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1.
Chemphyschem ; 24(4): e202200618, 2023 Feb 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36287210

ABSTRACT

We report the water adsorption/desorption behavior and dynamic magnetic properties of the Pt-Cl chain complex [{[Pt(en)2 ][PtCl2 (en)2 ]}3 ][{(MnCl5 )Cl3 }2 ] ⋅ 12H2 O (1). Upon heating 1 in a vacuum, we obtained the dehydrated form [{[Pt(en)2 ][PtCl2 (en)2 ]}3 ][{(MnCl5 )Cl3 }2 ] (1DH). The framework structures of 1 and 1DH are identical, and both complexes underwent slow magnetic relaxation. However, the magnetic relaxation times for 1DH were shorter than those for 1, meaning that the dynamic magnetic properties were controlled upon water vapor adsorption/desorption. From detailed analyses of the dynamic magnetic behavior, a phonon-bottleneck effect contributes to the magnetic relaxation processes. We discuss the mechanism for the changes in the magnetic relaxation processes upon dehydration in terms of the heat capacity and thermal conductivity.

2.
Org Lett ; 24(26): 4739-4744, 2022 Jul 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35724970

ABSTRACT

Chiral binaphthyldiimine-Ni(II)-catalyzed asymmetric 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition reactions between acyclic carbonyl ylides generated from donor-acceptor oxiranes and aldehydes are reported. Both aromatic and aliphatic aldehydes could be used as dipolarophiles, providing cis-1,3-dioxolanes with high diastereo- and enantioselectivities. On the basis of mechanistic studies, a monomeric chiral Ni(II) complex was hypothesized to act as the active species for the cycloaddition. The high levels of asymmetric induction are satisfactorily explained by a concerted-asynchronous endo Si-face approach of the aldehyde.

3.
Commun Chem ; 4(1): 76, 2021 May 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36697639

ABSTRACT

With sodium being the most abundant alkali metal on Earth, organosodium compounds are an attractive choice for sustainable chemical synthesis. However, organosodium compounds are rarely used-and are overshadowed by organolithium compounds-because of a lack of convenient and efficient preparation methods. Here we report a halogen-sodium exchange method to prepare a large variety of (hetero)aryl- and alkenylsodium compounds including tri- and tetrasodioarenes, many of them previously inaccessible by other methods. The key discovery is the use of a primary and bulky alkylsodium lacking ß-hydrogens, which retards undesired reactions, such as Wurtz-Fittig coupling and ß-hydrogen elimination, and enables efficient halogen-sodium exchange. The alkylsodium is readily prepared in situ from neopentyl chloride and an easy-to-handle sodium dispersion. We believe that the efficiency, generality, and convenience of the present method will contribute to the widespread use of organosodium in organic synthesis, ultimately contributing to the development of sustainable organic synthesis by rivalling the currently dominant organolithium reagents.

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