesis of alkylphosphine-substituted α-diimine (DI) ligands and their subsequent addition to Ni(COD)2 allowed for the preparation of (iPr2PPrDI)Ni and (tBu2PPrDI)Ni. The solid state structures of both compounds were found to feature a distorted tetrahedral geometry that is largely consistent with the reported structure of the diphenylphosphine-substituted variant, (Ph2PPrDI)Ni. To explore and optimize the synthetic utility of this catalyst class, all three compounds were screened for benzaldehyde hydrosilylation activity at 1.0 mol% loading over 3 h at 25 °C. Notably, (Ph2PPrDI)Ni was found to be the most efficient catalyst while phenyl silane was the most effective reductant. A broad scope of aldehydes and ketones were then hydrosilylated, and the silyl ether products were hydrolyzed to afford alcohols in good yield. When attempts were made to explore ester reduction, inefficient dihydrosilylation was noted for ethyl acetate and no reaction was observed for several additional substrates. However, when an equimolar solution of allyl acetate and phenyl silane was added to 1.0 mol% (Ph2PPrDI)Ni, complete ester C-O bond hydrosilylation was observed within 30 min at 25 °C to generate propylene and PhSi(OAc)3. The scope of this reaction was expanded to include six additional allyl esters, and under neat conditions, turnover frequencies of up to 990 h-1 were achieved. This activity is believed to be the highest reported for transition metal-catalyzed ester C-O bond hydrosilylation. Proposed mechanisms for (Ph2PPrDI)Ni-mediated carbonyl and allyl ester C-O bond hydrosilylation are also discussed.

16.
Inorg Chem ; 57(10): 6065-6075, 2018 May 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29738258

ABSTRACT

We report the preparation and electronic structure determination of chelate-reduced Mn(I) compounds that are relevant to electrocatalytic proton reduction mediated by [(Ph2PPrPDI)Mn(CO)][Br]. Reducing [(Ph2PPrPDI)Mn(CO)][Br] with excess Na-Hg afforded a neutral paramagnetic complex, (Ph2PPrPDI)Mn(CO). This compound was found to feature a low spin Mn(I) center and a PDI radical anion as determined by magnetic susceptibility measurement (1.97 µB), EPR spectroscopy ( S = 1/2), and density functional theory calculations. When [(Ph2PPrPDI)Mn(CO)][Br] was reduced with K-Hg, Mn(I) complexes with highly activated CO ligands were obtained. Recrystallization of the reduced product from diethyl ether solution allowed for the isolation of dimeric [(κ4-Ph2PPrPDI)Mn(µ-η1,η1,η2-CO)K(Et2O)]2 (νCO = 1710 cm-1, 1656 cm-1), while methyl tert-butyl ether treatment afforded dimeric [(κ4-Ph2PPrPDI)Mn(µ-η1,η1-CO)K(MTBE)2]2 (νCO = 1695 cm-1, MTBE = methyl tert-butyl ether). Addition of 18-crown-6 to these products, or conducting the K-Hg reduction of [(Ph2PPrPDI)Mn(CO)][Br] in the presence of 18-crown-6, allowed for the isolation of a monomeric example, (κ4-Ph2PPrPDI)Mn(µ-η1,η2-CO)K(18-crown-6) (νCO = 1697 cm-1). All three complexes were found to be diamagnetic and were characterized thoroughly by multinuclear 1D and 2D NMR spectroscopy and single crystal X-ray diffraction. Detailed analysis of the metrical parameters and spectroscopic properties suggest that all three compounds possess a Mn(I) center that is supported by a PDI dianion. Importantly, (κ4-Ph2PPrPDI)Mn(µ-η1,η2-CO)K(18-crown-6) was found to react instantaneously with either HBF4·OEt2 or HOTf to evolve H2 and generate the corresponding Mn(I) complex, [(Ph2PPrPDI)Mn(CO)][BF4] or [(Ph2PPrPDI)Mn(CO)][OTf], respectively. These products are spectroscopically and electrochemically similar to previously reported [(Ph2PPrPDI)Mn(CO)][Br]. It is believed that the mechanism of [(Ph2PPrPDI)Mn(CO)][Br]-mediated proton reduction involves intermediates that are related to the compounds described herein and that their ambient temperature isolation is aided by the redox active nature of Ph2PPrPDI.

