ABSTRACT
Here, we present the synthesis of a highly efficient V-doped α-Ag2WO4 catalyst for the oxidation of sulfides to sulfones, exhibiting a high degree of tolerance towards various sensitive functional groups. Remarkably, the catalysts with 0.01% V-doping content exhibited outstanding selectivity towards the oxidation process. Scavenger experiments indicated the direct involvement of electron-hole (e-/h+) pairs, hydroxyl radical (ËOH), and singlet oxygen (1O2) in the catalytic mechanism. Based on the experimental and theoretical results, the higher activity of the V-doped α-Ag2WO4 samples was associated with the preferential formation of the (100) surface in the catalyst morphology.
ABSTRACT
Formic acid (FA) dehydrogenation is an attractive process in the implementation of a hydrogen economy. To make this process greener and less costly, the interest nowadays is moving toward non-noble metal catalysts and additive-free protocols. Efficient protocols using earth abundant first row transition metals, mostly iron, have been developed, but other metals, such as molybdenum, remain practically unexplored. Herein, we present the transformation of FA to form H2 and CO2 through a cluster catalysis mechanism mediated by a cuboidal [Mo3S4H3(dmpe)3]+ hydride cluster in the absence of base or any other additive. Our catalyst has proved to be more active and selective than the other molybdenum compounds reported to date for this purpose. Kinetic studies, reaction monitoring, and isolation of the [Mo3S4(OCHO)3(dmpe)3]+ formate reaction intermediate, in combination with DFT calculations, have allowed us to formulate an unambiguous mechanism of FA dehydrogenation. Kinetic studies indicate that the reaction at temperatures up to 60 °C ends at the triformate complex and occurs in a single kinetic step, which can be interpreted in terms of statistical kinetics at the three metal centers. The process starts with the formation of a dihydrogen-bonded species with Mo-H···HOOCH bonds, detected by NMR techniques, followed by hydrogen release and formate coordination. Whereas this process is favored at temperatures up to 60 °C, the subsequent ß-hydride elimination that allows for the CO2 release and closes the catalytic cycle is only completed at higher temperatures. The cycle also operates starting from the [Mo3S4(OCHO)3(dmpe)3]+ formate intermediate, again with preservation of the cluster integrity, which adds our proposal to the list of the infrequent cluster catalysis reaction mechanisms.
ABSTRACT
In this work, α-Ag2-2xCuxWO4 (0 ≤ x ≤ 0.16) solid solutions with enhanced antibacterial (against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus) and antifungal (against Candida albicans) activities are reported. A plethora of techniques (X-ray diffraction with Rietveld refinements, inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry, micro-Raman spectroscopy, attenuated total reflectance-Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, field emission scanning electron microscopy, ultraviolet-visible spectroscopy, photoluminescence emissions, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy) were employed to characterize the as-synthetized samples and determine the local coordination geometry of Cu2+ cations at the orthorhombic lattice. To find a correlation between morphology and biocide activity, the experimental results were sustained by first-principles calculations at the density functional theory level to decipher the cluster coordinations and electronic properties of the exposed surfaces. Based on the analysis of the under-coordinated Ag and Cu clusters at the (010) and (101) exposed surfaces, we propose a mechanism to explain the biocide activity of these solid solutions.
Subject(s)
Disinfectants , Metal Nanoparticles , Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus , Anti-Bacterial Agents/chemistry , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Antifungal Agents/chemistry , Antifungal Agents/pharmacology , Disinfectants/pharmacology , Metal Nanoparticles/chemistry , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared , X-Ray DiffractionABSTRACT
Cubane-type Mo3S4 cluster hydrides decorated with phosphine ligands are active catalysts for the transfer hydrogenation of nitroarenes to aniline derivatives in the presence of formic acid (HCOOH) and triethylamine (Et3N). The process is highly selective and most of the cluster species involved in the catalytic cycle have been identified through reaction monitoring. Formation of a dihydrogen cluster intermediate has also been postulated based on previous kinetic and theoretical studies. However, the different steps involved in the transfer hydrogenation from the cluster to the nitroarene to finally produce aniline remain unclear. Herein, we report an in-depth computational investigation into this mechanism. Et3N reduces the activation barrier associated with the formation of Mo-HHOOCH dihydrogen species. The global catalytic process is highly exergonic and occurs in three consecutive steps with nitrosobenzene and N-phenylhydroxylamine as reaction intermediates. Our computational findings explain how hydrogen is transferred from these Mo-HHOOCH dihydrogen adducts to nitrobenzene with the concomitant formation of nitrosobenzene and the formate substituted cluster. Then, a ß-hydride elimination reaction accompanied by CO2 release regenerates the cluster hydride. Two additional steps are needed for hydrogen transfer from the dihydrogen cluster to nitrosobenzene and N-phenylhydroxylamine to finally produce aniline. Our results show that the three metal centres in the Mo3S4 unit act independently, so the cluster can exist in up to ten different forms that are capable of opening a wide range of reaction paths. This behaviour reveals the outstanding catalytic possibilities of this kind of cluster complexes, which work as highly efficient catalytic machines.
