RESUMO
Despite the significance of H2O2-metal adducts in catalysis, materials science and biotechnology, the nature of the interactions between H2O2 and metal cations remains elusive and debatable. This is primarily due to the extremely weak coordinating ability of H2O2, which poses challenges in characterizing and understanding the specific nature of these interactions. Herein, we present an approach to obtain H2O2-metal complexes that employs neat H2O2 as both solvent and ligand. SnCl4 effectively binds H2O2, forming a SnCl4(H2O2)2 complex, as confirmed by 119Sn and 17O NMR spectroscopy. Crystalline adducts, SnCl4(H2O2)2·H2O2·18-crown-6 and 2[SnCl4(H2O2)(H2O)]·18-crown-6, are isolated and characterized by X-ray diffraction, providing the complete characterization of the hydrogen bonding of H2O2 ligands including geometric parameters and energy values. DFT analysis reveals the synergy between a coordinative bond of H2O2 with metal cation and its hydrogen bonding with a second coordination sphere. This synergism of primary and secondary interactions might be a key to understanding H2O2 reactivity in biological systems.
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Metal-metal cooperation for inert bond activation is a ubiquitous concept in coordination chemistry and catalysis. While the great majority of such transformations proceed via intramolecular mode in binuclear complexes, to date only a few examples of intermolecular small molecule activation using usually bimetallic frustrated Lewis pairs (Mδ+â¯M'δ-) have been reported. We introduce herein an alternative approach for the intermolecular bimetallic cooperativity observed in the catalytic dehydrogenation of amine-boranes, in which the concomitant activation of N-H and B-H bonds of the substrate via the synergetic action of Lewis acidic (M+) and basic hydride (M-H) metal species derived from the same mononuclear complex (M-Br). It was also demonstrated that this system generated in situ from the air-stable Mn(i) complex fac-[(CO)3(bis(NHC))MnBr] and NaBPh4 shows high activity for H2 production from several substrates (Me2NHBH3, tBuNH2BH3, MeNH2BH3, NH3BH3) at low catalyst loading (0.1% to 50 ppm), providing outstanding efficiency for Me2NHBH3 (TON up to 18 200) that is largely superior to all known 3d-, s-, p-, f-block metal derivatives and frustrated Lewis pairs (FLPs). These results represent a step forward towards more extensive use of intermolecular bimetallic cooperation concepts in modern homogeneous catalysis.
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Acid-base characteristics (acidity, pKa, and hydricity, ΔG°H- or kH-) of metal hydride complexes could be a helpful value for forecasting their activity in various catalytic reactions. Polarity of the M-H bond may change radically at the stage of formation of a non-covalent adduct with an acidic/basic partner. This stage is responsible for subsequent hydrogen ion (hydride or proton) transfer. Here, the reaction of tricarbonyl manganese hydrides mer,trans-[L2Mn(CO)3H] (1; L = P(OPh)3, 2; L = PPh3) and fac-[(L-L')Mn(CO)3H] (3, L-L' = Ph2PCH2PPh2 (dppm); 4, L-L' = Ph2PCH2-NHC) with organic bases and Lewis acid (B(C6F5)3) was explored by spectroscopic (IR, NMR) methods to find the conditions for the Mn-H bond repolarization. Complex 1, bearing phosphite ligands, features acidic properties (pKa 21.3) but can serve also as a hydride donor (ΔG≠298K = 19.8 kcal/mol). Complex 3 with pronounced hydride character can be deprotonated with KHMDS at the CH2-bridge position in THF and at the Mn-H position in MeCN. The kinetic hydricity of manganese complexes 1-4 increases in the order mer,trans-[(P(OPh)3)2Mn(CO)3H] (1) < mer,trans-[(PPh3)2Mn(CO)3H] (2) ≈ fac-[(dppm)Mn(CO)3H] (3) < fac-[(Ph2PCH2NHC)Mn(CO)3H] (4), corresponding to the gain of the phosphorus ligand electron-donor properties.
