RESUMO
Reaction of water with in situ generated [(PSiP-R)IrI] (PSiP-R = [{2-(R2P)C6H4}2MeSi]-; R = cyclohexyl, tBu or iPr) from [(PSiP-R)Ir(H)4] and tert-butylethylene (tbe) showed high ligand dependency. Oxidative addition of water cleanly proceeded in the reaction of [(PSiP-tBu)IrI] in THF at room temperature to selectively afford a 16-electron hydrido-hydroxo complex [(PSiP- t Bu)Ir(H)(OH)] almost quantitatively. In contrast, the reaction of cyclohexyl and iPr derivatives was unselective and formed various products containing Ir-H bonds. In the case of iPr-derivative, a small amount of 18-electron hydrido-hydroxo aqua complex [(PSiP-iPr)Ir(H)(OH)(H2O)] was isolated and structurally characterized by X-ray crystallography.
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The first trivalent and pentavalent tricarbabismatranes were synthesized by the reaction of N(CH2{2-LiC6H4})3 with BiCl3 and subsequent reaction with XeF2, respectively. The trivalent bismatrane was easily oxidized by air, while the pentavalent bismatrane difluoride was relatively stable to air. A similar pentavalent bismatrance dichloride was prone to C-Cl bond reductive elimination even at room temperature.
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A new tripodal C-anionic ligand, 2-{bis(benzothiazolyl)(methoxy)methyl}phenyl (L), was stably generated by the reaction of the ligand precursor (L'), the corresponding bromide (2-BrC6H4)(MeO)C(C7H4NS)2 (C7H4NS = 2-benzothiazolyl), with nBuLi at -104 °C in the presence of TMEDA (N,N,N',N'-tetramethylethylenediamine). The ligand lithium salt reacted with BiCl3 to give a 2 : 1 complex L2BiCl. A 1 : 1 complex LBiCl2 was obtained in good yield by the redistribution reaction between L2BiCl and BiCl3. X-ray diffraction analysis revealed that the ligand L coordinated in an expected κ3-C,N,N' coordination mode in LBiCl2, while it coordinated in κ3-C,N,O and κ2-C,O coordination modes in L2BiCl. The ligand precursor reacted with BiX3 (X = Cl, Br) to give 1 : 1 complexes L'BiX3 and was found to act as a neutral tripodal C(π),N,N-ligand.
RESUMO
The reaction of cyclic organobismuth compounds, 12-phenyl- and 12-chloro-5,6,7,12-tetrahydrodibenz[c,f][1,5]azabismocines, with Pt(PEt3)3 was examined. Oxidative addition of the exocyclic Bi-C bond to Pt(0) selectively took place in the reaction of the 12-phenyl derivative. Oxidative addition of the exocyclic Bi-Cl bond reversibly took place and was kinetically preferred, while endocyclic Bi-C bond oxidative addition products were thermodynamically favored and became the final products in the reaction of 12-chloro derivatives. These results demonstrate the oxidative addition of a Bi-C bond to a transition metal complex for the first time.
RESUMO
Hydrosilanes were synthesized by reduction of alkoxy silanes with BH3 in the presence of hexamethylphosphoric triamide (HMPA) as a Lewis-base catalyst. The reaction was also achieved using an inexpensive and easily handled hydride source NaBH4, which reacted with EtBr as a sacrificial reagent to form BH3in situ.
RESUMO
Silicones are highly valuable poly- and oligomeric materials with a broad range of applications due to their outstanding physicochemical properties. The core framework of silicone materials consists of siloxane (Si-O-Si) bonds, and thus, the development of efficient siloxane-bond-forming reactions has attracted much attention. However, these reactions, especially "catalytic" siloxane-bond-forming reactions that enable the selective formation of unsymmetrical siloxane bonds, remain relatively underdeveloped. On the other hand, controlled iteration has become a powerful tool for the sequence-controlled synthesis of poly- and oligomeric compounds. Recently, control over the siloxane sequence has been achieved by the one-pot iteration of a B(C6 F5 )3 -catalyzed dehydrocarbonative cross-coupling of alkoxysilanes with hydrosilanes and a B(C6 F5 )3 -catalyzed hydrosilylation of carbonyl compounds. Thus, it is now possible to generate linear, branched, and cyclic sequence-specific oligosiloxanes in a highly selective manner under chloride-free conditions.
