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Homogenous advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) based on transition metal catalysts toward the activation of H2O2 to hydroxyl radical (â¢OH) have been widely applied to organic pollutants removal, such as Fenton and Fenton-like processes. These transition metal catalysts mostly flocculate as the pH increases. It's worth noting that the formed transition metal flocs are complex heterogeneous aggregations with active substances, providing diverse reaction spaces and interfaces. However, it is a challenge to distinguish the roles of transition metal flocs in the organic pollutants removal from homogeneous catalytic reactions. Herein, we unveiled a pathway for the long-lasting removal of organic pollutants via Cr flocs adsorbed with â¢OH (HOâ¢-Cr flocs) using a stepwise method. First, adsorbed â¢OH (â¢OHads) within the HOâ¢-Cr flocs was proved to be the active site forming hydrogen bond (H-bond) and van der Waals force with organic pollutants. Then, the presence of switchable electron transfer between Cr and OH groups within the HOâ¢-Cr flocs was revealed, contributing to the persistent existence of â¢OHads and consequently ensuring the long-lasting organics removal. Further, this removal pathway of organic pollutants was confirmed during the leather wastewater treatment. These findings will complement a different pathway for organic pollutants removal via transition metal flocs and extend the lifetime of homogeneous AOPs based on transition metal catalysts, providing significant implications for their design and optimization.
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SignificanceThe photosensitizer is one of the important components in the photocatalytic system. Molecular photosensitizers have well-defined structures, which is beneficial in revealing the catalysis mechanism and helpful for further structural design and performance optimization. However, separation and recycling of the molecular photosensitizers is a great problem. Loading them into/on two/three-dimensional supports through covalent bonds, electrostatic interactions, and supramolecular interactions is a method that enhances their separation and recycling capability. Nonetheless, the structures of the resulting composites are unclear. Thus, the development of highly crystalline heterogeneity methods for molecular photosensitizers, albeit greatly challenging, is meaningful and desirable in photocatalysis, through which heterogeneous photosensitizers with well-defined structures, definite catalysis mechanisms, and good catalytic performance would be expected.
Assuntos
Fármacos Fotossensibilizantes , Catálise , Estrutura Molecular , Fármacos Fotossensibilizantes/químicaRESUMO
The development of palladium-catalyzed fluorination with biaryl monophosphine ligands has faced two important problems that limit its application for bromoarenes: the formation of regioisomers and insufficient catalysis for heteroaryl substrates as bromothiophene derivatives. Overcoming these problems requires more ligand design. In this work, reliable theoretical calculations were used to elucidate important ligand features necessary for achieving more rate acceleration and selectivity. These features include increasing the ligand-substrate repulsion and creating a negative charge in the space around the fluoride ion bonded to the palladium. The investigated L5 ligand presents these features, and the calculations predict that this ligand completely suppresses the regioisomer formation in the difficult case of 4-bromoanisole. In addition, the free energy barriers are decreased by 2-3 kcal mol-1 in comparison with the catalysis involving the AlPhos ligand. Thus, the present study points out a direction for new developments in palladium-catalyzed fluorination.
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Metal-Organic Frameworks (MOFs) recently emerged as a new platform for the realization of integrated devices for artificial photosynthesis. However, there remain few demonstrations of rational tuning of such devices for improved performance. Here, a fast molecular water oxidation catalyst working via water nucleophilic attack is integrated into the MOF MIL-142, wherein Fe3O nodes absorb visible light, leading to charge separation. Materials are characterized by a range of structural and spectroscopic techniques. New, [Ru(tpy)(Qc)(H2O)]+ (tpy = 2,2':6',2â³-terpyridine and Qc = 8-quinolinecarboxylate)-doped Fe MIL-142 achieved a high photocurrent (1.6 × 10-3 A·cm-2) in photo-electrocatalytic water splitting at pH = 1. Unassisted photocatalytic H2 evolution is also reported with Pt as the co-catalyst (4.8 µmol g-1 min-1). The high activity of this new system enables hydrogen gas capture from an easy-to-manufacture, scaled-up prototype utilizing MOF deposited on FTO glass as a photoanode. These findings provide insights for the development of MOF-based light-driven water-splitting assemblies utilizing a minimal amount of precious metals and Fe-based photosensitizers.
