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1.
Inorg Chem ; 60(1): 494-504, 2021 Jan 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33325695

RESUMO

In the past decade, the use of earth-abundant metals in homogeneous catalysis has flourished. In particular, metals such as cobalt and iron have been used extensively in reductive transformations including hydrogenation, hydroboration, and hydrosilylation. Manganese, on the other hand, has been considerably less explored in these reductive transformations. Here, we report a well-defined manganese complex, [Mn(iPrBDI)(OTf)2] (2a; BDI = bipyridinediimine), that is an active precatalyst in the hydroboration of a variety of electronically differentiated alkenes (>20 examples). The hydroboration is specifically selective for terminal alkenes and occurs with exclusive anti-Markovnikov selectivity. In contrast, when using the analogous cobalt complex [Co(iPrBDI)(OTf)2] (3a), internal alkenes are hydroborated efficiently, where a sequence of isomerization steps ultimately leads to their hydroboration. The contrasting terminal versus internal alkene selectivity for manganese and cobalt was investigated computationally and is further discussed in the herein-reported study.

2.
Inorg Chem ; 60(23): 18296-18306, 2021 Dec 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34787414

RESUMO

Metal-ligand cooperation is an important aspect in earth-abundant metal catalysis. Utilizing ligands as electron reservoirs to supplement the redox chemistry of the metal has resulted in many new exciting discoveries. Here, we demonstrate that iron bipyridine-diimine (BDI) complexes exhibit an extensive electron-transfer series that spans a total of five oxidation states, ranging from the trication [Fe(BDI)]3+ to the monoanion [Fe(BDI]-1. Structural characterization by X-ray crystallography revealed the multifaceted redox noninnocence of the BDI ligand, while spectroscopic (e.g., 57Fe Mössbauer and EPR spectroscopy) and computational studies were employed to elucidate the electronic structure of the isolated complexes, which are further discussed in this report.

3.
Chemistry ; 23(61): 15529-15533, 2017 Nov 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28833691

RESUMO

This work discloses that a simple change in the anion of a copper(II) reagent along with the reaction solvent can dramatically alter the course of a Cp*RhIII -catalyzed C-H activation-annulation reaction leading to completely switchable chemoselective products. The nature of the anion in terms of its coordinating ability and basicity, and also the polarity of the solvent have been found to be the crucial factors in the observed divergence.

4.
Chemistry ; 23(53): 13051-13057, 2017 Sep 21.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28671734

RESUMO

Cyclometalated complexes are an important class of (pre)catalysts in many reactions including hydride transfer. The ring size of such complexes could therefore be a relevant aspect to consider while modulating their catalytic activity. However, any correlation between the cyclometalating ring size and the catalytic activity should be drawn by careful assessment of the pertinent geometrical parameters, and overall electronic effects thereof. In this study, we investigated the vital role of key stereoelectronic functions of two classes of iridacyclic complexes-five-membered and six-membered cycles-in manupulating the catalytic efficiency in a model hydride-transfer reaction. Our investigation revealed that there exists an interesting multidimensional synergy among all the relevant stereoelectronic factors-yaw angle, bite angle, and the electronic properties of both the ligand and the metal center-that governs the hydride donor ability (hydricity) of the complexes during catalysis. Thus the six-membered chelate complexes with small yaw and large bite angles, strong donor ligand, and electron-rich metal were found to be better catalysts than their five-membered analogues. A frontier molecular orbital analysis supported the significant role of the above stereoelectronic synergistic effect associated with the chelate ring to control the hydride donor ability of the complexes.

5.
Chem Asian J ; 16(8): 999-1006, 2021 Apr 19.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33728809

RESUMO

During the past decade earth-abundant metals have become increasingly important in homogeneous catalysis. One of the reactions in which earth-abundant metals have found important applications is the hydroboration of unsaturated C-C and C-X bonds (X=O or N). Within these set of transformations, the hydroboration of challenging substrates such as nitriles, carbonates and esters still remain difficult and often relies on elaborate ligand designs and highly reactive catalysts (e. g., metal alkyls/hydrides). Here we report an effective methodology for the hydroboration of challenging C≡N and C=O bonds that is simple and applicable to a wide set of substrates. The methodology is based on using a manganese(II) triflate salt that, in combination with commercially available potassium tert-butoxide and pinacolborane, catalyzes the hydroboration of nitriles, carbonates, and esters at room temperature and with near quantitative yields in less than three hours. Additional studies demonstrated that other earth-abundant metal triflate salts can facilitate this reaction as well, which is further discussed in this report.

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