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Novel 18eÌ and 16eÌ pentamethylcyclopentadienyl rhodium(III) complexes [(η5-C5Me5)RhX(NPN)] (1a,b, X = Cl; 2a-c, X = PF6, BAr4F) with chelating zwitterionic iminophosphonamide (NPN) ligands (Ph2P(NR)(NR'); a, R = R' = p-Tol; b, R = p-Tol, R' = Me; c, R = R' = Me) were synthesized and characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. In the 16eÌ complexes 2, the rhodium (Rh) atom is efficiently stabilized by π-donation of unshared N electrons, thus hampering coordination of the external ligands and rendering the 18eÌ complexes labile. Due to low coordination enthalpy, the cationic 18eÌ monocarbonyl and pyridine adducts 2a·L are stable only at low temperatures. At room temperature, 2·CO adducts readily give stable carbonyl-carbamoyl complexes [(η5-C5Me5)Rh(CO){(CO(NR')Ph2P(NR)}]+ (4) formed as a result of CO insertion into the Rh-N bond, thus showing high nucleophilicity of the N atoms in 18eÌ complexes. High basicity of the Na+NPN- precursors caused side deprotonation of the η5-C5Me5 ligand during the synthesis of 1 that yields unstable fulvene Rh(I) complexes [(η4-C5Me4CH2)Rh{Ph2P(NR)(NR')2}] (3a,b). Complex 3a undergoes a facile reaction with isoprene to yield an unusual [(η5:η1-C5Me4(CH2)C(Me)âCHCH2)Rh(NPN)] complexâthe first example of intermolecular 1,4-metallacycloaddition of diene to the Rh-fulvene complex.
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Low-temperature IR and NMR studies combined with DFT calculations revealed the mechanistic complexity of apparently simple reactions between Mn(I) complex fac-[(dppm)Mn(CO)3H] and Lewis acids (LA = Ph3C+, B(C6F5)3) involving the formation of so-far elusive meridional hydride species mer-[(dppm)Mn(CO)3Hâ¯LA] and unusual dearomatization of the Ph3C+ cation upon hydride transfer.
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Indolyl fragment containing phenanthroline based new ligands and their corresponding Ru(II) complexes were synthesized and fully characterized by various spectroscopic techniques. The catalytic activity of these newly synthesized cyclometalated (NNC)Ru(II) complexes was explored towards the ß-methylation of alcohols using methanol. Notably, these complexes displayed superior reactivity compared to various (NNN)Ru(II) complexes. Utilizing this strategy, a wide range of primary, secondary, and aliphatic straight chain alcohols were selectively methylated. This protocol was further employed for the methylation of a few natural products and the gram scale synthesis of ß-methylated alcohols. A series of control experiments and kinetic studies were performed to understand the plausible reaction mechanism.
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The catalytic activity in amine-borane dehydrogenation is shown for the first time for Ln(II) species using complexes [{(p-tBu-C6H4)2CH}2M·L] (M = Yb, Sm, L = (DME)2, TMEDA). The protonation of M(II)-C bonds with HNR1R2BH3 affords amidoborane complexes [M(NR1R2BH3)2L], which under excess HNMe2BH3 transform to [NMe2BH2NMe2BH3]- derivatives, both serving as the dehydrocoupling intermediates.
RESUMO
The mechanism of the consecutive halogenation of the tetrahydroborate anion [BH4]- by hydrogen halides (HX, X = F, Cl, Br) and hexahydro-closo-hexaborate dianion [B6H6]2- by HCl via electrophile-induced nucleophilic substitution (EINS) was established by ab initio DFT calculations [M06/6-311++G(d,p) and wB97XD/6-311++G(d,p)] in acetonitrile (MeCN), taking into account non-specific solvent effects (SMD model). Successive substitution of H- by X- resulted in increased electron deficiency of borohydrides and changes in the character of boron atoms from nucleophilic to highly electrophilic. This, in turn, increased the tendency of the B-H bond to transfer a proton rather than a hydride ion. Thus, the regularities established suggested that it should be possible to carry out halogenation more selectively with the targeted synthesis of halogen derivatives with a low degree of substitution, by stabilization of H2 complex, or by carrying out a nucleophilic substitution of B-H bonds activated by interaction with Lewis acids (BL3).
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The reaction between basic [(PCP)Pd(H)] (PCP = 2,6-(CH2P(t-C4H9)2)2C6H4) and acidic [LWH(CO)3] (L = Cp (1a), Tp (1b); Cp = η5-cyclopentadienyl, Tp = κ3-hydridotris(pyrazolyl)borate) leads to the formation of bimolecular complexes [LW(CO)2(µ-CO)â¯Pd(PCP)] (4a, 4b), which catalyze amine-borane (Me2NHBH3, t BuNH2BH3) dehydrogenation. The combination of variable-temperature (1H, 31P{1H}, 11B NMR and IR) spectroscopies and computational (ωB97XD/def2-TZVP) studies reveal the formation of an η1-borane complex [(PCP)Pd(Me2NHBH3)]+[LW(CO3)]- (5) in the first step, where a BH bond strongly binds palladium and an amine group is hydrogen-bonded to tungsten. The subsequent intracomplex proton transfer is the rate-determining step, followed by an almost barrierless hydride transfer. Bimetallic species 4 are easily regenerated through hydrogen evolution in the reaction between two hydrides.
