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1.
The complexes PtRu(5)(CO)(15)(PMe(2)Ph)(mu(6)-C) (2), PtRu(5)(CO)(14)(PMe(2)Ph)(2)(mu(6)-C) (3), PtRu(5)(CO)(15)(PMe(3))(mu(6)-C) (4), PtRu(5)(CO)(14)(PMe(3))(2)(mu(6)-C) (5), and PtRu(5)(CO)(15)(Me(2)S)(mu(6)-C) (6) were obtained from the reactions of PtRu(5)(CO)(16)(mu(6)-C) (1) with the appropriate ligand. As determined by NMR spectroscopy, all the new complexes exist in solution as a mixture of isomers. Compounds 2, 3, and 6 were characterized crystallographically. In all three compounds, the six metal atoms are arranged in an octahedral geometry, with a carbido carbon atom in the center. The PMe(2)Ph and Me(2)S ligands are coordinated to the Pt atom in 2 and 6, respectively. In 3, the two PMe(2)Ph ligands are coordinated to Ru atoms. In solution, all the new compounds undergo dynamical intramolecular isomerization by shifting the PMe(2)Ph or Me(2)S ligand back and forth between the Pt and Ru atoms. For compound 2, DeltaH++ = 15.1(3) kcal/mol, DeltaS++ = -7.7(9) cal/(mol.K), and DeltaG(298) = 17.4(6) kcal/mol for the transformation of the major isomer to the minor isomer; for compound 4, DeltaH++ = 14.0(1) kcal/mol, DeltaS++ = -10.7(4) cal/(mol.K), and DeltaG(298) = 17.2(2) kcal/mol for the transformation of the major isomer to the minor isomer; for compound 6, DeltaH++ = 18(1) kcal/mol, DeltaS++ = 21(5) cal/(mol.K) and DeltaG(298) = 12(2) kcal/mol. The shifts of the Me(2)S ligand in 6 are significantly more facile than the shifts for the phosphine ligand in compounds 2-5. This is attributed to a more stable ligand-bridged intermediate for the isomerizations of 6 than that for compounds 2-5. The intermediate for the isomerization of 6 involves a bridging Me(2)S ligand that can use two lone pairs of electrons for coordination to the metal atoms, whereas a tertiary phosphine ligand can use only one lone pair of electrons for bridging coordination.  相似文献   

2.
The Cu(I) beta-diketiminate [Me2NN]Cu(eta2-ethylene) (2) catalyzes the cyclopropanation of styrene with N2CPh2 to give 1,1,2-triphenylcyclopropane in 67% yield. Addition of N2CPh2 to 2 equiv of 2 allows for the isolation of the dicopper carbene [[Me2NN]Cu]2(mu-CPh2) (3) in which the diphenylcarbene moiety is symmetrically bound between two [Me2NN]Cu fragments (Cu-C = 1.922(4) and 1.930(4) A) with a Cu-Cu separation of 2.4635(7) A. In toluene-d8 solution, 3 reversibly dissociates a [Me2NN]Cu fragment to give [Me2NN]Cu(toluene) and the terminal carbene [Me2NN]Cu=CPh2. Dicopper carbene 3 reacts with 3 equiv of styrene to give 1,1,2-triphenylcyclopropane and 2 equiv of [Me2NN]Cu(eta2-styrene) within minutes. DFT studies with simplified ligands indicate a stronger Cu-C pi-back-bonding interaction from two Cu(I) centers to the carbene acceptor orbital in a dicopper carbene than that present in a monocopper carbene. Nonetheless, the terminal carbene [Me3NN]Cu=CPh2 (8) that possesses a p-methyl group on each beta-diketiminato N-aryl ring may be isolated and exhibits a shortened Cu-C distance of 1.834(3) A. The stoichiometric cyclopropanation of styrene by 8 in 1,4-dioxane is first-order in both copper carbene 8 and styrene with activation parameters DeltaH = 10.4(3) kcal/mol and DeltaS = -32.3(9) cal/mol.K. In 1,4-dioxane, 8 decomposes to Ph2C=CPh2 via first-order kinetics with activation parameters DeltaH = 21(1) kcal/mol and DeltaS = -8(3) cal/mol.K. Arene solutions of thermally sensitive terminal carbene 8 decompose to [Me3NN]Cu(arene), which reacts with 8 still present in solution to give the more thermally stable [[Me3NN]Cu]2(mu-CPh2).  相似文献   

3.
