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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(32): 18094-18103, 2023 Aug 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37540636

ABSTRACT

Chiral oxygenated aliphatic moieties are recurrent in biological and pharmaceutically relevant molecules and constitute one of the most versatile types of functionalities for further elaboration. Herein we report a protocol for straightforward and general access to chiral γ-lactones via enantioselective oxidation of strong nonactivated primary and secondary C(sp3)-H bonds in readily available carboxylic acids. The key enabling aspect is the use of robust sterically encumbered manganese catalysts that provide outstanding enantioselectivities (up to >99.9%) and yields (up to 96%) employing hydrogen peroxide as the oxidant. The resulting γ-lactones are of immediate interest for the preparation of inter alia natural products and recyclable polymeric materials.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(29): 15742-15753, 2023 Jul 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37431886

ABSTRACT

Enantioselective C-H oxidation is a standing chemical challenge foreseen as a powerful tool to transform readily available organic molecules into precious oxygenated building blocks. Here, we describe a catalytic enantioselective hydroxylation of tertiary C-H bonds in cyclohexane scaffolds with H2O2, an evolved manganese catalyst that provides structural complementary to the substrate similarly to the lock-and-key recognition operating in enzymatic active sites. Theoretical calculations unveil that enantioselectivity is governed by the precise fitting of the substrate scaffold into the catalytic site, through a network of complementary weak non-covalent interactions. Stereoretentive C(sp3)-H hydroxylation results in a single-step generation of multiple stereogenic centers (up to 4) that can be orthogonally manipulated by conventional methods providing rapid access, from a single precursor to a variety of chiral scaffolds.

3.
Dalton Trans ; 52(12): 3596-3609, 2023 Mar 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36602022

ABSTRACT

Two new tetradentate N4 ligands (LN4), LN4 = Me2,Me2PyzTACN (1-(2-(3,5-dimethyl-1H-pyrazol-1-yl)ethyl)-4,7-dimethyl-1,4,7-triazacyclononane) and Me2,MeImTACN (1-((1-methyl-1H-imidazol-1-yl)methyl)-4,7-dimethyl-1,4,7-triazacyclononane) have been synthesized and their corresponding Fe(II) complexes [FeII(Me2,Me2PyzTACN)(CF3SO3)2], 1Pz, and [FeII(Me2,MeImTACN)(CF3SO3)2], 1Im, have been prepared and characterized. Complexes 1Pz and 1Im catalyse the hydroxylation of C-H bonds of alkanes with excellent efficiencies, using hydrogen peroxide as oxidant. The high H/D kinetic isotope effect values for C-H hydroxylation, large normalized tertiary/secondary C-H (C3/C2) bond selectivities in adamantane oxidation, and high degrees of stereoretention in the oxidation of cis-1,2-dimethylcyclohexane are indicative of metal-based oxidation processes. The complexes also catalyse the oxidation of cyclooctene to form its corresponding epoxide and syn-diol. For 1Pz the epoxide is the main product, while for the analogous complex 1Im the syn-diol predominates. The active oxidant is proposed to be an [(LN4)FeV(O)(OH)]2+ species (2Pz, LN4 = Me2,Me2PyzTACN and 2Im, LN4 = Me2,MeImTACN) which may exist in two tautomeric forms related by a proton shift between the oxo and hydroxo ligands. Isotope labelling experiments show that the oxygen atom in the hydroxylated products originates from both water and hydrogen peroxide, and labelling experiments involving oxygen atom transfer to sterically bulky substrates provide indirect information on the steric influence exerted by the two ligands in the relative reactivities of the two hypervalent iron tautomers. Based on these labelling studies, the steric influence exerted by each of the ligands towards the relative reactivity of the oxo ligands of the corresponding pair of Fe(V)(O)(OH) tautomers can be derived. Furthermore, this steric influence can be gauged relative to related complexes/ligands.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(42): 19542-19558, 2022 10 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36228322