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Two stereoisomers of pentacoordinate iridium(III) hydridochloride with triptycene-based PC(sp3)P pincer ligand (1,8-bis(diisopropylphosphino)triptycene), 1 and 2, differ by the orientation of hydride ligand relative to the bridgehead ring of triptycene. According to DFT/B3PW91/def2-TZVP calculations performed, an equatorial Cl ligand can relatively easily change its position in 1, whereas that is not the case in 2. Both complexes 1 and 2 readily bind the sixth ligand to protect the empty coordination site. Variable temperature spectroscopic (NMR, IR, and UV-visible) studies show the existence of two isomers of hexacoordinate complexes 1·MeCN, 2·MeCN, and 2·Py with acetonitrile or pyridine coordinated trans to hydride or trans to metalated C(sp3), whereas only the equatorial isomer is found for 1·Py. These complexes are stabilized by various intramolecular noncovalent C-H···Cl interactions that are affected by the rotation of isopropyls or pyridine. The substitution of MeCN by pyridine is slow yielding axial Py complexes as kinetic products and the equatorial Py complexes as thermodynamic products with faster reactions of 1·L. Ultimately, that explains the higher activity of 1 in the catalytic alkenes' isomerization observed for allylbenzene, 1-octene, and pent-4-enenitrile, which proceeds as an insertion/elimination sequence rather than through the allylic mechanism.
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The activation of silanes in dehydrogenative coupling with alcohols under general base catalysis was studied experimentally (using multinuclear NMR, IR, and UV-visible spectroscopies) and computationally (at DFT M06/6-311++G(d,p) theory level) on the example of Ph4-nSiHn (n = 1-3) interaction with (CF3)2CHOH in the presence of Et3N. The effect of the phenyl groups' number and H- substitution by the electron-withdrawing (CF3)2CHO- group on Si-H bond hydricity (quantified as hydride-donating ability, HDA) and Lewis acidity of silicon atom (characterized by maxima of molecular electrostatic potential) was accessed. Our results show the coordination of Lewis base (Y = Me3N, ROH, OR-) leads to the increased hydricity of pentacoordinate hypervalent Ph4-nSi(Y)Hn complexes and a decrease of the reaction barrier for H2 release. The formation of tertiary complexes [Ph4-nSi(Y)Hn]···HOR is a critical prerequisite for the dehydrocoupling with alkoxides being ideal activators. The latter can be external or internal, generated by in situ HOR deprotonation. The mutual effect of tetrel interaction and dihydrogen bonding in tertiary complexes (RO-)Ph4-nSiHn···HOR leads to dichotomous activation of Si-H bond promoting the proton-hydride transfer and H2 release.
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Thermodynamic hydricity (HDAMeCN) determined as Gibbs free energy (ΔG°[H]-) of the H- detachment reaction in acetonitrile (MeCN) was assessed for 144 small borane clusters (up to 5 boron atoms), polyhedral closo-boranes dianions [BnHn]2-, and their lithium salts Li2[BnHn] (n = 5-17) by DFT method [M06/6-311++G(d,p)] taking into account non-specific solvent effect (SMD model). Thermodynamic hydricity values of diborane B2H6 (HDAMeCN = 82.1 kcal/mol) and its dianion [B2H6]2- (HDAMeCN = 40.9 kcal/mol for Li2[B2H6]) can be selected as border points for the range of borane clusters' reactivity. Borane clusters with HDAMeCN below 41 kcal/mol are strong hydride donors capable of reducing CO2 (HDAMeCN = 44 kcal/mol for HCO2-), whereas those with HDAMeCN over 82 kcal/mol, predominately neutral boranes, are weak hydride donors and less prone to hydride transfer than to proton transfer (e.g., B2H6, B4H10, B5H11, etc.). The HDAMeCN values of closo-boranes are found to directly depend on the coordination number of the boron atom from which hydride detachment and stabilization of quasi-borinium cation takes place. In general, the larger the coordination number (CN) of a boron atom, the lower the value of HDAMeCN.