17.
Acc Chem Res ; 50(11): 2842-2852, 2017 11 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29120607

ABSTRACT

In recent years, interest in homogeneous manganese catalyst development has intensified because of the earth-abundant and nontoxic nature of this metal. Although compounds of Mn have largely been utilized for epoxidation reactions, recent efforts have revealed that Mn catalysts can mediate a broad range of reductive transformations. Low-valent Mn compounds have proven to be particularly effective for the hydrosilylation of carbonyl- and carboxylate-containing substrates, and this Account aims to highlight my research group's contributions to this field. In our initial 2014 communication, we reported that the bis(imino)pyridine-supported compound (Ph2PPrPDI)Mn mediates ketone hydrosilylation with exceptional activity under solvent-free conditions. Silanes including Ph2SiH2, (EtO)3SiH, (EtO)2MeSiH, and (EtO)Me2SiH were found to partially reduce cyclohexanone in the presence of (Ph2PPrPDI)Mn, while turnover frequencies of up to 1280 min-1 were observed using PhSiH3. This led us to evaluate the hydrosilylation of 11 additional ketones and allowed for the atom-efficient preparation of tertiary and quaternary silanes. At that time, it was also discovered that (Ph2PPrPDI)Mn catalyzes the dihydrosilylation of esters (by way of acyl C-O bond hydrosilylation) to yield a mixture of silyl ethers with modest activity. Earlier this year, the scope of these transformations was extended to aldehydes and formates, and the observed hydrosilylation activities are among the highest obtained for any transition-metal catalyst. The effectiveness of three related catalysts has also been evaluated: (Ph2PPrPDI)MnH, (PyEtPDEA)Mn, and [(Ph2PEtPDI)Mn]2. To our surprise, (Ph2PPrPDI)MnH was found to exhibit higher carboxylate dihydrosilylation activity than (Ph2PPrPDI)Mn, while (PyEtPDEA)Mn demonstrated remarkable carbonyl hydrosilylation activity considering that it lacks a redox-active supporting ligand. The evaluation of [(Ph2PEtPDI)Mn]2 revealed competitive aldehyde hydrosilylation and formate dihydrosilylation turnover frequencies; however, this catalyst is significantly inhibited by pyridine and alkene donor groups. In our efforts to fully understand how (Ph2PPrPDI)Mn operates, a thorough electronic structure evaluation was conducted, and the ground-state doublet calculated for this compound was found to exhibit nonclassical features consistent with a low-spin Mn(II) center supported by a singlet PDI dianion and an intermediate-spin Mn(II) configuration featuring antiferromagnetic coupling to PDI diradical dianion. A comprehensive mechanistic investigation of (Ph2PPrPDI)Mn- and (Ph2PPrPDI)MnH-mediated hydrosilylation has revealed two operable pathways, a modified Ojima pathway that is more active for carbonyl hydrosilylation and an insertion pathway that is more effective for carboxylate reduction. Although these efforts represent a small fraction of the recent advances made in Mn catalysis, this work has proven to be influential for the development of Mn-based reduction catalysts and is likely to inform future efforts to develop Mn catalysts that can be used to prepare silicones.

18.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 53(53): 7333-7336, 2017 Jun 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28503682

ABSTRACT

Addition of NaEt3BH to (Ph2PPrDI)CoCl2 affords the corresponding monohydride, (Ph2PPrDI)CoH. X-ray diffraction and DFT calculations indicate that this compound possesses a radical monoanion α-DI chelate and a Co(ii) centre. Notably, (Ph2PPrDI)CoH catalyzes the hydroboration of alkynes and dihydroboration of nitriles under mild conditions.

19.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(13): 4901-4915, 2017 04 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28282136

ABSTRACT

We recently reported a bis(imino)pyridine (or pyridine diimine, PDI) manganese precatalyst, (Ph2PPrPDI)Mn (1), that is active for the hydrosilylation of ketones and dihydrosilylation of esters. In this contribution, we reveal an expanded scope for 1-mediated hydrosilylation and propose two different mechanisms through which catalysis is achieved. Aldehyde hydrosilylation turnover frequencies (TOFs) of up to 4900 min-1 have been realized, the highest reported for first row metal-catalyzed carbonyl hydrosilylation. Additionally, 1 has been shown to mediate formate dihydrosilylation with leading TOFs of up to 330 min-1. Under stoichiometric and catalytic conditions, addition of PhSiH3 to (Ph2PPrPDI)Mn was found to result in partial conversion to a new diamagnetic hydride compound. Independent preparation of (Ph2PPrPDI)MnH (2) was achieved upon adding NaEt3BH to (Ph2PPrPDI)MnCl2 and single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis revealed this complex to possess a capped trigonal bipyramidal solid-state geometry. When 2,2,2-trifluoroacetophenone was added to 1, radical transfer yielded (Ph2PPrPDI·)Mn(OC·(Ph)(CF3)) (3), which undergoes intermolecular C-C bond formation to produce the respective Mn(II) dimer, [(µ-O,Npy-4-OC(CF3)(Ph)-4-H-Ph2PPrPDI)Mn]2 (4). Upon finding 3 to be inefficient and 4 to be inactive, kinetic trials were conducted to elucidate the mechanisms of 1- and 2-mediated hydrosilylation. Varying the concentration of 1, substrate, and PhSiH3 revealed a first order dependence on each reagent. Furthermore, a kinetic isotope effect (KIE) of 2.2 ± 0.1 was observed for 1-catalyzed hydrosilylation of diisopropyl ketone, while a KIE of 4.2 ± 0.6 was determined using 2, suggesting 1 and 2 operate through different mechanisms. Although kinetic trials reveal 1 to be the more active precatalyst for carbonyl hydrosilylation, a concurrent 2-mediated pathway is more efficient for carboxylate hydrosilylation. Considering these observations, 1-catalyzed hydrosilylation is believed to proceed through a modified Ojima mechanism, while 2-mediated hydrosilylation occurs via insertion.

20.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 52(77): 11555-8, 2016 Oct 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27603939

ABSTRACT

In 5.0 M H2O/acetonitrile, [((Ph2PPr)PDI)MoO][PF6]2 produces H2 with 96% Faradaic efficiency at -2.5 V vs. Fc(+/0) and a rate of 55 s(-1). Reactivity studies and isolation of a Mo(ii) oxo intermediate, ((Ph2PPr)PDI)MoO, shed light on the H2 evolution mechanism.

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