ABSTRACT
A general protocol to access Mo(3)FeS(4)(4+) clusters selectively modified at the Fe coordination site is presented starting from the all-chlorine Mo(3)(FeCl)S(4)(dmpe)(3)Cl(3) (1) [dmpe = 1,2-bis(dimethylphosphane-ethane)] cluster and tetrabutylammonium salts (n-Bu(4)NX) (X = CN(-), N(3)(-), and PhS(-)). Clusters Mo(3)(FeX)S(4)(dmpe)(3)Cl(3) [X = CN(-) (2), N(3)(-) (3), and PhS(-) (4)] are prepared in high yield, and comparison of geometric and redox features upon modification of the coordination environment at the Fe site at parity of ligands at the Mo sites is also presented. The existence of the cubane-type Mo(3)FeS(4)(4+,5+) redox couple is demonstrated by cyclic voltammetry and for compound 1 by cluster synthesis and X-ray structure determinations. Ground states for the 1/1(+) redox couple are evaluated on the basis of magnetic susceptibility measurements, electron paramagnetic resonance, and (57)Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy aimed at providing an input of experimental data for electronic structure determination based on density functional theory calculations.
Subject(s)
Electrons , Iron/chemistry , Molybdenum/chemistry , Organometallic Compounds/chemistry , Phosphines/chemistry , Spectrum Analysis , Sulfur/chemistry , Ligands , Magnetic Phenomena , Models, Molecular , Molecular Conformation , Oxidation-Reduction , Quantum TheoryABSTRACT
Chemoselective cubes: Cubane-type [Mo(3)S(4)X(3)(dmpe)(3)](+) clusters (dmpe = 1,2-(bis)dimethylphosphinoethane), in combination with an azeotropic 5:2 mixture of HCOOH and NEt(3) as the reducing agent, act as selective cluster catalysts (X = H) or precatalysts (X = Cl) for the transfer hydrogenation of functionalized nitroarenes, without the formation of hazardous hydroxylamines.
Subject(s)
Aniline Compounds/chemical synthesis , Coordination Complexes/chemistry , Nitro Compounds/chemistry , Aniline Compounds/chemistry , Catalysis , Coordination Complexes/chemical synthesis , Hydrogenation , Molecular StructureABSTRACT
The synthesis, crystal structure and solution characterization of the cubane-type [Mo(3)(FeCl)S(4)(dmpe)(3)Cl(3)] (1) (dmpe = 1,2-bis(dimethylphophane-ethane)) cluster are reported and the ligand substitution processes of chloride by thiophenolate investigated. The kinetics and the intimate mechanism of these substitutions reveal that compound 1 undergoes a number of Fe and Mo site specific ligand substitution reactions in acetonitrile solutions. In particular, PhS(-) coordination at the tetrahedral Fe site proceeds in a single resolved kinetic step whereas such substitutions at the Mo sites proceed more slowly. The effect of the presence of acids in the reaction media is also investigated and reveals that an acid excess hinders substitution reactions both at the Fe and Mo sites; however, an acid-promoted solvolysis of the Fe-Cl bonds is observed. Electrospray ionization (ESI) and tandem (ESI-MS/MS) mass spectrometry allow the identification of all the reaction intermediates proposed on the basis of stopped-flow measurements. The distinctive site specific reactivity made it possible to isolate two new clusters of the Mo(3)FeS(4)(4+) family featuring mixed chlorine/thiophenolate ligands, namely Mo(3)S(4)(FeSPh)(dmpe)(3)Cl(3) (2) and [Mo(3)S(4)(FeSPh)(dmpe)(3)(SPh)(3)] (3). A detailed computational study has also been carried out to understand the details of the mechanism of substitution at the M-Cl (M = Mo and Fe) bonds as well as the solvolysis at the Fe-Cl sites, with particular emphasis on the role of acids on the substitution process. The results of the calculations are in agreement with the experimental observations, thus justifying the non-existence of an accelerating effect of acids on the thiophenolate substitution reaction, which differs from previous proposals for the Fe(4)S(4) and MoFe(3)S(4) clusters and some related compounds.
