RESUMO
Azomethine ylides are typically in situ generated synthons for making N-heterocycles through cycloaddition reactions. But an offbeat aspect about them is the isomeric nature of aldiminium-based azomethine ylides and (alkyl/aryl)(amino)carbenes, interconvertible by a formal 1,3-H+ transfer. Herein, two thermally robust azomethine ylides with a N-appended picolyl sidearm are isolated, which cyclize to py aziridines at 80 °C but unprecedentedly result N-pico CAAC-CuCl (CAAC=cyclic(alkyl)(amino)carbene) complexes when heated with CuCl at merely 60 °C. The pendant Npy , as revealed by computational analysis, plays a crucial role in this unusual 1,3-H+ shift using a deprotonation-protonation sequence, as well as in placing the CuCl at the carbenic site in tandem. The softer nature of Cu(I) is also critical. Chelating CAACs are rare and one with a N-tethered additional donor is priorly unknown. Both N-pico CAAC and py aziridine are bidentate chelators giving highly active cationic Rh(I) catalysts for hydrosilylating unactivated olefins by Et3 SiH. Notably, the py aziridine-Rh(I) is superior than the N-pico CAAC-Rh(I) catalyst.
RESUMO
A fluorenyl-tethered N-heterocyclic carbene LH (LH=[(Flu)H-(CH2 )2 -NHCDipp ]) and its monoanionic version L- are explored in complexation with zinc towards the hydroboration of N-heteroarenes, carbonyl, ester, amide, and nitrile under ambient condition. The N-heteroarenes exhibit high 1,2-regioselectivity which is justified by computational analyses. The relative hydroboration rates of differently p-substituted (electron donating vs. withdrawing) pyridines are also addressed. The monodentate LH offers a better catalytic activity than the chelating L- for steric reasons despite both giving three-coordinate zinc complexes. The mechanism involves a Zn-H species at the heart of these catalytic processes which is trapped by Ph2 CO. Computational studies suggest that the barrier to form the hydride complex is comparable to the barrier required for the following hydride transfer to pyridine.
RESUMO
Virtually irreversible intramolecular C-H activations are deleterious for aza-carbenes. A picolyl-tethered cyclic(alkyl)(amino)carbene (CAAC) isomerizes into a donor-acceptor cyclopropane in this manner but restores the CAAC status by retro-C-H activation in the presence of trapping agents like Se or CuCl. The same DA cyclopropane is readily hydrolyzed to a pyrrolidin-2-ol that acts as another picoCAAC precursor by undergoing 1,1-dehydration in the presence of Se or CuCl. The chemistry is distinct from the N-heterocyclic carbene analogue throughout.
RESUMO
A conformationally flexible ligand, [(Flu)-(CH2)2-(NHC)-CH2-(NHC)-(CH2)2-(Flu)]2- (L), that offers four sequential organic donor modules and enwraps a Ca2+ pseudo-tetrahedrally in a twisted 'S'-shape is devised. The [(L)Ca] synthesis is intriguingly stepwise involving the intermediate [(LH)Ca(HMDS)], whereas [(LH)Li2(HMDS)] shows the potential for bimetallic chemistry. The bonding is illustrated by energy decomposition analyses.
RESUMO
The electron-rich cyclopentadienyl and the analogous indenyl and fluorenyl ligands (collectively denoted here as Cp') have been impactful in stabilizing electron-deficient metal centers including the highly electropositive alkaline earths. Being in the s-block, the group 2 metals follow a major periodic variation in their atomic and ionic properties which is reflected in those Cp' compounds. This article presents an overview of this class of compounds for all the five metals from beryllium to barium (radium is excluded for its radioactivity), highlighting their systematic variation.