The kinetics of the equilibrium reaction between [Ni(SC(6)H(4)R-4)(2)(dppe)] (R= MeO, Me, H, Cl, or NO(2); dppe = Ph(2)PCH(2)CH(2)PPh(2)) and mixtures of [lutH](+) and lut (lut = 2,6-dimethylpyridine) in MeCN to form [Ni(SHC(6)H(4)R-4)(SC(6)H(4)R-4)(dppe)](+) have been studied using stopped-flow spectrophotometry. The kinetics for the reactions with R = MeO, Me, H, or Cl are consistent with a single-step equilibrium reaction. Investigation of the temperature dependence of the reactions shows that DeltaG = 13.6 +/- 0.3 kcal mol(-)(1) for all the derivatives but the values of DeltaH and DeltaS vary with R (R = MeO, DeltaH() = 8.5 kcal mol(-)(1), DeltaS = -16 cal K(-)(1) mol(-)(1); R = Me, DeltaH() = 10.8 kcal mol(-)(1), DeltaS = -9.5 cal K(-)(1) mol(-)(1); R = Cl, DeltaH = 23.7 kcal mol(-)(1), DeltaS = +33 cal K(-)(1) mol(-)(1)). With [Ni(SC(6)H(4)NO(2)-4)(2)(dppe)] a more complicated rate law is observed consistent with a mechanism in which initial hydrogen-bonding of [lutH](+) to the complex precedes intramolecular proton transfer. It seems likely that all the derivatives operate by this mechanism, but only with R = NO(2) (the most electron-withdrawing substituent) does the intramolecular proton transfer step become sufficiently slow to result in the change in kinetics. Studies with [lutD](+) show that the rates of proton transfer to [Ni(SC(6)H(4)R-4)(2)(dppe)] (R = Me or Cl) are associated with negligible kinetic isotope effect. The possible reasons for this are discussed. The rates of proton transfer to [Ni(SC(6)H(4)R-4)(2)(dppe)] vary with the 4-R-substituent, and the Hammett plot is markedly nonlinear. This unusual behavior is attributable to the electronic influence of R which affects the electron density at the sulfur.  相似文献   

4.
The reaction of Ru(5)(CO)(12)(eta(6)-C(6)H(6))(mu(5)-C), 7, with Pt(PBu(t)(3))(2) yielded two products Ru(5)(CO)(12)(eta(6)-C(6)H(6))(mu(6)-C)[Pt(PBu(t)(3))], 8, and Ru(5)(CO)(12)(eta(6)-C(6)H(6))(mu(6)-C)[Pt(PBu(t)(3))](2), 9. Compound 8 contains a Ru(5)Pt metal core in an open octahedral structure. In solution, 8 exists as a mixture of two isomers that interconvert rapidly on the NMR time scale at 20 degrees C, DeltaH() = 7.1(1) kcal mol(-1), DeltaS() = -5.1(6) cal mol(-)(1) K(-)(1), and DeltaG(298)(#) = 8.6(3) kcal mol(-1). Compound 9 is structurally similar to 8, but has an additional Pt(PBu(t)(3)) group bridging an Ru-Ru edge of the cluster. The two Pt(PBu(t)(3)) groups in 9 rapidly exchange on the NMR time scale at 70 degrees C, DeltaH(#) = 9.2(3) kcal mol(-)(1), DeltaS(#) = -5(1) cal mol(-)(1) K(-)(1), and DeltaG(298)(#) = 10.7(7) kcal mol(-1). Compound 8 reacts with hydrogen to give the dihydrido complex Ru(5)(CO)(11)(eta(6)-C(6)H(6))(mu(6)-C)[Pt(PBu(t)(3))](mu-H)(2), 10, in 59% yield. This compound consists of a closed Ru(5)Pt octahedron with two hydride ligands bridging two of the four Pt-Ru bonds.  相似文献   

5.