Subject(s)
Coordination Complexes/chemistry , Iron/chemistry , Ligands , Molybdenum/chemistry , Coordination Complexes/chemical synthesis , Coordination Complexes/isolation & purification , Crystallography, X-Ray , Kinetics , Molecular Conformation , Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization , Spectrophotometry, UltravioletABSTRACT
The kinetics of reaction of the [W(3)PdS(4)H(3)(dmpe)(3)(CO)](+) hydride cluster (1(+)) with HCl has been measured in dichloromethane, and a second-order dependence with respect to the acid is found for the initial step. In the presence of added BF(4) (-) the second-order dependence is maintained, but there is a deceleration that becomes more evident as the acid concentration increases. DFT calculations indicate that these results can be rationalized on the basis of the mechanism previously proposed for the same reaction of the closely related [W(3)S(4)H(3)(dmpe)(3)](+) cluster, which involves parallel first- and second-order pathways in which the coordinated hydride interacts with one and two acid molecules, and ion pairing to BF(4) (-) hinders formation of dihydrogen bonded adducts able to evolve to the products of proton transfer. Additional DFT calculations are reported to understand the behavior of the cluster in neat acetonitrile and acetonitrile-water mixtures. The interaction of the HCl molecule with CH(3)CN is stronger than the W-H...HCl dihydrogen bond and so the reaction pathways operating in dichloromethane become inefficient, in agreement with the lack of reaction between 1(+) and HCl in neat acetonitrile. However, the attacking species in acetonitrile-water mixtures is the solvated proton, and DFT calculations indicate that the reaction can then go through pathways involving solvent attack to the W centers, while still maintaining the coordinated hydride, which is made possible by the capability of the cluster to undergo structural changes in its core.
Subject(s)
Palladium/chemistry , Sulfides/chemistry , Tungsten/chemistry , Catalysis , Crystallography, X-Ray , Kinetics , Molecular Structure , Protons , SolventsABSTRACT
The substitutional lability of Mo-Cl and Cu-Cl bonds in cubane-type Mo(3)CuS(4) and incomplete cubane-type Mo(3)S(4) clusters is exploited in an attempt to prepare cyanide-terminated complexes, namely [Mo(3)S(4)(CuCN)(dmpe)(3)Cl(3)]PF(6) ([2]PF(6)) and [Mo(3)S(4)(dmpe)(3)(CN)(3)]PF(6) ([5]PF(6)), and to subsequently use them as precursors in low-dimensional linking reactions. Mixed-metal assemblies formulated as [Mo(3)S(4)(Cu-muCN...Mo(CO)(5))(dmpe)(3)Cl(3)](+) ([3](+)) and [Mo(3)S(4)(dmpe)(3)(muCN...Mo(CO)(5))(3)](+) ([6](+)) are obtained by reaction of tetrahydrofuran solutions of [2]BPh(4) and [5]BPh(4) with the complex (THF)Mo(CO)(5). The intrinsic stability of the (M'-muCN...Mo(CO)(5)) linkages (M' = Cu in 3(+) and Mo in 6(+)) in solution and in the gas phase is investigated through a combination of variable-temperature (31)P NMR, IR, UV-vis spectroscopies, and electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry. The spectroscopic and electrochemical consequences of CN coordination as well as Mo(CO)(5) ligation either at the Cu or the Mo site in Mo(3)CuS(4) and Mo(3)S(4) clusters are reported. Replacement of Cl by CN or CN...Mo(CO)(5) at the Cu site does not affect the redox potentials, whereas analogous substitution at Mo sites exerts a profound anodic shift of 220 and 500 mV upon Cl to CN and Cl to CN...Mo(CO)(5) replacement, respectively.
