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1.
Nat Chem ; 13(2): 156-162, 2021 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33495607

ABSTRACT

Closed-loop recycling offers the opportunity to mitigate plastic waste through reversible polymer construction and deconstruction. Although examples of chemical recycling of polymers are known, few have been applied to materials derived from abundant commodity olefinic monomers, which are the building blocks of ubiquitous plastic resins. Here we describe a [2+2] cycloaddition/oligomerization of 1,3-butadiene to yield a previously unrealized telechelic microstructure of (1,n'-divinyl)oligocyclobutane. This material is thermally stable, has stereoregular segments arising from chain-end control, and exhibits high crystallinity even at low molecular weight. Exposure of the oligocyclobutane to vacuum in the presence of the pyridine(diimine) iron precatalyst used to synthesize it resulted in deoligomerization to generate pristine butadiene, demonstrating a rare example of closed-loop chemical recycling of an oligomeric material derived from a commodity hydrocarbon feedstock.


Subject(s)
Butadienes/chemistry , Cyclobutanes/chemistry , Alkenes , Catalysis , Iron , Plastics , Polymers , Recycling
2.
Science ; 367(6477): 542-548, 2020 01 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32001650

ABSTRACT

The cobalt complexes HCo(CO)4 and HCo(CO)3(PR3) were the original industrial catalysts used for the hydroformylation of alkenes through reaction with hydrogen and carbon monoxide to produce aldehydes. More recent and expensive rhodium-phosphine catalysts are hundreds of times more active and operate under considerably lower pressures. Cationic cobalt(II) bisphosphine hydrido-carbonyl catalysts that are far more active than traditional neutral cobalt(I) catalysts and approach rhodium catalysts in activity are reported here. These catalysts have low linear-to-branched (L:B) regioselectivity for simple linear alkenes. However, owing to their high alkene isomerization activity and increased steric effects due to the bisphosphine ligand, they have high L:B selectivities for internal alkenes with alkyl branches. These catalysts exhibit long lifetimes and substantial resistance to degradation reactions.

3.
Inorg Chem ; 54(11): 5579-87, 2015 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25965161

ABSTRACT

Reported here are synthetic studies probing highly reduced iron centers in an encumbering tetraisocyano ligand environment. Treatment of FeCl2 with sodium amalgam in the presence of 2 equiv of the m-terphenyl isocyanide CNAr(Mes2) (Ar(Mes2) = 2,6-(2,4,6-Me3C6H2)2C6H3) produces the disodium tetraisocyanoferrate Na2[Fe(CNAr(Mes2))4]. Structural characterization of Na2[Fe(CNAr(Mes2))4] revealed a tight ion pair, with the Fe center adopting a tetrahedral coordination geometry consistent with a d(10) metal center. Attempts to disrupt the cation-anion contacts in Na2[Fe(CNAr(Mes2))4] with cation-sequestration reagents lead to decomposition, except for the case of 18-crown-6, where a mononuclear complex featuring a dianionic 1-azabenz[b]azulene ligand was isolated in low yield. Formation of this 1-azabenz[b]azulene is rationalized to proceed by an aza-Büchner ring expansion of a CNAr(Mes2) ligand mediated by a coordinatively unsaturated Fe center. Disodium tetraisocyanoferrate Na2[Fe(CNAr(Mes2))4] is readily protonated by trimethylsilanol (HOSiMe3) to produce the monohydride ferrate salt, Na[HFe(CNAr(Mes2))4], the anionic portion of which serves as an isocyano analogue of the hydrido-tetracarbonyl metalate [HFe(CO)4](-). Treatment of Na[HFe(CNAr(Mes2))4] with methyl triflate (MeOTf; OTf = [O3SCF3](-)) at low temperature in the presence of dinitrogen yields the five-coordinate Fe(0) complex Fe(N2)(CNAr(Mes2))4. The formation of Fe(N2)(CNAr(Mes2))4 in this reaction is consistent with the intermediacy of the neutral tetraisocyanide Fe(CNAr(Mes2))4. The decomposition of Fe(N2)(CNAr(Mes2))4 to the dimeric complex [Fe(η(6)-(Mes)-µ(2)-C-CNAr(Mes))]2 and a seven-membered cyclic imine derived from a CNAr(Mes2) ligand is presented and provides insight into the ability of CNAr(Mes2) and related m-terphenyl isocyanides to stabilize zerovalent four-coordinate iron complexes in a strongly π-acidic ligand field.