Nitrile hydratase (NHase) is an iron-containing metalloenzyme that converts nitriles to amides. The mechanism by which this biochemical reaction occurs is unknown. One mechanism that has been proposed involves nucleophilic attack of an Fe-bound nitrile by water (or hydroxide). Reported herein is a five-coordinate model compound ([Fe(III)(S(2)(Me2)N(3)(Et,Pr))](+)) containing Fe(III) in an environment resembling that of NHase, which reversibly binds a variety of nitriles, alcohols, amines, and thiocyanate. XAS shows that five-coordinate [Fe(III)(S(2)(Me2)N(3)(Et,Pr))](+) reacts with both methanol and acetonitrile to afford a six-coordinate solvent-bound complex. Competitive binding studies demonstrate that MeCN preferentially binds over ROH, suggesting that nitriles would be capable of displacing the H(2)O coordinated to the iron site of NHase. Thermodynamic parameters were determined for acetonitrile (DeltaH = -6.2(+/-0.2) kcal/mol, DeltaS = -29.4(+/-0.8) eu), benzonitrile (-4.2(+/-0.6) kcal/mol, DeltaS = -18(+/-3) eu), and pyridine (DeltaH = -8(+/-1) kcal/mol, DeltaS = -41(+/-6) eu) binding to [Fe(III)(S(2)(Me2)N(3)(Et,Pr))](+) using variable-temperature electronic absorption spectroscopy. Ligand exchange kinetics were examined for acetonitrile, iso-propylnitrile, benzonitrile, and 4-tert-butylpyridine using (13)C NMR line-broadening analysis, at a variety of temperatures. Activation parameters for ligand exchange were determined to be DeltaH(+ +) = 7.1(+/-0.8) kcal/mol, DeltaS(+ +) = -10(+/-1) eu (acetonitrile), DeltaH(+ +) = 5.4(+/-0.6) kcal/mol, DeltaS(+ +) = -17(+/-2) eu (iso-propionitrile), DeltaH(+ +) = 4.9(+/-0.8) kcal/mol, DeltaS(+ +) = -20(+/-3) eu (benzonitrile), and DeltaH(+ +) = 4.7(+/-1.4) kcal/mol DeltaS(+ +) = -18(+/-2) eu (4-tert-butylpyridine). The thermodynamic parameters for pyridine binding to a related complex, [Fe(III)(S(2)(Me2)N(3)(Pr,Pr))](+) (DeltaH = -5.9(+/-0.8) kcal/mol, DeltaS = -24(+/-3) eu), are also reported, as well as kinetic parameters for 4-tert-butylpyridine exchange (DeltaH(+ +) = 3.1(+/-0.8) kcal/mol, DeltaS(+ +) = -25(+/-3) eu). These data show for the first time that, when it is contained in a ligand environment similar to that of NHase, Fe(III) is capable of forming a stable complex with nitriles. Also, the rates of ligand exchange demonstrate that low-spin Fe(III) in this ligand environment is more labile than expected. Furthermore, comparison of [Fe(III)(S(2)(Me2)N(3)(Et,Pr))](+) and [Fe(III)(S(2)(Me2)N(3)(Pr,Pr))](+) demonstrates how minor distortions induced by ligand constraints can dramatically alter the reactivity of a metal complex.  相似文献   

6.
