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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 146(6): 4045-4059, 2024 Feb 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38290523

RESUMO

The use of molecular oxygen as an oxidant in chemical synthesis has significant environmental and economic benefits, and it is widely used as such in large-scale industrial processes. However, its adoption in highly selective homogeneous catalytic transformations, particularly to produce oxygenated organics, has been hindered by our limited understanding of the mechanisms by which O2 reacts with transition metals. Of particular relevance are the mechanisms of the reactions of oxygen with late transition metal hydrides as these metal centers are better poised to release oxygenated products. Homogeneous catalysis with gold complexes has markedly increased, and herein we report the synthesis and full characterization of a rare AuIII-H, supported by a diphosphine pincer ligand (tBuPCP = 2,6-bis(di-tert-butylphosphinomethyl)benzene). [(tBuPCP)AuIII-H]+ was found to cleanly react with molecular oxygen to yield a stable AuIII-OOH complex that was also fully characterized. Extensive kinetic studies on the reaction via variable temperature NMR spectroscopy have been completed, and the results are consistent with an autoaccelerating radical chain mechanism. The observed kinetic behavior exhibits similarities to that of previously reported PdII-H and PtIV-H reactions with O2 but is not fully consistent with any known O2 insertion mechanism. As such, this study contributes to the nascent fundamental understanding of the mechanisms of aerobic oxidation of late metal hydrides.

3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(36): 14317-14328, 2019 Sep 11.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31390860

RESUMO

The hydrogenation of CO2 in the presence of amines to formate, formamides, and methanol (MeOH) is a promising approach to streamlining carbon capture and recycling. To achieve this, understanding how catalyst design impacts selectivity and performance is critical. Herein we describe a thorough thermochemical analysis of the (de)hydrogenation catalyst, (PNP)Ru-Cl (PNP = 2,6-bis(di-tert-butylphosphinomethyl)pyridine; Ru = Ru(CO)(H)) and correlate our findings to catalyst performance. Although this catalyst is known to hydrogenate CO2 to formate with a mild base, we show that MeOH is produced when using a strong base. Consistent with pKa measurements, the requirement for a strong base suggests that the deprotonation of a six-coordinate Ru species is integral to the catalytic cycle that produces MeOH. Our studies also indicate that the concentration of MeOH produced is independent of catalyst concentration, consistent with a deactivation pathway that is dependent on methanol concentration, not equivalency. Our temperature-dependent equilibrium studies of the dearomatized congener, (*PNP)Ru, with various H-X species (to give (PNP)Ru-X; X = H, OH, OMe, OCHO, OC(O)NMe2) reveal that formic acid equilibrium is approximately temperature-independent; relative to H2, it is more favored at elevated temperatures. We also measure the hydricity of (PNP)Ru-H in THF and show how subsequent coordination of the substrate can impact the apparent hydricity. The implications of this work are broadly applicable to hydrogenation and dehydrogenation catalysis and, in particular, to those that can undergo metal-ligand cooperativity (MLC) at the catalyst. These results serve to benchmark future studies by allowing comparisons to be made among catalysts and will positively impact rational catalyst design.

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