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Manganese is currently experiencing a great deal of attention in homogeneous catalysis as a sustainable alternative to platinum group metals due to its abundance, affordable price and low toxicity. While homogeneous nitrogen fixation employing well-defined transition metal complexes has been an important part of coordination chemistry, manganese derivatives have been only sporadically used in this research area. In this contribution, the authors systematically cover manganese organometallic chemistry related to N2 activation spanning almost 60â years, identify apparent pitfalls and outline encouraging perspectives for its future development.
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The synthesis of a water-soluble, phosphine-pegylated iridium(I) catalyst and its application in hydrogen isotope exchange (HIE) reactions in buffer is reported. The longer polyethylene glycol side chains on the phosphine increased the water solubility independently from the pH. HIE reactions of polar substrates in protic solvents were studied. DFT calculations gave further insights into the catalytic processes. The scope and limitation of the pegylated catalyst was studied in HIE reactions of several complex compounds in borax buffer at pHâ 9 and the best conditions were applied in a tritium experiment with the drug telmisartan.
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Manganese(I) carbonyl complexes bearing a MACHO-type ligand (HN(CH2 CH2 PR2 )2 ) readily react in their amido form with CO2 to generate 4-membered {Mn-N-C-O} metallacycles. The stability of the adducts decreases with the steric demand of the R groups at phosphorous (R=isopropyl>adamantyl). The CO2 -adducts display generally a lower reactivity as compared to the parent amido complexes. These adducts can thus be interpretated as masked forms of the active amido catalysts and potentially play important roles as off-loop species or branching points in catalytic transformations of carbon dioxide.
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The combination of metal-based homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysts in the same reaction media is a powerful, yet relatively unexplored approach in organic chemistry. This strategy can address important limitations associated with purely homogeneous or heterogeneous catalysis such as the incompatibility of different catalytic species in solution, or the limited tunability of solid catalysts, respectively. Moreover, the facile reusability of the solid catalyst, contributes to increase the overall sustainability of the process. As a result, this semi-heterogeneous multi-catalytic approach has unlocked significant advances in organic chemistry, improving existing reactions and even enabling the discovery of novel transformations, exemplified by the formal alkane metathesis. This concept article aims to showcase the benefits of this strategy through the exploration of diverse relevant examples from the literature, hoping to spur research on new metal-based homogeneous-heterogeneous catalyst combinations that will result in reactivity challenging to achieve by conventional homogeneous or heterogeneous catalysis alone.
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The synthetic potential of substituted 1,4-dioxenes is well recognised, although the chemistry of 2-aryl-1,4-dioxenes is relatively unexplored. Their transition metal-catalysed synthesis has been limited to Stille-type cross-coupling chemistry, typically showing long reaction times, or proceeding at high reaction temperatures. Here we present a facile and general methodology for the cross-coupling of aryl bromides with lithium 1,4-dioxene, affording a range of 2-aryl-1,4-dioxenes in generally good yields. We highlight the synthetic applicability of this transformation at multigram scale, and demonstrate the versatility of the products by conversion of the dioxene units to various carbonyl-based functionalities. Additionally, we present a concise two-step synthesis of an arylated analogue to a known 1,4-dioxene-based antifungal agent.
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Based on our previous study in chemical subtleties of the proton tunneling distance for metal hydride formation (PTD-MH) to regulate the selectivity of CO2 reduction reaction (CO2RR), we have developed a family of Mn terpyridine derivatives, in which urea groups functions as multipoint hydrogen-bonding hangman to accelerate the reaction rate. We found that such changes to the second coordination sphere significantly increased the turnover frequency (TOF) for CO2 reduction to ca. 360 s - 1 ${{s}^{-1}}$ with this family of molecular catalysts while maintaining high selectivity (ca. 100 %±3) for CO even in the presence of a large amount of phenol as proton source. Notably, the compounds studied in this manuscript all exhibit large value for i c a t / i p ${{{\bf i}}_{{\bf c a t}}/{{\bf i}}_{{\bf p}}}$ as that achieved by Fe porphyrins derivates, while saving up to 0.55â V in overpotential with respect to the latter.