Synthetic studies are reported that show that the reaction of either H2SnR2 (R = Ph, n-Bu) or HMo(CO)3(Cp) (1-H, Cp = eta(5)-C5H5) with Mo(N[t-Bu]Ar)3 (2, Ar = 3,5-C6H3Me2) produce HMo(N[t-Bu]Ar)3 (2-H). The benzonitrile adduct (PhCN)Mo(N[t-Bu]Ar)3 (2-NCPh) reacts rapidly with H2SnR2 or 1-H to produce the ketimide complex (Ph(H)C=N)Mo(N[t-Bu]Ar)3 (2-NC(H)Ph). The X-ray crystal structures of both 2-H and 2-NC(H)Ph are reported. The enthalpy of reaction of 1-H and 2 in toluene solution has been measured by solution calorimetry (DeltaH = -13.1 +/- 0.7 kcal mol(-1)) and used to estimate the Mo-H bond dissociation enthalpy (BDE) in 2-H as 62 kcal mol(-1). The enthalpy of reaction of 1-H and 2-NCPh in toluene solution was determined calorimetrically as DeltaH = -35.1 +/- 2.1 kcal mol(-1). This value combined with the enthalpy of hydrogenation of [Mo(CO)3(Cp)]2 (1(2)) gives an estimated value of 90 kcal mol(-1) for the BDE of the ketimide C-H of 2-NC(H)Ph. These data led to the prediction that formation of 2-NC(H)Ph via nitrile insertion into 2-H would be exothermic by approximately 36 kcal mol(-1), and this reaction was observed experimentally. Stopped flow kinetic studies of the rapid reaction of 1-H with 2-NCPh yielded DeltaH(double dagger) = 11.9 +/- 0.4 kcal mol(-1), DeltaS(double dagger) = -2.7 +/- 1.2 cal K(-1) mol(-1). Corresponding studies with DMo(CO)3(Cp) (1-D) showed a normal kinetic isotope effect with kH/kD approximately 1.6, DeltaH(double dagger) = 13.1 +/- 0.4 kcal mol(-1) and DeltaS(double dagger) = 1.1 +/- 1.6 cal K(-1) mol(-1). Spectroscopic studies of the much slower reaction of 1-H and 2 yielding 2-H and 1/2 1(2) showed generation of variable amounts of a complex proposed to be (Ar[t-Bu]N)3Mo-Mo(CO)3(Cp) (1-2). Complex 1-2 can also be formed in small equilibrium amounts by direct reaction of excess 2 and 1(2). The presence of 1-2 complicates the kinetic picture; however, in the presence of excess 2, the second-order rate constant for H atom transfer from 1-H has been measured: 0.09 +/- 0.01 M(-1) s(-1) at 1.3 degrees C and 0.26 +/- 0.04 M(-1) s(-1) at 17 degrees C. Study of the rate of reaction of 1-D yielded kH/kD = 1.00 +/- 0.05 consistent with an early transition state in which formation of the adduct (Ar[t-Bu]N)3Mo...HMo(CO)3(Cp) is rate limiting.  相似文献   

7.
Treatment of (EBI)ZrMe2 with B(C6F5)3 and 100 equiv of 1-hexene in toluene-d8 at -40 degrees C for 1 h, followed by addition of >5 equiv of propene, generates a living polypropene catalyst (3) with a polyhexene "tail". Upon further addition of propene, speciation of the catalyst and propagation kinetics are measured directly by NMR, yielding a propagation rate law that is first order in [propene] and [living catalyst] with a rate constant of 2.6 M-1 s-1 at -40 degrees C and the activation parameters DeltaH = 3.4(0.2) kcal/mol and DeltaS = -42(2) cal/(mol K). In the absence of propene, elimination of vinylidene-terminated polymer is observed with a first-order rate constant of 3.3 (0.5) x 10-5 s-1 at -40 degrees C and DeltaH = 12.9(1.4) kcal/mol and DeltaS = -23(5) cal/(mol K). Use of 1-13C-propene and 1,1-2H-2,3-13C-propene and 1H, 19F, and 13C NMR spectroscopy provide rigorous characterization of the living catalyst and enable the first direct observation of both 1,3-isomerization and chain-end epimerization processes at a metallocene catalyst. Isomerization and epimerization occur with rates that are similar to that of vinylidene termination and are consistent with previous mechanistic hypotheses featuring isomerization via a tertiary alkyl intermediate and switching between enantiofaces of the coordinated alkene.  相似文献   

8.
