50870-65-0Relevant articles and documents
Cooperative metal-ligand reactivity and catalysis in low-spin ferrous alkoxides
Chu, Wan-Yi,Zhou, Xiaoyuan,Rauchfuss, Thomas B.
, p. 1619 - 1625 (2015)
This report describes examples of combined Fe- and O-centered reactivity of Fe(P2O2)(CO)2 (1), where P2O2 is the diphosphinoglycolate (Ph2PC6H4CHO)22-
N-Heterocyclic Carbene Complexes of Nickel, Palladium, and Iridium Derived from Nitron: Synthesis, Structures, and Catalytic Properties
Quinlivan, Patrick J.,Loo, Aaron,Shlian, Daniel G.,Martinez, Joan,Parkin, Gerard
, p. 166 - 183 (2021/02/05)
The mesoionic compound (1,4-diphenyl-1,2,4-triazol-4-ium-3-yl)phenylazanide, commonly referred to as Nitron, has been employed as a "crypto-NHC"to afford 1,2,4-triazolylidene compounds of nickel, palladium, and iridium. Specifically, Nitron reacts with NiBr2, PdCl2, and [Ir(COD)Cl]2 to afford the N-heterocyclic carbene complexes (NitronNHC)2NiBr2, (NitronNHC)2PdCl2, and (NitronNHC)Ir(COD)Cl, respectively. The lattermost compound reacts with (i) CO to afford the dicarbonyl compound (NitronNHC)Ir(CO)2Cl and (ii) CO, in the presence of PPh3, to afford the monocarbonyl compound (NitronNHC)Ir(PPh3)(CO)Cl. Structural studies on (NitronNHC)Ir(COD)Cl and (NitronNHC)Ir(CO)2Cl indicate that NitronNHC has a stronger trans influence than does Cl; furthermore, IR spectroscopic studies on (NitronNHC)Ir(CO)2Cl indicate that NitronNHC is electronically similar to the structurally related Enders carbene but is less electron donating than imidazol-2-ylidenes with aryl substituents. Significantly, the NitronNHC ligand affords catalytic systems, as illustrated by the ability of (NitronNHC)Ir(CO)2Cl to effect (i) the dehydrogenation of formic acid, (ii) aldehyde hydrosilylation, (iii) dehydrocoupling of hydrosilanes and alcohols, and (iv) ketone reduction via transfer hydrogenation.
Heavier Alkaline-Earth Catalyzed Dehydrocoupling of Silanes and Alcohols for the Synthesis of Metallo-Polysilylethers
Hill, Michael S.,Mahon, Mary F.,Manners, Ian,Morris, Louis J.,S. McMenamy, Fred,Whittell, George R.
supporting information, p. 2954 - 2966 (2020/03/04)
The dehydrocoupling of silanes and alcohols mediated by heavier alkaline-earth catalysts, [Ae{N(SiMe3)2}2?(THF)2] (I–III) and [Ae{CH(SiMe3)2}2?(THF)2], (IV–VI) (Ae=Ca, Sr, Ba) is described. Primary, secondary, and tertiary alcohols were coupled to phenylsilane or diphenylsilane, whereas tertiary silanes are less tolerant towards bulky substrates. Some control over reaction selectivity towards mono-, di-, or tri-substituted silylether products was achieved through alteration of reaction stoichiometry, conditions, and catalyst. The ferrocenyl silylether, FeCp(C5H4SiPh(OBn)2) (2), was prepared and fully characterized from the ferrocenylsilane, FeCp(C5H4SiPhH2) (1), and benzyl alcohol using barium catalysis. Stoichiometric experiments suggested a reaction manifold involving the formation of Ae–alkoxide and hydride species, and a series of dimeric Ae–alkoxides [(Ph3CO)Ae(μ2-OCPh3)Ae(THF)] (3 a–c, Ae=Ca, Sr, Ba) were isolated and fully characterized. Mechanistic experiments suggested a complex reaction mechanism involving dimeric or polynuclear active species, whose kinetics are highly dependent on variables such as the identity and concentration of the precatalyst, silane, and alcohol. Turnover frequencies increase on descending Group 2 of the periodic table, with the barium precatalyst III displaying an apparent first-order dependence in both silane and alcohol, and an optimum catalyst loading of 3 mol % Ba, above which activity decreases. With precatalyst III in THF, ferrocene-containing poly- and oligosilylethers with ferrocene pendent to- (P1–P4) or as a constituent (P5, P6) of the main polymer chain were prepared from 1 or Fe(C5H4SiPhH2)2 (4) with diols 1,4-(HOCH2)2-(C6H4) and 1,4-(CH(CH3)OH)2-(C6H4), respectively. The resultant materials were characterized by NMR spectroscopy, gel permeation chromatography (GPC) and DOSY NMR spectroscopy, with estimated molecular weights in excess of 20,000 Da for P1 and P4. The iron centers display reversible redox behavior and thermal analysis showed P1 and P5 to be promising precursors to magnetic ceramic materials.