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The major impediment in realizing a carbon-neutral hydrogen fuel economy is the cost and inadequacy of contemporary electrochemical water splitting approaches towards the energy intensive oxygen evolution reaction (OER). The O-O bond formation in the water oxidation half-cell reaction is both kinetically and thermodynamically challenging and amplifies the overpotential requirement in most of the active water oxidation catalysts. Herein, density functional theory is employed to interrogate 20 Ni(II) complexes, out of which 17 are in silico designed molecular water oxidation catalysts, coordinated to electron-rich tetra-anionic redox non-innocent phenylenebis(oxamidate) and dibenzo-1,4,7,10-tetraazacyclododecane-2,3,8,9-tetraone parent ligands and their structural analogues, and identify the role of substituent changes or ligand effects in the order of their reactivity. Importantly, our computational mechanistic analyses predict that the activation free energy of the rate-determining O-O bond formation step obeys an inverse scaling relationship with the global electrophilicity index of the intermediate generated on two-electron oxidation of the starting complex. Additionally, the driving force is directly correlated with this OER descriptor which enables two-dimensional volcano representation and thereby extrapolation towards the ideal substitution with the chosen ligand. Our study, therefore, establish fundamental insights to overcome the imperative overpotential issue with simple and precise computational rationalization preceding experimental validation.
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Energy demands, and environmental aspects raised the need to study hydrogen-carrying material such as borohydride for the practical usage of hydrogen as a cleaner and more efficient fuel. A proper understanding of the hydrogen generation mechanism is a key requirement for the designing of efficient catalysts, as the non-catalytic hydrolysis of borohydride in non-acidic media is a slow process. The hydrolysis mechanism of borohydride varies considerably using homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysts. A comparison of the hydrolysis mechanism of borohydride using gold and silver as homogenous and heterogeneous catalysts is given in this review. Unexpectedly, with gold catalyst, Au+ or Au(111), only two steps of hydrolysis occur and BH(OH)2 is produced, while with silver catalyst, Ag+ or Ag(111), the hydrolysis can proceed to completion.
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The discovery that cyclic (ArO)2PF can support Rh-catalysts for hydroformylation with significant advantages in tuning regioselectivity transformed the study of metal complexes of monofluorophos ligands from one of primarily academic interest to one with potentially important applications in catalysis. In this review, the syntheses of monofluorophosphites, (RO)2PF, and monofluorophosphines, R2PF, are discussed and the factors that control the kinetic stability of these ligands to hydrolysis and disproportionation are set out. A survey of the coordination chemistry of these two classes of monofluorophos ligands with d-block metals is presented, emphasising the bonding of the fluorophos to d-block metals, predominantly in low oxidation states. The application of monofluorophos ligands in homogeneous catalysis (especially hydroformylation and hydrocyanation) is discussed, and it is argued that there is great potential for monofluorophos complexes in future catalytic applications.
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The design and study of rich, bulky phosphorus ligands is a key area of research for homogeneous catalysis. Here, we describe an original strategy using a hydrophosphination reaction to produce phosphines of interest for coordination chemistry and homogenous catalysis. In particular, the phosphine obtained by reacting diphenylphosphine with acenaphthylene (ligand 2) gives a ligand that adopts an unusual spatial geometry. The coordination chemistry of the ligand has been investigated with Au(I), Ag(I), Cu(I), and Pd(II), for which a complete characterization could be made, particularly in X-ray diffraction studies. The reactivity of some of these complexes has been demonstrated, particularly in Pd-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions and Au-catalyzed hydroaminations and in the hydration of alkynes.
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Phospholane-phosphites are known to show highly unusual selectivity towards branched aldehydes in the hydroformylation of terminal alkenes. This paper describes the synthesis of hitherto unknown unsaturated phospholene borane precursors and their conversion to the corresponding phospholene-phosphites. The relative stereochemistry of one of these ligands and its Pd complex was assigned with the aid of X-ray crystal structure determinations. These ligands were able to approach the level of selectivity observed for phospholane-phosphites in the rhodium-catalysed hydroformylation of propene. High-pressure infra-red (HPIR) spectroscopic monitoring of the catalyst formation revealed that whilst the catalysts showed good thermal stability with respect to fragmentation, the C=C bond in the phospholene moiety was slowly hydrogenated in the presence of rhodium and syngas. The ability of this spectroscopic tool to detect even subtle changes in structure, remotely from the carbonyl ligands, underlines the usefulness of HPIR spectroscopy in hydroformylation catalyst development.
