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1.
Inorg Chem ; 49(1): 108-22, 2010 Jan 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19950956

ABSTRACT

A family of triphenylamido-amine ligands of the general stoichiometry L(x)H(3) = [R-NH-(2-C(6)H(4))](3)N (R = 4-t-BuPh (L(1)H(3)), 3,5-t-Bu(2)Ph (L(2)H(3)), 3,5-(CF(3))(2)Ph (L(3)H(3)), CO-t-Bu (L(4)H(3)), 3,5-Cl(2)Ph (L(5)H(3)), COPh (L(6)H(3)), CO-i-Pr (L(7)H(3)), COCF(3) (L(8)H(3)), and i-Pr (L(9)H(3))) has been synthesized and characterized, featuring a rigid triphenylamido-amine scaffold and an array of stereoelectronically diverse aryl, acyl, and alkyl substituents (R). These ligands are deprotonated by potassium hydride in THF or DMA and reacted with anhydrous FeCl(2) to afford a series of ferrous complexes, exhibiting stoichiometric variation and structural complexity. The prevalent [(L(x))Fe(II)-solv](-) structures (L(x) = L(1), L(2), L(3), L(5), solv = THF; L(x) = L(8), solv = DMA; L(x) = L(6), L(8), solv = MeCN) reveal a distorted trigonal bipyramidal geometry, featuring ligand-derived [N(3,amido)N(amine)] coordination and solvent attachment trans to the N(amine) atom. Specifically for [(L(8))Fe(II)-DMA](-), a N(amido) residue is coordinated as the corresponding N(imino) moiety (Fe-N(Ar) horizontal lineC(CF(3))-O(-)). In contrast, compounds [(L(4))Fe(II)](-), [(L(6))(2)Fe(II)(2)](2-), [K(L(7))(2)Fe(II)(2)](2)(2-), and [K(L(9))Fe](2) are all solvent-free in their coordination sphere and exhibit four-coordinate geometries of significant diversity. In particular, [(L(4))Fe(II)](-) demonstrates coordination of one amidato residue via the O-atom end (Fe-O-C(t-Bu) horizontal lineN(Ar)). Furthermore, [(L(6))(2)Fe(II)(2)](2-) and [K(L(7))(2)Fe(II)(2)](2)(2-) are similar structures exhibiting bridging amidato residues (Fe-N(Ar)-C(R) horizontal lineO-Fe) in dimeric structural units. Finally, the structure of [K(L(9))Fe](2) is the only example featuring a minimal [N(3,amido)N(amine)] coordination sphere around each Fe(II) site. All compounds have been characterized by a variety of physicochemical techniques, including Mossbauer spectroscopy and electrochemistry, to reveal electronic attributes that are responsible for a range of Fe(II)/Fe(III) redox potentials exceeding 1.0 V.


Subject(s)
Ferrous Compounds/chemistry , Amides/chemistry , Amines/chemistry , Ferrous Compounds/chemical synthesis , Ligands , Models, Molecular , Molecular Structure
2.
Inorg Chem ; 47(23): 10998-1009, 2008 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18937446

ABSTRACT

Redox events involving both metal and ligand sites are receiving increased attention since a number of biological processes direct redox equivalents toward functional residues. Metalloradical synthetic analogues remain scarce and require better definition of their mode of formation and subsequent operation. The trisamido-amine ligand [(RNC6H4)3N]3-, where R is the electron-rich 4-t-Bu Ph, is employed in this study to generate redox active residues in manganese and chromium complexes. Solutions of [(L1)Mn(II)-THF]- in THF are oxidized by dioxygen to afford [(L1re-1)Mn(III)-(O)2-Mn(III)(L1 re-1)]2-as the major product. The rare dinuclear manganese (III,III) core is stabilized by a rearranged ligand that has undergone an one-electron oxidative transformation, followed by retention of the oxidation equivalent as a pi radical in ano-diiminobenzosemiquinonate moiety. Magnetic studies indicate that the ligand-centered radical is stabilized by means of extended antiferromagnetic coupling between the S ) 1/2 radical and the adjacent S ) 2 Mn(III) site, as well as between the two Mn(III) centers via the dioxo bridge. Electrochemical and EPR data suggest that this system can store higher levels of oxidation potency. Entry to the corresponding Cr(III) chemistry is achieved by employing CrCl3 to access both[(L1)Cr(III)-THF] and [(L1re-1)Cr(III)-THF(Cl)], featuring the intact and the oxidatively rearranged ligands, respectively. The latter is generated by ligand-centered oxidation of the former compound. The rearranged ligand is perceived to be the product of an one-electron oxidation of the intact ligand to afford a metal-bound aminyl radical that subsequently mediates a radical 1,4-(N-to-N) aryl migration.