ABSTRACT

Reactions that enable selective functionalization of strong aliphatic C-H bonds open new synthetic paths to rapidly increase molecular complexity and expand chemical space. Particularly valuable are reactions where site-selectivity can be directed toward a specific C-H bond by catalyst control. Herein we describe the catalytic site- and stereoselective γ-lactonization of unactivated primary C-H bonds in carboxylic acid substrates. The system relies on a chiral Mn catalyst that activates aqueous hydrogen peroxide to promote intramolecular lactonization under mild conditions, via carboxylate binding to the metal center. The system exhibits high site-selectivity and enables the oxidation of unactivated primary γ-C-H bonds even in the presence of intrinsically weaker and a priori more reactive secondary and tertiary ones at α- and ß-carbons. With substrates bearing nonequivalent γ-C-H bonds, the factors governing site-selectivity have been uncovered. Most remarkably, by manipulating the absolute chirality of the catalyst, γ-lactonization at methyl groups in gem-dimethyl structural units of rigid cyclic and bicyclic carboxylic acids can be achieved with unprecedented levels of diastereoselectivity. Such control has been successfully exploited in the late-stage lactonization of natural products such as camphoric, camphanic, ketopinic, and isoketopinic acids. DFT analysis points toward a rebound type mechanism initiated by intramolecular 1,7-HAT from a primary γ-C-H bond of the bound substrate to a highly reactive MnIV-oxyl intermediate, to deliver a carbon radical that rapidly lactonizes through carboxylate transfer. Intramolecular kinetic deuterium isotope effect and 18O labeling experiments provide strong support to this mechanistic picture.


Subject(s)
Biological Products , Carboxylic Acids , Biological Products/chemistry , Hydrogen Peroxide , Deuterium , Catalysis , Carbon/chemistry
5.
Chem Sci ; 13(15): 4270-4282, 2022 Apr 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35509462

ABSTRACT

A catalytic system based on earth-abundant elements that efficiently hydrogenates aryl olefins using visible light as the driving-force and H2O as the sole hydrogen atom source is reported. The catalytic system involves a robust and well-defined aminopyridine cobalt complex and a heteroleptic Cu photoredox catalyst. The system shows the reduction of styrene in aqueous media with a remarkable selectivity (>20 000) versus water reduction (WR). Reactivity and mechanistic studies support the formation of a [Co-H] intermediate, which reacts with the olefin via a hydrogen atom transfer (HAT). Synthetically useful deuterium-labelled compounds can be straightforwardly obtained by replacing H2O with D2O. Moreover, the dual photocatalytic system and the photocatalytic conditions can be rationally designed to tune the selectivity for aryl olefin vs. aryl ketone reduction; not only by changing the structural and electronic properties of the cobalt catalysts, but also by modifying the reduction properties of the photoredox catalyst.

6.
Dalton Trans ; 50(44): 15983-15995, 2021 Nov 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34783805

ABSTRACT

Our previous study on the photochemical CO2 reduction into CO catalyzed by the diazapyridinophane complexes of Fe, Co, and Ni revealed that (i) the Co catalyst shows the highest TOF but degrades rapidly, (ii) the Fe catalyst exhibits a lower TOF relative to Co but shows higher robustness, giving a higher TON, and (iii) the Ni complex shows no activity (Sakaguchi et al., Chem. Commun., 2019, 55, 8552). Here we show our DFT results unveiling that the Fe and Co catalysts can utilize multiple sets of frontier MO associations at the CO2 binding by including one of the SOMOs in a high-spin d7 Fe(I) and d8 Co(I) center, respectively, giving an increased driving force for these oxidative addition steps. Remarkably, two-electron reduction of CO2 to CO22- at the binding step is driven by the two electrons transferred from different d-based orbitals. The CoI species binds CO2 at the rate-limiting step with an activation barrier of 15.0 kcal mol-1, rationalizing the high initial TOF observed. However, the CoI(CO) species is given as a dead-end product, consistent with its relatively rapid deactivation. The Fe catalyst possesses a slightly higher barrier in CO2 binding (ΔG‡ = 15.8 kcal mol-1) but does not stabilize the FeI(CO) species which readily releases CO (ΔG = 3.5 kcal mol-1). The Ni catalyst has the smallest barrier in CO2 binding (ΔG‡ = 11.5 kcal mol-1) but the CO release is largely prohibited by the dead-end NiI(CO) species, consistent with its inactive character towards CO2 reduction. The combined results all satisfactorily explain the observed catalytic behaviors.

7.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 55(59): 8552-8555, 2019 Jul 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31268437

ABSTRACT

Herein we report an earth-abundant photocatalytic system for CO2 reduction to CO based on an iron catalyst combined with a CuI photosensitizer. Under visible light irradiation CO is produced as the main product (TONCO = 565, TOFmaxCO = 114 h-1) with a high selectivity over H2 production (SelCO2 = 84%).