Interactions between two aromatic rings with various substituents in a near-sandwich configuration have been quantitatively studied by using the triptycene derived molecular models. This model system allows a stacking arrangement of two arenes to assume a near-perfect face-to-face configuration in its ground state conformation. Comparing to our previous study of the parallel displaced configuration, repulsive interactions are predominant for most arenes currently studied. However, if one arene is strongly electron deficient (Ar2=pentafluorobenzoate), attractive interactions were observed regardless of the character of the other arene (Ar1). For stacking interactions between Me2NC6H4 and C6F5CO groups, a DeltaH of -1.84+/-0.2 kcal/mol and a DeltaS of -2.9+/-0.8 cal/(mol.K) were determined. The general trend in the attractive stacking interaction toward a pentafluorobenzoate is Me2NC6H4>Me3C6H2>Me2C6H3>MeC6H4>MeOC6H4>C6H5>O2NC6H4. The observed trend is consistent with a donor-acceptor relationship and the acceptor is a C6F5CO group.  相似文献   

9.
d0 Tungsten alkylidyne alkyl complex (Me3SiCH2)3W(CSiMe3)(PMe3) (4a) was found to undergo a rare, PMe3-promoted exchange with its bis(alkylidene) tautomer (Me3SiCH2)2W(=CHSiMe3)2(PMe3) (4b). Thermodynamic studies of the exchange showed that 4b is favored and gave Keq and the enthalpy and entropy of the equilibrium: DeltaH degrees = -1.8(0.5) kcal/mol and DeltaS degrees = -1.5(1.7) eu. Kinetic studies of the alpha-H migration between 4a and 4b by variable-temperature NMR gave rate constants k1 and k-1 for the reversible reactions and activation enthalpies and entropies: DeltaH1 = 16.2(1.2) kcal/mol and DeltaS1 = -22.3(4.0) eu for the forward reaction (4a --> 4b); DeltaH2 = 18.0(1.3) kcal/mol and DeltaS2 = -20.9(4.3) eu for the reverse reaction (4b --> 4a). Ab initio calculations at the B3LYP level revealed that PMe3 binds with the bis(alkylidene) tautomer relatively more strongly than with the alkylidyne tautomer and thus stabilizes the bis(alkylidene) tautomer.  相似文献   

10.
The thermodynamic and structural characteristics of Al(C6F(5)3-derived vs B(C6F5)3-derived group 4 metallocenium ion pairs are quantified. Reaction of 1.0 equiv of B(C6F5)3 or 1.0 or 2.0 equiv of Al(C6F5)3 with rac-C2H4(eta5-Ind)2Zr(CH3)2 (rac-(EBI)Zr(CH3)2) yields rac-(EBI)Zr(CH3)(+)H3CB(C6)F5)(3)(-) (1a), rac-(EBI)Zr(CH3)+H3CAl(C6F5)(3)(-) (1b), and rac-(EBI)Zr2+[H3CAl(C6F5)3](-)(2) (1c), respectively. X-ray crystallographic analysis of 1b indicates the H3CAl(C6F5)(3)(-) anion coordinates to the metal center via a bridging methyl in a manner similar to B(C6F5)3-derived metallocenium ion pairs. However, the Zr-(CH3)(bridging) and Al-(CH3)(bridging) bond lengths of 1b (2.505(4) A and 2.026(4) A, respectively) indicate the methyl group is less completely abstracted in 1b than in typical B(C6F5)3-derived ion pairs. Ion pair formation enthalpies (DeltaH(ipf)) determined by isoperibol solution calorimetry in toluene from the neutral precursors are -21.9(6) kcal mol(-1) (1a), -14.0(15) kcal mol(-1) (1b), and -2.1(1) kcal mol(-1) (1b-->1c), indicating Al(C6F5)3 to have significantly less methide affinity than B(C6F5)3. Analogous experiments with Me2Si(eta5-Me4C5)(t-BuN)Ti(CH3)2 indicate a similar trend. Furthermore, kinetic parameters for ion pair epimerization by cocatalyst exchange (ce) and anion exchange (ae), determined by line-broadening in VT NMR spectra over the range 25-75 degrees C, are DeltaH++(ce) = 22(1) kcal mol(-1), DeltaS++(ce) = 8.2(4) eu, DeltaH++(ae) = 14(2) kcal mol(-1), and DeltaS++(ae) = -15(2) eu for 1a. Line broadening for 1b is not detectable until just below the temperature where decomposition becomes significant ( approximately 75-80 degrees C), but estimation of the activation parameters at 72 degrees C gives DeltaH++(ce) approximately 22 kcal mol(-1)and DeltaH++(ae) approximately 16 kcal mol(-1), consistent with the bridging methide being more strongly bound to the zirconocenium center than in 1a.  相似文献   

11.