RESUMO
Organocatalytic controlled/living ring-opening polymerization of cyclotrisiloxanes, such as hexamethylcyclotrisiloxane, 1,3,5-trimethyl-1,3,5-triphenylcyclotrisiloxane, 1,3,5-trimethyl-1,3,5-trivinylcyclotrisiloxane, and 1,3,5-trimethyl-1,3,5-tris(3,3,3-trifluoropropyl)cyclotrisiloxane, using water as an initiator and strong organic bases, such as amidines, guanidines, phosphazene bases, and proazaphosphatrane, as catalysts produced a variety of polysiloxanes with controlled number-average molecular weights (M n = 2.64-102.3 kg mol-1), narrow polydispersity (D = 1.03-1.16), and well-defined symmetric structures. Controlled syntheses of statistical copolymers and triblock copolymers were achieved by copolymerizations of two cyclotrisiloxanes. Various terminal functionalities were successfully introduced by the end-capping reaction of propagating polysiloxanes using functional chlorosilanes. Kinetic investigations demonstrated that the polymerization proceeded through the initiator/chain-end activation mechanism, namely activations of water in the initiation reaction and of terminal silanols in propagating polysiloxanes in the propagation reaction. Catalytic activities of strong organic bases were revealed to depend on their Brønsted basicity and efficiency of the proton transfer in the initiation and propagation reactions. Guanidines possessing an R-N[double bond, length as m-dash]C(N)-NH-R' unit, in particular 1,3-trimethylene-2-propylguanidine, showed excellent performance as a catalyst. In this system, even non-dehydrated solvents are usable for the polymerization.
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A nickel complex/Lewis acid combination effectively catalyzed the direct silyl-Heck reaction of chlorosilanes, which are key raw materials in the organosilicon industry, to give synthetically important alkenylsilane products. Trichlorosilanes, dichlorosilanes, and monochlorosilanes underwent the silyl-Heck reaction to afford the corresponding alkenylsilanes in high yields. In the reactions of dichlorosilanes, a single substitution occurred to give monoalkenylsilanes in a highly selective manner.
RESUMO
Silicones (organopolysiloxanes) have found applications in a wide range of research areas, and their unique and valuable properties have rendered these materials virtually irreplaceable. Despite the fact that silicones have been employed industrially for more than 70â years, synthetic routes to generate silicones remain limited, and the sequence-controlled synthesis of oligo- and polysiloxanes still represents a major challenge in silicone chemistry. Described here is a highly selective sequence-controlled synthesis of linear, branched, and cyclic oligosiloxanes by simple iteration of two reactions, specifically, a B(C6 F5 )3 -catalyzed dehydrocarbonative cross-coupling of alkoxysilanes with hydrosilanes and a B(C6 F5 )3 -catalyzed hydrosilylation of carbonyl compounds, in a single flask. The sequence of the resulting oligosiloxanes can be controlled precisely by the order of addition of the hydrosilane monomers.
RESUMO
Hydrosilylation of various sulfur-containing olefins with (RO)3SiH has been achieved using iridium catalysts [IrX(cod)]2 (X = Cl, SPh). The catalysis is applicable to the chemoselective hydrosilylation of thioacetate, which enables the preparation of an industrially important silane coupling agent.
RESUMO
Orthosilicic acid (Si(OH)4) and its small condensation compounds are among the most important silicon compounds but have never been isolated, due to their instability. These compounds would be highly useful building blocks for advanced materials if they became available at high purity. Here we show a simple procedure to selectively synthesize orthosilicic acid and its dimer, cyclic trimer and tetramer in organic solvents. Isolation of orthosilicic acid, the dimer and the cyclic tetramer as hydrogen-bonded crystals with tetrabutylammonium halides and the cyclic trimer as solvent-containing crystals is also described. The solid-state structures of these compounds are unambiguously clarified by single crystal X-ray and neutron diffraction studies. The usefulness of orthosilicic acid and its oligomers prepared by the new procedure is demonstrated by the synthesis of functionalized oligosiloxanes.Orthosilicic acid is essential to many natural and synthetic materials but notoriously difficult to isolate, limiting its use in materials synthesis. Here, the authors successfully synthesize and stabilize orthosilicic acid and its oligomers, making available a new family of building blocks for silicon oxide-based materials.