8.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 54(69): 9643-9646, 2018 Aug 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30095842

ABSTRACT

Cobalt(ii) complexes with the general structure [CoII(OTf)(Y,XPy2Tstacn)](OTf) (1R, where Y,XPy2Tstacn is 1,4-di(p-Y,m-X-picolyl)-7-R-1,4,7-triazacyclononane; 1H, 1CO2Et, 1DMM) and [CoII(OTf)2(Y,XPyMetacn)] (2R, where Y,XPyMetacn is 1-(p-Y,m-X-picolyl)-7,4-di-methyl-1,4,7-triazacyclononane; 2CO2Et, 2Cl, 2H, 2DMM, 2NMe2) were active in both light-driven acetophenone (3a) and water reduction. Competition studies show that aromatic ketone/water reduction selectivity ranks from 0.2 to 8.0. Nevertheless, considering the concentrations of water and ketone in catalysis (ratio H2O/3a ∼ 2000) the highest selectivity obtained is greater than 15 000. The selectivity correlates well with the CoI/II redox potential within the same cobalt catalyst series (span 240 mV (1R) and 290 mV (2R)), with electron donating ligands favoring ketone reduction over H2 evolution. Based on this finding, the operative mechanism for the reduction of aromatic ketones is consistent with a single electron transfer (SET) followed by a hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) mechanism. This new insight will be a guide to develop selective catalytic systems to produce fine solar chemicals in water.

9.
Chemistry ; 24(62): 16620-16629, 2018 Nov 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30152563

ABSTRACT

A new photo-charge separator (PCS) consisting of a [Ru(bpy)3 ]2+ (bpy=2,2'-bipyridine) chromophore and six viologen (MV2+ ) acceptors, [Ru(bpyMV2)3 ]14+ , is synthesized and its application in the photocatalytic H2 evolution reaction is reported. The present PCS possesses shorter linkers for connecting the Ru chromophore and the MV2+ acceptors in comparison with our previous PCSs (Inorg. Chem. Front., 2016, 3, 671-680) and shows a consecutive photo-driven electron transfer in the presence of a sacrificial electron donor [ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA)], leading to a multi-electron storage over the PCS. This behavior can also be coupled with the catalytic H2 evolution by the presence of a colloidal Pt catalyst. More importantly, the present PCS exhibits a much higher durability during the photolysis, which is attributed to the higher rate in the catalytic process. The high durability is also attributed to its bulky framework preventing undesirable side reactions.

10.
Chem Sci ; 9(9): 2609-2619, 2018 Mar 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29675253

ABSTRACT

A new family of cobalt complexes with the general formula [CoII(OTf)2(Y,XPyMetacn)] (1R , Y,XPyMetacn = 1-[(4-X-3,5-Y-2-pyridyl)methyl]-4,7-dimethyl-1,4,7-triazacyclononane, (X = CN (1CN ), CO2Et (1CO2Et ), Cl (1Cl ), H (1H ), NMe2 (1NMe2 )) where (Y = H, and X = OMe when Y = Me (1DMM )) is reported. We found that the electronic tuning of the Y,XPyMetacn ligand not only has an impact on the electronic and structural properties of the metal center, but also allows for a systematic water-reduction-catalytic control. In particular, the increase of the electron-withdrawing character of the pyridine moiety promotes a 20-fold enhancement of the catalytic outcome. By UV-Vis spectroscopy, luminescence quenching studies and Transient Absorption Spectroscopy (TAS), we have studied the direct reaction of the photogenerated [IrIII(ppy)2(bpy˙-)] (PSIr ) species to form the elusive CoI intermediates. In particular, our attention is focused on the effect of the ligand architecture in this elemental step of the catalytic mechanism. Finally, kinetic isotopic experiments together with DFT calculations provide complementary information about the rate-determining step of the catalytic cycle.