4.
Inorg Chem ; 54(6): 2936-44, 2015 Mar 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25700244

ABSTRACT

To assess the relative electronic influence of highly substituted aryl isocyanides on transition metal centers, a series of C4v-symmetric Cr(CNR)(CO)5 complexes featuring various alkyl, aryl, and m-terphenyl substituents have been prepared. A correlation between carbonyl-ligand (13)C{(1)H} NMR chemical shift (δCO) and calculated Cotton-Kraihanzel (C-K) force constant (kCO) is presented for these complexes to determine the relative changes in isocyanide σ-donor/π-acid ratio as a function of substituent identity and pattern. For nonfluorinated aryl isocyanides possessing alkyl or aryl substitution, minimal variation in effective σ-donor/π-acid ratio is observed over the series. In addition, aryl isocyanides featuring strongly electron-releasing substituents display an electronic influence that nearly matches that of nonfluorinated alkyl isocyanides. Lower σ-donor/π-acid ratios are displayed by polyfluorinated aryl isocyanide ligands. However, the degree of this attenuation relative to nonfluorinated aryl isocyanides is not substantial and significantly higher σ-donor/π-acid ratios than CO are observed in all cases. Substituent patterns for polyfluorinated aryl isocyanides are identified that give rise to low relative σ-donor/π-acid ratios but offer synthetic convenience for coordination chemistry applications. In order to expand the range of available substitution patterns for comparison, the syntheses of the new m-terphenyl isocyanides CNAr(Tripp2), CNp-MeAr(Mes2), CNp-MeAr(DArF2), and CNp-FAr(DArF2) are also reported (Ar(Tripp2) = 2,6-(2,4,6-(i-Pr)3C6H2)2C6H3); p-MeAr(Mes2) = 2,6-(2,4,6-Me3C6H2)2-4-Me-C6H2); p-MeAr(DArF2) = 2,6-(3,5-(CF3)2C6H3)2-4-Me-C6H2); p-FAr(DArF2) = 2,6-(3,5-(CF3)2C6H3)2-4-F-C6H2).

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 136(44): 15481-4, 2014 Nov 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25317481

ABSTRACT

Reported here are the isolation, structural characterization, and decomposition kinetics of the four-coordinate pentachloroethyl nickel complex, NiCl(CCl2CCl3)(CNAr(Mes2))2 (Ar(Mes2) = 2,6-(2,4,6-Me3C6H2)2C6H3). This complex is a unique example of a kinetically persistent ß-chloroalkyl in a system relevant to coordination-insertion polymerization of polar olefins. Kinetic analysis of NiCl(CCl2CCl3)(CNAr(Mes2))2 decomposition indicates that ß-chloride (ß-Cl) elimination proceeds by a unimolecular mechanism that does not require initial dissociation of a CNAr(Mes2) ligand. The results suggest that a direct ß-Cl elimination pathway is available to four-coordinate, Group 10 metal vinyl chloride polymerization systems.

6.
Inorg Chem ; 52(22): 13216-29, 2013 Nov 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24171549

ABSTRACT

Presented herein are synthetic and structural studies exploring the propensity of m-terphenyl isocyanide ligands to provide flanking-ring η(6)-arene interactions to zerovalent molybdenum centers. The alkyl-substituted m-terphenyl isocyanides CNAr(Mes2) and CNAr(Dipp2) (Ar(Mes2) = 2,6-(2,4,6-Me3C6H2)2C6H3; Ar(Dipp2) = 2,6-(2,6-(i-Pr)2C6H3)2C6H3) react with Mo(η(6)-napthalene)2 in a 3:1 ratio to form tris-isocyanide η(6)-arene Mo complexes, in which a flanking mesityl or 2,6-diisopropylphenyl group, respectively, of one isocyanide ligand is bound to the zerovalent molybdenum center. Thermal stability and reactivity studies show that these flanking ring η(6)-arene interactions are particularly robust. To weaken or prevent formation of a flanking-ring η(6)-arene interaction, and to potentially provide access to the coordinatively unsaturated [Mo(CNAr(R))3] fragment, the new halo-substituted m-terphenyl isocyanides CNAr(Clips2) and CNAr(DArF2) (Ar(Clips) = 2,6-(2,6-Cl2C6H3)2(4-t-Bu)C6H2; Ar(DArF2) = 2,6-(3,5-(CF3)2C6H3)2C6H3) have been prepared. Relative to their alkyl-substituted counterparts, synthetic and structural studies demonstrate that the flanking aryl rings of CNAr(Clips2) and CNAr(DArF2) display a lower tendency toward η(6)-binding. In the case of CNAr(DArF2), it is shown that an η(6)-bound 3,5-bis(trifluoromethyl)phenyl group can be displaced from a zerovalent molybdenum center by three molecules of acetonitrile. This observation suggests that the CNAr(DArF2) ligand effectively masks low-valent metal centers in a fashion that provides access to low-coordinate isocyano targets such as [Mo(CNAr(R))3]. A series of Mo(CO)3(CNAr(R))3 complexes were also prepared to compare the relative π-acidities of CNAr(Mes2), CNAr(Clips2), and CNAr(DArF2). It is found that CNAr(DArF2) shows increased π-acidity relative to CNAr(Mes2) and CNAr(Clips2), despite the fact that its electron-withdrawing CF3 groups are fairly distal to the terminal isocyano unit.

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