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Aim This study clarified the characteristics of life habits of obese Japanese male students at the National Colleges of Technology, Japan. Materials and methods Healthy students aged 15-19 years answered a questionnaire containing 21 items on the following five categories of life habits: general exercise, meals, sleeping, leisure activity and illness or injury history. The subjects were divided into three groups based on the criteria of body mass index (BMI) and body fat percentage (%BF): non-obese (%BF < 20%, n = 420), overweight obese (%BF ≥ 20% and BMI ≥ 25, n = 99), and hidden obese (%BF ≥ 20% and BMI < 25, n = 60). The mean differences in waking time, bedtime and amount of time spent walking, sleeping and watching TV per day were examined using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) and chi-square tests for each item. Results The overweight obese and hidden obese groups engaged in less exercise time, were more likely to eat until they were full at meals and were less likely to eat between meals or late at night than the non-obese group. In addition, the non-obese group had significantly later waking times and significantly less TV-watching time than the overweight obese group. There were no significant differences with respect to leisure activity and illness or injury history among the three groups. Many students in all groups had regular waking times and were not performing any leisure activities. Conclusion The findings suggest that obese students may need further guidance to help them maintain a healthy life and appropriate weight.
RESUMO
Selective O-borylation of silanols with diborons took place in the presence of Pd catalysts to give the corresponding boryl silyl ethers in high yields.
RESUMO
Siloxane bonds are usually synthesized by condensation reactions, such as hydrolysis/dehydration and cross-coupling reactions, in which the generation of by-products during bond formation can not be avoided. We have developed a one-pot sequence of iridium-catalyzed silyl ester hydrosilylation and boron-catalyzed rearrangement of the resulting disilyl acetals for the construction of siloxane bonds, in principle without the formation of any by-products. Moreover, the programmed synthesis of tri-, tetra-, and pentasiloxanes was possible in a single flask by combining the above sequence of iridium-catalyzed hydrosilylation and boron-catalyzed rearrangement with a boron-catalyzed cross-coupling reaction. The obtained oligosiloxanes are difficult to synthesize selectively by other known synthetic procedures.
RESUMO
In this account, our studies on nickel-catalyzed hydrosilylation reactions are described. A series of (salicylaldiminato)methylnickel complexes efficiently catalyze alkene hydrosilylation under ambient reaction conditions. Commercially available Ni(II) salts, Ni(acac)2 (acac = acetylacetonato) and its derivatives bis(hexafluoroacetylacetonato)nickel(II) and bis (2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-3,5-heptanedionato)nickel(II), also act as versatile hydrosilylation catalyst precursors in the presence of NaBHEt3 . These systems catalyze the hydrosilylation of various alkenes such as industrially important siloxy-, amino-, and epoxy-substituted ones. The arene-supported cationic nickel allyl complexes also serve as good catalysts for alkene hydrosilylation at room temperature. These nickel complexes exhibit high selectivity towards the reaction using secondary hydrosilanes. Mechanistic studies based on experiments and DFT calculations support a novel mechanism, which includes a facile Si-H bond cleavage and a Si-C bond formation, assisted by the cooperative action of the allyl ligand.
RESUMO
A Pd-catalyzed dehydrogenative phosphorylation of thiols is developed. A variety of thiols dehydrogenatively couple readily with all three kinds of P(O)-H compounds, i.e., H-phosphonates, H-phosphinates, and secondary phosphine oxides, providing a general access to the valuable phosphorothioates including the P-chiral compounds. A plausible mechanism is proposed.