ABSTRACT
Opening the cluster core: Substitution of the chloride ligand in the novel cationic cluster [W(3)CuS(4)H(3)Cl(dmpe)(3)](+) (see figure; dmpe=1,2-bis(dimethylphosphino)ethane) by acetonitrile is promoted by water addition. Kinetic and density functional theory studies lead to a mechanistic proposal in which acetonitrile or water attack causes the opening of the cluster core with dissociation of one of the Cu--S bonds to accommodate the entering ligand.Reaction of the incomplete cuboidal cationic cluster [W(3)S(4)H(3)(dmpe)(3)](+) (dmpe=1,2-bis(dimethylphosphino)ethane) with Cu(I) compounds produces rare examples of cationic heterodimetallic hydrido clusters of formula [W(3)CuClS(4)H(3)(dmpe)(3)](+) ([1](+)) and [W(3)Cu(CH(3)CN)S(4)H(3)(dmpe)(3)](2+) ([2](2+)). An unexpected conversion of [1](+) into [2](2+), which involves substitution of chloride by CH(3)CN at the copper centre, has been observed in CH(3)CN/H(2)O mixtures. Surprisingly, formation of the acetonitrile complex does not occur in neat acetonitrile and requires the presence of water. The kinetics of this reaction has been studied and the results indicate that the process is accelerated when the water concentration increases and is retarded in the presence of added chloride. Computational studies have also been carried out and a mechanism for the substitution reaction is proposed in which attack at the copper centre by acetonitrile or water causes disruption of the cubane-type core. ESI-MS experiments support the formation of intermediates with an open-core cluster structure. This kind of process is unprecedented in the chemistry of M(3)M'Q(4) (M=Mo, W; Q=S, Se) clusters, and allows for the transient appearance of a new coordination site at the M' site which could explain some aspects of the reactivity and catalytic properties of this kind of clusters.
Subject(s)
Copper/chemistry , Tungsten Compounds/chemistry , Crystallography, X-Ray , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Kinetics , Molecular Structure , Thermodynamics , Tungsten Compounds/chemical synthesisABSTRACT
X-ray structural data for the cubane-type clusters [Mo3CuS4(dmpe)3Cl4](+) and Mo3NiS4(dmpe)3Cl4 (dmpe = 1,2-bis(dimethylphosphino)ethane) with 16 metal electrons have been compared with optimized structural parameters calculated using "ab initio" methodologies. Compound Mo3NiS4(dmpe)3Cl4 crystallizes in the cubic noncentrosymmetric space group P213 with a Mo-Ni distance of 2.647 Angstrom, that is 0.2 Angstrom shorter than the Mo-Cu bond length in the isoelectronic copper cluster. The best agreement between theory and experiments has been obtained using the B3P86 method. In order to validate the B3P86 results, accurate infrared and Raman spectra have been acquired and the vibrational modes associated to the cubane-type Mo3M'S4 (M' = Cu or Ni) unit have been assigned theoretically. The electronic changes taking place when incorporating the M' into the Mo3S4 unit have been analyzed from a theoretical and experimental perspective. The bond dissociation energies between M'-Cl and Mo3S4 fragments show that formation of [Mo3CuS4(dmpe)3Cl4](+) is 135 kcal/mol energetically less favorable than the Ni incorporation. The more robust nature of the Mo3NiS4 fragment has been confirmed by mass spectrometry. The X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) spectra of the trimetallic and tetrametallic complexes have been measured and the obtained binding energies compared with the computed electronic populations based on topological approaches of the electron localization function (ELF). The energies and shapes of the Cu 2p and Ni 2p lines indicate formal oxidation states of Cu(I) and Ni(II). However, the reductive addition of nickel into [Mo3S4(dmpe)3Cl3](+) causes a small decrease in the Mo 3d binding energies. This fact prevents an unambiguous assignment of an oxidation state in a conventional way, a circumstance that has been analyzed through the covariance of the electronic populations associated to the C(M') core and V(Mo3Ni) and V(S(2)') valence basins where Mo3NiS4 is a particularly electronically delocalized chemical entity.
