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1.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 3503, 2024 Apr 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38664372

ABSTRACT

The assembly of chiral molecules with multiple stereogenic elements is challenging, and, despite of indisputable advances, largely limited to toxic, cost-intensive and precious metal catalysts. In sharp contrast, we herein disclose a versatile C-H alkylation using a non-toxic, low-cost iron catalyst for the synthesis of substituted indoles with two chiral elements. The key for achieving excellent diastereo- and enantioselectivity was substitution on a chiral N-heterocyclic carbene ligand providing steric hindrance and extra represented by noncovalent interaction for the concomitant generation of C-N axial chirality and C-stereogenic center. Experimental and computational mechanistic studies have unraveled the origin of the catalytic efficacy and stereoselectivity.

2.
JACS Au ; 4(2): 512-524, 2024 Feb 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38425937

ABSTRACT

The association of the ferrous complex FeIICl2(dmpe)2 (1) with alkali bases M(hmds) (M = Li, Na, K) proves to be an efficient platform for the activation of Ar-H bonds. Two mechanisms can be observed, leading to either Ar-FeII species by deprotonative ferration or hydrido species Ar-FeII-H by oxidative addition of transient Fe0(dmpe)2 generated by reduction of 1. Importantly, the nature of the alkali cation in M(hmds) has a strong influence on the preferred path. Starting from the same iron precursor, diverse catalytic applications can be explored by a simple modulation of the MI cation. Possible strategies enabling cross-coupling using arenes as pro-nucleophiles, reductive dehydrocoupling, or deuteration of B-H bonds are discussed.

3.
Chemistry ; 30(25): e202400204, 2024 May 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38391392

ABSTRACT

Diarsene [L(MeO)GaAs]2 (L=HC[C(Me)N(Ar)]2, Ar=2,6-iPr2C6H3, 4) reacts with MeOTf and MeNHC (MeNHC=1,3,4,5-tetra-methylimidazol-2-ylidene) to the diarsene [L(TfO)GaAs]2 (5) and the carbene-coordinated diarsene [L(MeO)GaAsAs(MeNHC)Ga(OMe)L] (6). The NHC-coordination results in an inversion of the redox properties of the diarsene 4, which shows only a reversible reduction event at E1/2=-2.06 V vs Fc0/+1, whereas the carbene-coordinated diarsene 6 shows a reversible oxidation event at E1/2=-1.31 V vs Fc0/+1. Single electron transfer reactions of 4 and 6 yielded [K[2.2.2.]cryp][L(MeO)GaAs]2 (8) and [L(MeO)GaAsAs(MeNHC)-Ga(OMe)L][B(C6F5)4] (9) containing the radical anion [L(MeO)GaAs]2⋅- (8⋅-) and the NHC-coordinated radical cation [L(MeO)GaAsAs(MeNHC)Ga(OMe)L]⋅+ (9⋅+), respectively, while the salt-elimination reaction of the triflate-coordinated diarsene 5 with Na[B(C6F5)4] gave [LGaAs]2[B(C6F5)4]2 (11) containing the dication [LGaAs]2 2+ (112+). Compounds 1-11 were characterized by 1H and 13C NMR, EPR (8, 9), IR, and UV-Vis spectroscopy and by single crystal X-ray diffraction (sc-XRD). DFT calculations provided a detailed understanding of the electronic nature of the diarsenes (4, 6) and the radical ions (8⋅-, 9⋅+), respectively.

4.
Organometallics ; 42(14): 1810-1817, 2023 Jul 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37502313

ABSTRACT

Iron-catalyzed amino-oxygenation of olefins often uses discrete ligands to increase reactivity and broaden substrate scope. This work is focused on examining ligand effects on reactivity and in situ iron speciation in a system which utilizes a bisoxazoline ligand. Freeze-trapped 57Fe Mössbauer and EPR spectroscopies as well as SC-XRD experiments were utilized to isolate and identify the species formed during the catalytic reaction of amino-oxygenation of olefins with functionalized hydroxylamines, as well as in the precatalytic mixture of iron salt and ligand. Experiments revealed significant influence of ligand and solvent on the speciation in the precatalytic mixture which led to the formation of different species which had significant influence on the reactivity. In situ experiments showed no evidence for the formation of an Fe(IV)-nitrene intermediate, and the isolation of a reactive intermediate was unsuccessful, suggesting that the use of the PyBOX ligand led to the formation of more reactive intermediates than observed in the previously studied system, preventing direct detection of intermediate species. However, isolation of the seven coordinate Fe(III) species with three carboxylate units of the hydroxylamine and spin-trap EPR experiments suggest formation of a species with unpaired electron density on the hydroxylamine nitrogen, which is in accordance with formation of a potential iron iminyl radical species, as recently proposed in literature. An observed increase in yield when substrates devoid of C-H bonds as well as isolation of a ring-closed dead-end species with substrates containing these bonds suggests the identity of the functionalized hydroxylamine can dictate the reactivity observed in these reactions.