Subject(s)
Chromium/chemistry , Manganese/chemistry , Organometallic Compounds/chemistry , Chlorides/chemistry , Chromium Compounds/chemistry , Electrochemistry , Ligands , Magnetics , Oxidants/chemistry , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxygen/chemistry
3.
Inorg Chem ; 47(3): 1165-72, 2008 Feb 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18179206

ABSTRACT

Functional systems that combine redox-active metals and noninnocent ligands are no longer rare chemical oddities; they are instead emerging as significant components of catalytic and enzymatic reactions. The present work examines the synthetic and functional aspects of iron compounds ligated by a family of new trisamidoamine ligands of the type [(RNC6H4)3N]3- (L1). When R is the electron-rich 4-t-Bu-Ph moiety, the ligand can undergo oxidative rearrangement and store oxidizing equivalents under specific conditions. Starting ferrous complexes of the general formula [(L1)FeIIsolv]- (solv=CH3CN, dimethylformamide) can be easily oxidized (a) by dioxygen to afford the corresponding [(L1)FeIIIOH]- complexes, featuring several cases of terminal hydroxo units, and (b) by organochlorides (R-Cl) to provide [(L1)FeIIIsolv] congeners and coupled R-R products. Efforts to synthesize [(L1)FeIII-O-FeIII(L1)]2- by using [Cl3FeIII-O-FeIIICl3]2- indicate that intrinsic FeIIICl units can oxidatively rearrange the ligand to afford [(L1re)(Cl)FeII][Et4N]2, although the oxidizing equivalent is not retained. Compound [(L1re)(Cl)FeII][Et4N]2 can be further oxidized to [(L1re-2)(Cl)FeIII][Et4N] by CH2Cl2. Finally, oxidation of [(L1)FeIIIsolv] by FeCl3 affords [(L1reH)(Cl)FeII(micro-Cl)2FeII(Cl)(L1re-2H)], which features a similar ligand rearrangement that also gives rise to a diamagnetic, doubly oxidized moiety. These results underscore the complexity of chemical transformations available to systems in which both the metal and the ligand are redox-active entities.


Subject(s)
Amines/chemistry , Iron/chemistry , Metals/chemistry , Electrochemistry , Ligands , Models, Molecular , Oxidation-Reduction
4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 128(9): 2808-9, 2006 Mar 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16506753

ABSTRACT

An unsaturated (PNP)Rh fragment can be generated by means of C-C reductive elimination from (PNP)Rh(Me)(Ar) or (PNP)Rh(Ar)(Ar). This fragment undergoes carbon-halogen oxidative addition with aryl chlorides, bromides, and iodides at room temperature. The C-H oxidative addition products in reactions with haloarenes are not observed, and evidence is presented that carbon-halogen oxidative addition is thermodynamically preferred. C-C reductive elimination from (PNP)Rh(Me)(Ar) and (PNP)Rh(Ar)(Ar) proceeds near quantitatively as a clean, first-order reaction.

5.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; (2): 197-9, 2006 Jan 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16372104

ABSTRACT

A Rh complex of a bulky diarylamino-based PNP pincer ligand is a robust catalyst for the dimerization of terminal alkynes and highly selective for the trans-enyne product.

6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 127(9): 2852-3, 2005 Mar 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15740111

ABSTRACT

Room-temperature catalytic hydrodefluorination of the strong C(sp3)-F bonds in benzotrifluorides and fluoropentane is catalyzed by Et3Si[B(C6F5)4] and uses Et3SiH as the source of H. Ar-CF3 compounds are converted to Ar-CH3 and fluropentane to pentane. The reaction is thought to proceed via abstraction of F- by Et3Si[B(C6F5)4], and the substituent effects are consistent with this hypothesis.

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