11.
Chemistry ; 24(13): 3305-3313, 2018 Mar 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29314370

ABSTRACT

Commercial carbon fibers can be used as electrodes with high conductive surfaces in reduced devices. Oxidative treatment of such electrodes results in a chemically robust material with high catalytic activity for electrochemical proton reduction, enabling the measurement of quantitative faradaic yields (>95 %) and high current densities. Combination of experiments and DFT calculations reveals that the presence of carboxylic groups triggers such electrocatalytic activity in a bioinspired manner. Analogously to the known Hantzsch esters, the oxidized carbon fiber material is able to transfer hydrides, which can react with protons, generating H2 , or with organic substrates resulting in their hydrogenation. A plausible mechanism is proposed based on DFT calculations on model systems.

12.
Chem Sci ; 8(7): 4739-4749, 2017 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30155221

ABSTRACT

We present an efficient, general, fast, and robust light-driven methodology based on earth-abundant elements to reduce aryl ketones, and both aryl and aliphatic aldehydes (up to 1400 TON). The catalytic system consists of a robust and well-defined aminopyridyl cobalt complex active for photocatalytic water reduction and the [Cu(bathocuproine)(Xantphos)](PF6) photoredox catalyst. The dual cobalt-copper system uses visible light as the driving-force and H2O and an electron donor (Et3N or iPr2EtN) as the hydride source. The catalytic system operates in aqueous mixtures (80-60% water) with high selectivity towards the reduction of organic substrates (>2000) vs. water reduction, and tolerates O2. High selectivity towards the hydrogenation of aryl ketones is observed in the presence of terminal olefins, aliphatic ketones, and alkynes. Remarkably, the catalytic system also shows unique selectivity for the reduction of acetophenone in the presence of aliphatic aldehydes. The catalytic system provides a simple and convenient method to obtain α,ß-deuterated alcohols. Both the observed reactivity and the DFT modelling support a common cobalt hydride intermediate. The DFT modelled energy profile for the [Co-H] nucleophilic attack to acetophenone and water rationalises the competence of [CoII-H] to reduce acetophenone in the presence of water. Mechanistic studies suggest alternative mechanisms depending on the redox potential of the substrate. These results show the potential of the water reduction catalyst [Co(OTf)(Py2Tstacn)](OTf) (1), (Py2Tstacn = 1,4-di(picolyl)-7-(p-toluenesulfonyl)-1,4,7-triazacyclononane, OTf = trifluoromethanesulfonate anion) to develop light-driven selective organic transformations and fine solar chemicals.

13.
Chemistry ; 20(20): 6171-83, 2014 May 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24692261

ABSTRACT

The synthesis and characterisation of the pentadentate ligand 1,4-di(picolyl)-7-(p-toluenesulfonyl)-1,4,7-triazacyclononane (Py2(Ts)tacn) and their metal complexes of general formula [M(CF3SO3)(Py2(Ts)tacn)][CF3SO3], (M = Fe (1Fe), Co (1Co) and Ni (1Ni)) are reported. Complex 1Co presents excellent H2 photoproduction catalytic activity when using [Ir(ppy)2(bpy)]PF6 (PSIr) as photosensitiser (PS) and Et3N as electron donor, but 1Ni and 1Fe result in a low activity and a complete lack of it, respectively. On the other hand, all three complexes have excellent electrocatalytic proton reduction activity in acetonitrile, when using trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) as a proton source with moderate overpotentials for 1Co (0.59 V vs. SCE) and 1Ni (0.56 V vs. SCE) and higher for 1Fe (0.87 V vs. SCE). Under conditions of CH3CN/H2O/Et3N (3:7:0.2), 1Co (5 µM), with PSIr (100 µM) and irradiating at 447 nm gives a turnover number (TON) of 690 (n H2/n1Co) and initial turnover frequency (TOF) (TON×t(-1)) of 703 h(-1) for H2 production. It should be noted that 1Co retains 25 % of the catalytic activity for photoproduction of H2 in the presence of O2. The inexistence of a lag time for H2 evolution and the absence of nanoparticles during the first 30 min of the reaction suggest that the main catalytic activity observed is derived from a molecular system. Kinetic studies show that the reaction is -0.7 order in catalyst, and time-dependent diffraction light scattering (DLS) experiments indicate formation of metal aggregates and then nanoparticles, leading to catalyst deactivation. By a combination of experimental and computational studies we found that the lack of activity in photochemical water reduction by 1Fe can be attributed to the 1Fe (II/I) redox couple, which is significantly lower than the PSIr (III/II) , while for 1Ni the pKa value (-0.4) is too small in comparison with the pH (11.9) imposed by the use of Et3N as electron donor.

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