Subject(s)
Copper/chemistry , Models, Molecular , Molybdenum/chemistry , Nickel/chemistry , Sulfides/chemistry , Oxidation-Reduction , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared , Spectrum Analysis/methods , X-RaysABSTRACT
Reaction of the incomplete cuboidal [W3S4H3(dmpe)3]+ cluster with a Pd(0) complex under a CO atmosphere produces a rare example of a heterodimetallic hydrido cluster of formula [W3PdS4H3(dmpe)3(CO)]+ ([1]+). There are not significant changes in the W-W bond lengths on going from the trinuclear to the tetranuclear cluster. The average W-W and W-Pd bond distances of 2.769[10] and 2.90[2] A, respectively, are consistent with the presence of single bonds between metal atoms. The heterodimetallic [1]+ complex is easier to oxidize and more difficult to reduce than its trinuclear precursor, which reflects the electron-donating capability of the Pd(CO) fragment. However, mechanistic studies on the reaction of [1]+ with acids show a lower basicity for this complex in comparison with that of its trinuclear precursor, so there is a major electron-density rearrangement within the cluster core upon Pd(CO) coordination. This rearrangement is also reflected in an unusual expansion of the sulfur tetrahedron within the W3PdS4 core with the concomitant elongation of the W-S bond distances by 0.04 A with respect to the analogous bond lengths in the trinuclear precursor. For those thermodynamically favored proton-transfer processes, the reaction mechanism of [1]+ with acids is quite similar to that observed for the incomplete trinuclear cluster, with only small changes in the rate constants. The reaction of [1]+ with HCl in acetonitrile/water mixtures produces [W3PdS4Cl3(dmpe)3(CO)]+ ([2]+) in two kinetically distinguishable steps. Proton transfer occurs in the initial step, in which the W-H bonds are attacked by the acid to yield dihydrogen-bonded adducts that are further attacked by an acetonitrile molecule to give [W3PdS4(CH3CN)3(dmpe)3(CO)]4+ and dihydrogen. The nature of processes involved in the second step are not well-understood with the present data, although it is very likely that these correspond to some secondary processes. In the third resolved step, the coordinated CH3CN ligands in [W3PdS4(CH3CN)3(dmpe)3(CO)]4+ are substituted by Cl- to afford the final [2]+ product. No reaction is observed between [1]+ and HCl in neat acetonitrile, whereas the product of the reaction of [1]+ with HBF4 or Hpts (pts- = p-toluenesulfonate) in this solvent is [W3PdS4(CH3CN)3(dmpe)3(CO)]4+. The reaction occurs in a single kinetic step with a first- (Hpts) or second-order (HBF4) dependence with respect to the acid. The first- and second-order acid dependences can be interpreted through the initial formation of dihydrogen adducts with one or two acid molecules, respectively.
ABSTRACT
Heterodimetallic cubane-type complexes coordinated to diphosphanes [Mo(3)CoS(4)(dmpe)(3)Cl(4)](+) ([1](+)) (dmpe=1,2-bis(dimethylphosphanyl)ethane), [Mo(3)CoS(4)(dmpe)(3)Cl(4)] (1) and [Mo(3)CoS(4)(dmpe)(3)Cl(3)(CO)] (2) with 14, 15 and 16 metal electrons, respectively, have been prepared from the [Mo(3)S(4)(dmpe)(3)Cl(3)](+) trinuclear precursor using [Co(2)(CO)(8)] or CoCl(2) as cobalt source. Cluster complexes [1](+) and 1 are easily interconverted chemically and electrochemically. The Co-Cl distance increases upon electron addition and substitution of the chlorine atom coordinated to cobalt with CO only takes place in presence of a reducing agent to give complex 2. Structural changes in the intermetallic distances agree with the entering electrons occupying an orbital which is basically Mo-Mo non-bonding and slightly Mo-Co bonding. Magnetic susceptibility measurements for [1](+) and 1 are consistent with the presence of two and one unpaired electrons, respectively and therefore with an "e" character for the HOMO orbital. Oxidation of 1 with TCNQ results in the formation of a charge transfer salt formulated as [1](+)[TCNQ](-) with alternate layers of paramagnetic cluster cations and also paramagnetic organic anions. There is no magnetic interaction between layers and the thermal variation of the magnetic susceptibility has been modelled as a S= 1/2 TCNQ antiferromagnetic chain plus a S=1 cluster monomer with zero field splitting.