5.
Inorg Chem ; 61(32): 12508-12517, 2022 Aug 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35905438

ABSTRACT

The first uranium bis(acyl)phosphide (BAP) complexes were synthesized from the reaction between sodium bis(mesitoyl)phosphide (Na(mesBAP)) or sodium bis(2,4,6-triisopropylbenzoyl)phosphide (Na(trippBAP)) and UI3(1,4-dioxane)1.5. Thermally stable, homoleptic BAP complexes were characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, when appropriate, for the elucidation of the electronic structure and bonding of these complexes. EPR spectroscopy revealed that the BAP ligands on the uranium center retain a significant amount of electron density. The EPR spectrum of the trivalent U(trippBAP)3 has a rhombic signal near g = 2 (g1 = 2.03; g2 = 2.01; and g3 = 1.98) that is consistent with the EPR-observed unpaired electron being located in a molecular orbital that appears ligand-derived. However, upon warming the complex to room temperature, no resonance was observed, indicating the presence of uranium character.


Subject(s)
Uranium , Crystallography, X-Ray , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Ligands , Models, Molecular , Sodium , Uranium/chemistry
6.
Chem Sci ; 12(27): 9398-9407, 2021 Jul 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34349913

ABSTRACT

Synthetic methods that utilise iron to facilitate C-H bond activation to yield new C-C and C-heteroatom bonds continue to attract significant interest. However, the development of these systems is still hampered by a limited molecular-level understanding of the key iron intermediates and reaction pathways that enable selective product formation. While recent studies have established the mechanism for iron-catalysed C-H arylation from aryl-nucleophiles, the underlying mechanistic pathway of iron-catalysed C-H activation/functionalisation systems which utilise electrophiles to establish C-C and C-heteroatom bonds has not been determined. The present study focuses on an iron-catalysed C-H allylation system, which utilises allyl chlorides as electrophiles to establish a C-allyl bond. Freeze-trapped inorganic spectroscopic methods (57Fe Mössbauer, EPR, and MCD) are combined with correlated reaction studies and kinetic analyses to reveal a unique and rapid reaction pathway by which the allyl electrophile reacts with a C-H activated iron intermediate. Supporting computational analysis defines this novel reaction coordinate as an inner-sphere radical process which features a partial iron-bisphosphine dissociation. Highlighting the role of the bisphosphine in this reaction pathway, a complementary study performed on the reaction of allyl electrophile with an analogous C-H activated intermediate bearing a more rigid bisphosphine ligand exhibits stifled yield and selectivity towards allylated product. An additional spectroscopic analysis of an iron-catalysed C-H amination system, which incorporates N-chloromorpholine as the C-N bond-forming electrophile, reveals a rapid reaction of electrophile with an analogous C-H activated iron intermediate consistent with the inner-sphere radical process defined for the C-H allylation system, demonstrating the prevalence of this novel reaction coordinate in this sub-class of iron-catalysed C-H functionalisation systems. Overall, these results provide a critical mechanistic foundation for the rational design and development of improved systems that are efficient, selective, and useful across a broad range of C-H functionalisations.

7.
Inorg Chem ; 60(18): 13811-13820, 2021 Sep 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34043353

ABSTRACT

As prevalent cofactors in living organisms, iron-sulfur clusters participate in not only the electron-transfer processes but also the biosynthesis of other cofactors. Many synthetic iron-sulfur clusters have been used in model studies, aiming to mimic their biological functions and to gain mechanistic insight into the related biological systems. The smallest [2Fe-2S] clusters are typically used for one-electron processes because of their limited capacity. Our group is interested in functionalizing small iron-sulfur clusters with redox-active ligands to enhance their electron storage capacity, because such functionalized clusters can potentially mediate multielectron chemical transformations. Herein we report the synthesis, structural characterization, and catalytic activity of a diferric [2Fe-2S] cluster functionalized with two o-phenylenediamide ligands. The electrochemical and chemical reductions of such a cluster revealed rich redox chemistry. The functionalized diferric cluster can store up to four electrons reversibly, where the first two reduction events are ligand-based and the remainder metal-based. The diferric [2Fe-2S] cluster displays catalytic activity toward silylation of dinitrogen, affording up to 88 equiv of the amine product per iron center.


Subject(s)
Iron-Sulfur Proteins/chemistry , Nitrogen/chemistry , Phenylenediamines/chemistry , Catalysis , Iron-Sulfur Proteins/chemical synthesis , Ligands , Molecular Structure , Oxidation-Reduction
8.
Dalton Trans ; 50(2): 416-428, 2021 Jan 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33315022

ABSTRACT

Magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectroscopy is a powerful experiment used to probe the electronic structure and bonding in paramagnetic metal-based complexes. While C-term MCD spectroscopy has been utilized in many areas of chemistry, it has been underutilized in studying paramagnetic organometallic transition metal and f-element complexes. From the analysis of isolated organometallic complexes to the study of in situ generated species, MCD can provide information regarding ligand interactions, oxidation and spin state, and geometry and coordination environment of paramagnetic species. The pratical aspects of this technique, such as air-free sample preparation and cryogenic experimental temperatures, allow for the study of highly unstable species, something that is often difficult with other spectroscopic techniques. This perspective highlights MCD studies of both transition metal and f-element organometallic complexes, including in situ generated reactive intermediates, to demonstrate the utility of this technique in probing electronic structure, bonding and mechanism in paramagnetic organometallic chemistry.

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