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A palladium capsule, made of three cavitands, namely P,P-dichlorido{5,17-bis[5-(diphenylphosphanyl)-4(24),6(10),12(16),18(22)-tetramethylenedioxy-2,8,14,20-tetrapentylresorcin[4]arenyl-17-oxymthyl]-4(24),6(10),12(16),18(22)-tetramethylenedioxy-2,8,14,20-tetrapentylresorcin[4]arene}palladium(II) (1), was synthetized by coordination of the corresponding diphosphinated ligand and the palladium precursor [PdCl2(PhCN)2] in 27% yield. The obtained P,P-chelate complex was fully characterized by elemental analysis, NMR and mass spectrometry. Molecular dynamics simulations carried out on the metallo-capsule showed the structure made by the three cavitands was slightly distorted over the 1 µs of the simulation. The evaluation of the palladium capsule 1 in the reaction between arylacetylenes and Et3SiH in undried conditions unequivocally demonstrates a drastic change in chemoselectivity, with the formation of the partially hydrogenation product rather than the hydrosilylation products observed with complexes whose active center is more accessible, for instance [PdCl2(PPh3)2].
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A novel synthesis strategy to access 2-alkoxyquinoline derivatives via a palladium-driven cascade reaction is disclosed. Unlike classic methods based on the alkylation of 2-quinolones with alkyl halides, the present method benefits from the de novo assembly of the quinoline core starting from 1,3-butadiynamides. Palladium-catalyzed reaction cascades with N-(2-iodophenyl)-N-tosyl-1,3-butadiynamides and primary alcohols as external nucleophiles proceed under mild reaction conditions and selectively deliver a variety of differently functionalized 4-alkenyl 2-alkoxyquinolines in a single batch transformation.
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This work describes the synthesis of eight new Pd(II) and Pt(II) complexes with the general formula [M(TSC)Cl], where TSC represents the 4N-monosubstituted thiosemicarbazone derived from 2-acetylpyridine N-oxide with the substituents CH3 (H4MLO), C2H5 (H4ELO), phenyl (H4PLO) and (CH3)2 (H4DMLO). These complexes have been characterized by elemental analysis, molar conductivity, IR spectroscopy, 1H, 13C, 195Pt and ESI-MS. The complexes exhibit a square planar geometry around the metallic center coordinated by a thiosemicarbazone molecule acting as a donor ONS-type pincer ligand and by a chloride, as confirmed by the molecular structures of the complexes, [Pd(4ELO)Cl] (3) and [Pd(4PLO)Cl] (5), determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. The 195Pt NMR spectra of the complexes of formulae [Pt(4PLO)Cl] (6) and [Pt(4DMLO)Cl] (8) in DMSO show a single signal at -2420.4 ppm, confirming the absence of solvolysis products. Complexes 3 and 5 have been tested as catalysts in the Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling reactions of aryl bromides with phenylboronic acid, with yields of between 50 and 90.
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Asymmetric hydrogenation finds widespread application in academia and industry. And indeed, a number of processes have been implemented for the production of pharma and agro intermediates as well as flavors & fragrances. Although these processes are all based on the use of late transition metals as catalysts, there is an increasing interest in the use of base metal catalysis in view of their lower cost and the expected different substrate scope. Catalysts based on cobalt have already shown their potential in enantioselective hydrogenation chemistry. This review outlines the impressive progress made in recent years on cobalt-catalyzed asymmetric hydrogenation of different unsaturated substrates. We also illustrate the ligand dependent substrate specificity as well as the mechanistic variability in detail. This may well guide further catalyst development in this research area.
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Hydroalkylation of alkynes is a powerful method for alkene synthesis. However, regioselectivity has been difficult to achieve in transformations of internal alkynes hindering applications in the synthesis of trisubstituted alkenes. To overcome these limitations, we explored using boryl groups as versatile directing groups that can control the regioselectivity of the hydroalkylation and subsequently be replaced in a cross-coupling reaction. The result of our exploration is a nickel-catalyzed hydroalkylation of alkynyl boronamides that provides access to a wide range of trisubstituted alkenes with high regio- and diastereoselectivity. The reaction can be accomplished with a variety of coupling partners, including primary and secondary alkyl iodides, α-bromo esters, α-chloro phthalimides, and α-chloro boronic esters. Preliminary studies of the reaction mechanism provide evidence for the hydrometalation mechanism and the formation of alkyl radical intermediates.