RESUMO
The thermally stable [(tBuMe2 Si)2 M] (M=Zn, Hg) generate R3 Si(.) radicals in the presence of [(dmpe)Pt(PEt3 )2 ] at 60-80 °C. The reaction proceeds via hexacoordinate Pt complexes, (M=Zn (2 a and 2 b), M=Hg (3 a and 3 b)) which were isolated and characterized. Mild warming or photolysis of 2 or 3 lead to homolytic dissociation of the Pt-MSiR3 bond generating silyl radicals and novel unstable pentacoordinate platinum paramagnetic complexes (M=Zn (5), Hg (6)) whose structures were determined by EPR spectroscopy and DFT calculations.
RESUMO
Reactive hyperemia reflects a compensatory vasodilation response of the local vasculature in ischemic tissue. The purpose of this study is to clarify the mechanism of regulation of this response in gingival circulation by using pharmacological analysis of reactive hyperemia and histochemical analysis of gingival tissue. Application of pressure to the gingiva was used to create temporary ischemia, and gingival blood flow was measured after pressure release. Reactive hyperemia increased in proportion to the duration of pressure. Systemic hemodynamics remained unaffected by the stimulus; therefore, the gingival reactive hyperemia reflected a local adjustment in circulation. Gingival reactive hyperemia was significantly suppressed by nitric oxide (NO) synthase inhibitors, especially the neural NO synthase-selective antagonist 7-nitroindazole, but not by anticholinergic drugs, ß-blockers, or antihistaminergic drugs. Moreover, immunohistochemical staining for neural NO synthase and histochemical staining for NADPH diaphorase activity were both positive in the gingival perivascular region. These histochemical and pharmacological analyses show that reactive hyperemia following pressure release is mediated by NO-induced vasodilation. Furthermore, histochemical analysis strongly suggests that NO originates from nitrergic nerves. Therefore, NO may play an important role in the neural regulation of local circulation in gingival tissue ischemia.
RESUMO
Organobismuth(III) and organobismuth(V) compounds have been used in a variety of C-C bond forming reactions using transition-metal catalysis. Triarylbismuths are the most often used reagents among organobismuth reagents. All three aryl groups of triarylbismuths are potentially used in C-C bond formation, as shown in a number of reactions. Some heterocyclic organobismuth compounds have high potential as useful reagents for C-C bond forming reactions.
RESUMO
A series of iridium tetrahydride complexes [Ir(H)(4)(PSiP-R)] bearing a tridentate pincer-type bis(phosphino)silyl ligand ([{2-(R(2)P)C(6)H(4)}(2)MeSi](-), PSiP-R, R=Cy, iPr, or tBu) were synthesized by the reduction of [IrCl(H)(PSiP-R)] with Me(4)N·BH(4) under argon. The same reaction under a nitrogen atmosphere afforded a rare example of thermally stable iridium(III)-dinitrogen complexes, [Ir(H)(2)(N(2))(PSiP-R)]. Two isomeric dinitrogen complexes were produced, in which the PSiP ligand coordinated to the iridium center in meridional and facial orientations, respectively. Attempted substitution of the dinitrogen ligand in [Ir(H)(2)(N(2))(PSiP-Cy)] with PMe(3) required heating at 150 °C to give the expected [Ir(H)(2)(PMe(3))(PSiP-Cy)] and a trigonal bipyramidal iridium(I)-dinitrogen complex, [Ir(N(2))(PMe(3))(PSiP-Cy)]. The reaction of [Ir(H)(4)(PSiP-Cy)] with three equivalents of 2-norbornene (nbe) in benzene afforded [Ir(I)(nbe)(PSiP-Cy)] in a high yield, while a similar reaction of [Ir(H)(4)(PSiP-R)] with an excess of 3,3-dimethylbutene (tbe) in benzene gave the C-H bond activation product, [Ir(III)(H)(Ph)(PSiP-R)], in high yield. The oxidative addition of benzene is reversible; heating [Ir(III)(H)(Ph)(PSiP-Cy)] in the presence of PPh(3) in benzene resulted in reductive elimination of benzene, coordination of PPh(3), and activation of the C-H bond of one aromatic ring in PPh(3). [Ir(III)(H)(Ph)(PSiP-R)] catalyzed a direct borylation reaction of the benzene C-H bond with bis(pinacolato)diboron. Molecular structures of most of the new complexes in this study were determined by a single-crystal X-ray analysis.