Assuntos
Acetonitrilas/química , Boranos/química , Hidrogênio/química , Teoria Quântica , TermodinâmicaRESUMO
Ruthenocene-based PCPtBu pincer ligands were used to synthesize novel pincer palladium chloride RcF[PCPtBu]PdCl (2a) and two novel palladium tetrahydroborates RcF[PCPtBu]Pd(BH4) (3a) and Rc*[PCPtBu]Pd(BH4) (3b), where RcF[PCPtBu] = κ3-{2,5-(tBu2PCH2)2-C5H2}Ru(CpF) (CpF = C5Me4CF3), and Rc*[PCPtBu] = κ3-{2,5-(tBu2PCH2)2C5H2}Ru(Cp*) (Cp* = C5Me5). These coordination compounds were characterized by X-ray, NMR and FTIR techniques. Analysis of the X-ray data shows that an increase of the steric bulk of non-metalated cyclopentadienyl ring in 3a and 3b relative to non-substituted Rc[PCPtBu]Pd(BH4) analogue (3c; where Rc[PCPtBu] = κ3-{2,5-(tBu2PCH2)2C5H2}Ru(Cp), Cp = C5H5) pushes palladium atom from the middle plane of the metalated Cp ring in the direction opposite to the ruthenium atom. This displacement increases in the order 3c < 3b < 3a following the order of the Cp-ring steric volume increase. The analysis of both X-ray and IR data suggests that BH4 ligand in both palladium tetrahydroborates 3a and 3b has the mixed coordination mode η1,2. The strength of the BH4 bond with palladium atom increases in the order Rc[PCPtBu]Pd(BH4) < Rc*[PCPtBu]Pd(BH4) < RcF[PCPtBu]Pd(BH4) that appears to be affected by both steric and electronic properties of the ruthenocene moiety.
Assuntos
Boroidretos/química , Compostos Organometálicos/química , Paládio/química , Cristalografia por Raios X , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Estrutura Molecular , Espectroscopia de Infravermelho com Transformada de FourierRESUMO
A series of arene ruthenium iminophosphonamide complexes, [(Arene)RuCl{R2P(NR')2}] (1), bearing various arenes and R,R' substituents on the NPN ligand have been investigated as precatalysts in acetophenone transfer hydrogenation in basic and base-free isopropanol. The results clearly demonstrate the presence of two distinct reaction mechanisms, which are controlled by the basicity of the N-atoms. Complexes 1 in which both R' substituents are aryl groups are only active once the neutral hydride complex [(Arene)RuH{R2P(NR')2}] (2) is generated in basic isopropanol, the latter being able to reduce a ketone via a stepwise hydride and proton transfer. On the other hand, complexes in which at least one R' group is Me readily catalyze the reaction in the absence of base. In the latter case, the results of kinetic studies and DFT calculations support an outer-sphere concerted asynchronous hydride and proton transfer assisted by the basic N-atom of the NPN ligand, which promotes catalysis via precoordination of an alcohol molecule by hydrogen bonding.
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Two novel ruthenocene-based pincer palladium tetrahydroborates were characterized by XRD, NMR and FTIR. The alcoholysis of Pd(ii) tetrahydroborate LPd(BH4) (L = κ3-[{2,5-(tBu2PCH2)2C5H2}Ru(C5H5)]) yields the dinuclear cationic Pd(ii) tetrahydroborate with the bridging BH4- ligand [(LPd)2(µ,η1,2:η1,2-BH4)]+. The bifurcate dihydrogen-bonded complexes are the active intermediates of the first proton transfer in the step-wise alcoholysis of LPd(BH4), yielding eventually [(LPd)2(µ,η1,2:η1,2-BH4)]+. According to the X-ray and DFT/M06 geometry analysis, the BH4- ligand in both palladium tetrahydroborates has a mixed coordination mode η1,2. The possibility of BH3-group abstraction from LPd(BH4) by an excess of organic base (THF, Py) with the formation of hydride LPdIIH is shown. This Pd(ii) hydride is a very reactive compound able to rapidly capture CO2 (ca. 15 min) converting into the formate complex LPdII(η1-OC(O)H). The hydrolysis of LPdH with subsequent CO2 insertion yields a hydrocarbonate complex LPdII(η1-OC(O)OH). The hydrocarbonate complex forms hydrogen-bonded dimers in the crystal due to hydrogen bonds between the OC(O)OH fragments.
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The interaction of a set of mono-, di- and trisubstituted silanes with OH proton donors of different strength was studied by variable temperature (VT) FTIR and NMR spectroscopies at 190-298â K. Two competing sites of proton donors coordination: SiH and π-density of phenyl rings-are revealed for phenyl-containing silanes. The hydrogen bonds SiHâ â â HO and OHâ â â π(Ph) are of similar strength, but can be distinguished in the νSiH range: the νSiHâ â â HO vibrations appear at lower frequencies while OHâ â â π(Ph) complexes give Si-H vibrations shifted to higher frequency. The calculations showed the manifold picture of the noncovalent interactions in hydrogen-bonded complexes of phenylsilanes. As OHâ â â HSi bonds are weak, the other noncovalent interactions compete in the stabilization of the intermolecular complexes. Still, the structural and electronic parameters of "pure" DHB complexes of phenylsilanes are similar to those of Et3 SiH.
