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1.
Inorg Chem ; 62(12): 5040-5045, 2023 Mar 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36912617

RESUMEN

Highly reducing Sm(II) reductants and protic ligands were used as a platform to ascertain the relationship between low-valent metal-protic ligand affinity and degree of ligand X-H bond weakening with the goal of forming potent proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reductants. Among the Sm(II)-protic ligand reductant systems investigated, the samarium dibromide N-methylethanolamine (SmBr2-NMEA) reagent system displayed the best combination of metal-ligand affinity and stability against H2 evolution. The use of SmBr2-NMEA afforded the reduction of a range of substrates that are typically recalcitrant to single-electron reduction including alkynes, lactones, and arenes as stable as biphenyl. Moreover, the unique role of NMEA as a chelating ligand for Sm(II) was demonstrated by the reductive cyclization of unactivated esters bearing pendant olefins in contrast to the SmBr2-water-amine system. Finally, the SmBr2-NMEA reagent system was found to reduce substrates analogous to key intermediates in the nitrogen fixation process. These results reveal SmBr2-NMEA to be a powerful reductant for a wide range of challenging substrates and demonstrate the potential for the rational design of PCET reagents with exceptionally weak X-H bonds.

2.
J Org Chem ; 87(3): 1689-1697, 2022 Feb 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34775764

RESUMEN

Coordination-induced desolvation or ligand displacement by cosolvents and additives is a key feature responsible for the reactivity of Sm(II)-based reagent systems. High-affinity proton donor cosolvents such as water and glycols also demonstrate coordination-induced bond weakening of the O-H bond, facilitating reduction of a broad range of substrates. In the present work, the coordination of ammonia to SmI2 was examined using Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics simulations and mechanistic studies, and the SmI2-ammonia system is compared to the SmI2-water system. The coordination number and reactivity of the SmI2-ammonia solvent system were found to be similar to those of SmI2-water but exhibited an order of magnitude greater rate of arene reduction by SmI2-ammonia than by SmI2-water at the same concentrations of cosolvent. In addition, upon coordination of ammonia to SmI2, the Sm(II)-ammonia solvate demonstrates one of the largest degrees of N-H bond weakening reported in the literature compared to known low-valent transition metal ammonia complexes.

3.
Dalton Trans ; 49(23): 7897-7902, 2020 Jun 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32483561

RESUMEN

Proton donors are important components of many reactions mediated by samarium diiodide (SmI2). The addition of water to SmI2 creates a reagent system that enables the reduction of challenging substrates through proton-coupled electron-transfer (PCET). Simple alcohols such as methanol are often used successfully in reductions with SmI2 but often have reduced reactivity. The basis for the change in reactivity of SmI2-H2O and SmI2-MeOH is not apparent given the modest differences between water and methanol. A combination of Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics simulations and mechanistic experiments were performed to examine the differences between the reductants formed in situ for the SmI2-H2O and SmI2-MeOH systems. This work demonstrates that reduced coordination of MeOH to Sm(ii) results in a complex that reduces arenes through a sequential electron proton transfer at low concentrations and that this process is significantly slower than reduction by SmI2-H2O.

4.
Inorg Chem ; 58(20): 13927-13932, 2019 Oct 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31584813

RESUMEN

Water addition to Sm(II) has been shown to increase reactivity for both SmI2 and SmBr2. Previous work in our groups has demonstrated that this increase in reactivity can be attributed to coordination induced bond weakening enabling substrate reduction through proton-coupled electron transfer. The present work examines the interaction of water with samarium dichloride (SmCl2) and illustrates the importance of the Sm-X interaction and bond distance upon water addition critical for the reactivity of the reagent system. Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics simulations identify substantial variations among the reductants created in solution upon water addition to SmI2, SmBr2, and SmCl2 with the latter showing the least halide dissociation. This results in a lower water coordination number for SmCl2, creating a more powerful reducing system. As previously shown with the other SmX2-water systems, coordination-induced bond-weakening of the O-H bond of water bound to Sm(II) results in significant bond weakening. In the case of SmCl2, the bond weakening is estimated to be in the range of 83 to 88.5 kcal/mol.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 140(48): 16731-16739, 2018 12 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30412400

RESUMEN

The addition of water to samarium(II) has been demonstrated to have a significant impact on the reduction of organic substrates, with the majority of research dedicated to the most widely used reagent, samarium diiodide (SmI2). The work presented herein focuses on the reducing capabilities of samarium dibromide (SmBr2) and demonstrates how the modest change in halide ligand results in observable mechanistic differences between the SmBr2-water and the SmI2-water systems that have considerable implications in terms of reactivity between the two reagents. Quantum chemical results from Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics simulations show significant differences between SmI2-water and SmBr2-water, with the latter displaying less dissociation of the halide, which results in a lower coordination number for water. Experimental results are consistent with computational results and demonstrate that the coordination sphere of SmBr2 is saturated at lower concentrations of water. In addition, coordination-induced bond-weakening of the O-H bond is demonstrably different for water bound to SmBr2, leading to an estimated O-H bond-weakening of at least 83 kcal/mol, nearly 10 kcal/mol larger than the bond-weakening observed in SmI2-H2O. Experimental results also demonstrate that the use of alcohols in place of water with SmBr2 leads to substrate reduction, albeit several orders of magnitude slower than for SmBr2-water. The difference in rates resulting from the change in proton donor is attributed to a rate-limiting proton-coupled electron transfer in SmBr2-water and a sequential electron transfer then proton transfer in SmBr2-alcohol systems, where electron transfer is rate-limiting.

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