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1.
Dalton Trans ; 51(7): 2696-2707, 2022 Feb 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35088802

RESUMO

The novel dimeric iodo-iridium(III) complex, [Ir(Cp*CONMe2)I2]2, (Cp*CONMe2 = η5-N,N-2,3,4,5-hexamethylcyclopenta-2,4-diene carboxamide) bearing an amide moiety within the tetramethylcyclopentadiene ring, has been synthesised and characterised. The ligand Cp*CONMe2 is synthesised as two regioisomers, however the 2-substituted isomer exists as two distinguishable conformers due to restricted rotation about the amide carbonyl carbon and the ring carbon. The relative acidities of Cp*CONMe2 and Cp* are compared by their relative rates of H/D exchange. The iridium complex of N,N-2,3,4,5-hexamethylcyclopenta-2-4-diene carboxamide [IrCp*CONMe2] and (R,R)-1,2-diphenyl-N'-tosylethane-1,2-diamine ((R,R)-TsDPEN) has been evaluated in the transfer hydrogenation of imines under acidic conditions - a 5 : 2 molar ratio of formic acid : triethylamine as the hydride source for the transfer hydrogenation of 1-methyl-3,4-dihydroisoquinoline (DHIQ) and its 6,7-dimethoxy derivative in acetonitrile. A decreasing enantiomeric excess with reaction progress is attributed to different kinetic orders for formation of the two product amine enantiomers. The pseudo zero-order formation of the R-amine may be due to a pre-steady-state formation of the less stable form of the diastereomeric catalyst. By contrast, both enantiomeric amines from 1-fluorinated methyl DHIQs as substrates for reduction are formed by pseudo first-order processes.

2.
Org Biomol Chem ; 14(29): 7092-8, 2016 Aug 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27377259

RESUMO

The dimeric iodo-iridium complex [IrCp*I2]2 (Cp* = pentamethylcyclopentadiene) is an efficient catalyst for the racemisation of secondary and tertiary amines at ambient and higher temperatures with a low catalyst loading. The racemisation occurs with pseudo-first-order kinetics and the corresponding four rate constants were obtained by monitoring the time dependence of the concentrations of the (R) and (S) enantiomers starting with either pure (R) or (S) and show a first-order dependence on catalyst concentration. Low temperature (1)H NMR data is consistent with the formation of a 1 : 1 complex with the amine coordinated to the iridium and with both iodide anions still bound to the metal-ion, but at the higher temperatures used for kinetic studies binding is weak and so no saturation zero-order kinetics are observed. A cross-over experiment with isotopically labelled amines demonstrates the intermediate formation of an imine which can dissociate from the iridium complex. Replacing the iodides in the catalyst by other ligands or having an amide substituent in Cp* results in a much less effective catalysts for the racemisation of amines. The rate constants for a deuterated amine yield a significant primary kinetic isotope effect kH/kD = 3.24 indicating that hydride transfer is involved in the rate-limiting step.

3.
Org Biomol Chem ; 14(14): 3614-22, 2016 Apr 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26984714

RESUMO

The iridium complex of pentamethylcyclopentadiene and (S,S)-1,2-diphenyl-N'-tosylethane-1,2-diamine is an effective catalyst for the asymmetric transfer hydrogenation of imine substrates under acidic conditions. Using the Ir catalyst and a 5 : 2 ratio of formic acid : triethylamine as the hydride source for the asymmetric transfer hydrogenation of 1-methyl-3,4-dihydroisoquinoline and its 6,7-dimethoxy substituted derivative, in either acetonitrile or dichloromethane, shows unusual enantiomeric excess (ee) profiles for the product amines. The reactions initially give predominantly the (R) enantiomer of the chiral amine products with >90% ee but which then decreases significantly during the reaction. The decrease in ee is not due to racemisation of the product amine, but because the rate of formation of the (R)-enantiomer follows first-order kinetics whereas that for the (S)-enantiomer is zero-order. This difference in reaction order explains the change in selectivity as the reaction proceeds - the rate formation of the (R)-enantiomer decreases exponentially with time while that for the (S)-enantiomer remains constant. A reaction scheme is proposed which requires rate-limiting hydride transfer from the iridium hydride to the iminium ion for the first-order rate of formation of the (R)-enantiomer amine and rate-limiting dissociation of the product for the zero-order rate of formation of the (S)-enantiomer.

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