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The interaction of trans-W(N2)2(dppe)2 (1; dppe = 1,2-bis(diphenylphosphino)ethane) with relatively weak acids (p-nitrophenol, fluorinated alcohols, CF3COOH) was studied by means of variable temperature IR and NMR spectroscopy and complemented by DFT/B3PW91-D3 calculations. The results show, for the first time, the formation of a hydrogen bond to the coordinated dinitrogen, W-N≡N···H-O, that is preferred over H-bonding to the metal atom, W···H-O, despite the higher proton affinity of the latter. Protonation of the core metal-the undesirable side step in the conversion of N2 to NH3-can be avoided by using weaker and, more importantly, bulkier acids.
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The ability of neutral transition-metal hydrides to serve as a source of hydride ion H- or proton H+ is well appreciated. The hydride ligands possessing a partly negative charge are proton accepting sites, forming a dihydrogen bond, M-Hδ- â â â δ+ HX (M=transition metal or metalloid). On the other hand, some metal hydrides are able to serve as a proton source and give hydrogen bond of M-Hδ+ â â â X type (X=organic base). In this paper we analyse recent works on transition-metal and boron hydrides showing i)â how formation of an intermolecular complex between the reactants changes the Z-H (M-H and X-H) bond polarity and ii)â what is the implication of such activation in the mechanisms of hydrides reactions.
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The thermodynamics of chloride dissociation from the 18e arene ruthenium iminophosphonamides [(η6 -arene)RuCl{(R'N)2 PR2 }] (1 a-d) [previously known with arene=C6 Me6 , R=Ph, R'=p-Tol (a); R=Et, R'=p-Tol (b); R=Ph, R'=Me (c); and new with arene=p-cymene, R=Ph, R'=p-Tol (d)] was assessed in both polar and apolar solvents by variable-temperature UV/Vis, NMR, and 2D EXSY 1 Hâ NMR methods, which highlighted the influence of the NPN ligand on the equilibrium parameters. The dissociation enthalpy ΔHd decreases with increasing electron-donating ability of the N- and P-substituents (1 a, 1 d>1 b>1 c) and solvent polarity, and this results in exothermic spontaneous dissociation of 1 c in polar solvents. The coordination of neutral ligands (MeCN, pyridine, CO) to the corresponding 16e complexes [(η6 -arene)Ru{(R'N)2 PR2 }]+ PF6- (2 a-d) is reversible; the stability of the 2â L adducts depends on the π-accepting ability of L. Carbonylation of 2 a and 2 d resulted in rare examples of cationic arene ruthenium carbonyl complexes (3 a, 3 d), while the monocarbonyl adduct derived from 2 c reacts further with a second equivalent of CO with conversion to carbonyl-carbamoyl complex 3 c, in which one CO molecule is inserted into the Ru-N bond. The new complexes 1 d, 2 d, 3 a, 3 c, and 3 d were isolated and structurally characterized.
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Two Co(I) hydrides containing the tripodal polyphosphine ligand EP3, (κ4-EP3)Co(H) [E(CH2CH2PPh2)3; E = N (1), P (2)], have been exploited as ammonia borane (NH3BH3, AB) dehydrogenation catalysts in THF solution at T = 55 °C. The reaction has been analyzed experimentally through multinuclear (11B, 31P{1H}, 1H) NMR and IR spectroscopy, kinetic rate measurements, and kinetic isotope effect (KIE) determination with deuterated AB isotopologues. Both complexes are active in AB dehydrogenation, albeit with different rates and efficiency. While 1 releases 2 equiv of H2 per equivalent of AB in ca. 48 h, with concomitant borazine formation as the final "spent fuel", 2 produces 1 equiv of H2 only per equivalent of AB in the same reaction time, along with long-chain poly(aminoboranes) as insoluble byproducts. A DFT modeling of the first AB dehydrogenation step has been performed, at the M06//6-311++G** level of theory. The combination of the kinetic and computational data reveals that a simultaneous B-H/N-H activation occurs in the presence of 1, after a preliminary AB coordination to the metal center. In 2, no substrate coordination takes place, and the process is better defined as a sequential BH3/NH3 insertion process on the initially formed [Co]-NH2BH3 amidoborane complex. Finally, the reaction of 1 and 2 with NH-acids [AB and Me2NHBH3 (DMAB)] has been followed via VT-FTIR spectroscopy (in the -80 to +50 °C temperature range), with the aim of gaining a deeper experimental understanding of the dihydrogen bonding interactions that are at the origin of the observed H2 evolution.