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1.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 63(7): e202316729, 2024 Feb 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38116899

RESUMEN

Oxidation of an iridium(III) oxo precursor enabled the structural, spectroscopic, and quantum-chemical characterization of the first well-defined iridium(IV) oxo complex. Side-by-side examination of the proton-coupled electron transfer thermochemistry revealed similar driving forces for the isostructural oxo complexes in two redox states due to compensating contributions from H+ and e- transfer. However, C-H activation of dihydroanthracene revealed significant hydrogen tunneling for the distinctly more basic iridium(III) oxo complex. Our findings complement the growing body of data that relate tunneling to ground state properties as predictors for the selectivity of C-H bond activation.

2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 25(16): 11324-11330, 2023 Apr 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37040157

RESUMEN

The sterically hindered nitroxyl radical TEMPO is co-expanded with its hydroxylamine TEMPO-H in a supersonic jet and probed by FTIR spectroscopy. One major and one minor conformation of the 1 : 1 complex are identified by their OH stretching signatures, the major one exhibiting a weaker hydrogen bond. The acidic hydrogen atom in these structures can switch between the two TEMPO units in a more or less symmetric double minimum potential with a high barrier. Both conformations are experimentally shown to have a self-exchange quantum tunnelling period longer than 15 ps or 1500 OH vibrational periods even when excited by 41 kJ mol-1 along the OH stretching coordinate. The homodimer and more tentatively the monohydrate of TEMPO-H are also identified in the spectrum.

3.
ACS Catal ; 10(14): 7449-7463, 2020 Jul 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35912398

RESUMEN

The oxidation state of the redox noninnocent tetra-amido macrocyclic ligand (TAML) scaffold was recently shown to affect the formation of nitrene radical species on cobalt(III) upon reaction with PhI=NNs [van Leest N. P.; J. Am. Chem. Soc.2020, 142, 552-563]. For the neutral [Co III (TAML sq )] complex, this leads to the doublet (S = 1/2) mono-nitrene radical species [Co III (TAML q )(N • Ns)(Y)] (bearing an unidentified sixth ligand Y in at least the frozen state), while a triplet (S = 1) bis-nitrene radical species [Co III (TAML q )(N • Ns) 2 ] - is generated from the anionic [Co III (TAML red )] - complex. The one-electron-reduced Fischer-type nitrene radicals (N•Ns-) are formed through single (mono-nitrene) or double (bis-nitrene) ligand-to-substrate single-electron transfer (SET). In this work, we describe the reactivity and mechanisms of these nitrene radical complexes in catalytic aziridination. We report that [Co III (TAML sq )] and [Co III (TAML red )] - are both effective catalysts for chemoselective (C=C versus C-H bonds) and diastereoselective aziridination of styrene derivatives, cyclohexane, and 1-hexene under mild and even aerobic (for [Co III (TAML red )] -) conditions. Experimental (Hammett plots; [Co III (TAML)]-nitrene radical formation and quantification under catalytic conditions; single-turnover experiments; and tests regarding catalyst decomposition, radical inhibition, and radical trapping) in combination with computational (density functional theory (DFT), N-electron valence state perturbation theory corrected complete active space self-consistent field (NEVPT2-CASSCF)) studies reveal that [Co III (TAML q )(N • Ns)(Y)], [Co III (TAML q )(N • Ns) 2 ] -, and [Co III (TAML sq )(N • Ns)] - are key electrophilic intermediates in aziridination reactions. Surprisingly, the electrophilic one-electron-reduced Fischer-type nitrene radicals do not react as would be expected for nitrene radicals (i.e., via radical addition and radical rebound). Instead, nitrene transfer proceeds through unusual electronically asynchronous transition states, in which the (partial) styrene substrate to TAML ligand (single-) electron transfer precedes C-N coupling. The actual C-N bond formation processes are best described as involving a nucleophilic attack of the nitrene (radical) lone pair at the thus (partially) formed styrene radical cation. These processes are coupled to TAML-to-cobalt and cobalt-to-nitrene single-electron transfer, effectively leading to the formation of an amido-γ-benzyl radical (NsN--CH2-•CH-Ph) bound to an intermediate spin (S = 1) cobalt(III) center. Hence, the TAML moiety can be regarded to act as a transient electron acceptor, the cobalt center behaves as a spin shuttle, and the nitrene radical acts as a nucleophile. Such a mechanism was hitherto unknown for cobalt-catalyzed hypovalent group transfer and the more general transition-metal-catalyzed nitrene transfer to alkenes but is now shown to complement the known concerted and stepwise mechanisms for N-group transfer.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(1): 552-563, 2020 01 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31846578

RESUMEN

The redox noninnocence of the TAML scaffold in cobalt-TAML (tetra-amido macrocyclic ligand) complexes has been under debate since 2006. In this work, we demonstrate with a variety of spectroscopic measurements that the TAML backbone in the anionic complex [CoIII(TAMLred)]- is truly redox noninnocent and that one-electron oxidation affords [CoIII(TAMLsq)]. Multireference (CASSCF) calculations show that the electronic structure of [CoIII(TAMLsq)] is best described as an intermediate spin (S = 1) cobalt(III) center that is antiferromagnetically coupled to a ligand-centered radical, affording an overall doublet (S = 1/2) ground-state. Reaction of the cobalt(III)-TAML complexes with PhINNs as a nitrene precursor leads to TAML-centered oxidation and produces nitrene radical complexes without oxidation of the metal ion. The ligand redox state (TAMLred or TAMLsq) determines whether mono- or bis-nitrene radical complexes are formed. Reaction of [CoIII(TAMLsq)] or [CoIII(TAMLred)]- with PhINNs results in the formation of [CoIII(TAMLq)(N•Ns)] and [CoIII(TAMLq)(N•Ns)2]-, respectively. Herein, ligand-to-substrate single-electron transfer results in one-electron-reduced Fischer-type nitrene radicals (N•Ns-) that are intermediates in catalytic nitrene transfer to styrene. These nitrene radical species were characterized by EPR, XANES, and UV-vis spectroscopy, high-resolution mass spectrometry, magnetic moment measurements, and supporting CASSCF calculations.

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