The isopropyl chloro complex Tp(Me2)NbCl(i-Pr)(PhC&tbd1;CMe) (2) [Tp(Me2) = hydrotris(3,5-dimethylpyrazolyl)borate] exhibits a beta-agostic structure in the crystal. The conformation of the alkyl group is such that the agostic methyl group lies in the Calpha-Nb-Cl plane and the nonagostic one, in a wedge formed by two pyrazole rings. As observed by solution NMR spectroscopy, restricted rotation about the Nb-C bond allows the observation of an equilibrium between this species, 2beta, and a minor alpha-agostic rotamer 2alpha. A putative third rotamer which would have the secondary hydrogen in the wedge is not observed. Similar behavior is observed for related Tp'NbCl(i-Pr)(R(2)C=CMe) [Tp' = Tp(Me2), R(2) = Me (3); Tp' = Tp(Me2,4Cl), R(2) = Ph (4)]. The two diastereomers of the sec-butyl complex Tp(Me2)NbCl(sec-Bu)(MeC=CMe) (5) have been separated. In the crystal, 5CR-AS has a beta-agostic methyl group with the ethyl group located in the wedge formed by two pyrazole rings. The same single beta-agostic species is observed in solution. The other diastereomer, 5AR-CS has a beta-agostic methylene group in the solid state, and the methyl group sits in the wedge. In solution, an equilibrium between this beta-agostic methylene complex 5AR-CSbeta and a minor alpha-agostic species 5AR-CSalpha, where the ethyl substituent of the sec-Bu group is located in the wedge between two pyrazole rings, is observed. NMR techniques have provided thermodynamic parameters for these equilibria (K = 2beta/2alpha = 4.0 +/- 0.1 at 193 K, DeltaG(o)(193) = -2.2 +/- 0.1, DeltaH(o) = -7.4 +/- 0.1 kJ mol(-)(1), and DeltaS(o) = -27 +/- 1 J K(-)(1) mol(-)(1)), as well as kinetic parameters for the rotation about the Nb-C bond (at 193 K, DeltaG(2)= 47.5 +/- 2.5, DeltaH= 58.8 +/- 2.5 kJ mol(-)(1), and DeltaS = 59.0 +/- 10 J K(-)(1) mol(-)(1)). Upon selective deuteration of the beta-methyl protons in Tp(Me2)NbCl[CH(CD(3))(2)](PhC=CMe) (2-d(6)), an expected isotope effect that displaces the equilibrium toward the alpha-agostic rotamer is observed (K = 2-d(6)beta/2-d(6)alpha = 3.1 +/- 0.1 at 193 K, DeltaG(o)(193) = -1.8 +/- 0.1, DeltaH(o) = -8.3 +/- 0.4 kJ mol(-)(1) and DeltaS(o)= -34 +/- 2 J K(-)(1) mol(-)(1)). The anomalous values for DeltaH(o) and DeltaS(o) are discussed. Hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics calculations (IMOMM (B3LYP:MM3)) on the realistic model Tp(Me2)NbCl(i-Pr)(HC=CMe) have reproduced the energy differences between the alpha- and beta-agostic species with remarkable accuracy. Similar calculations show that Tp(Me2)NbCl(CH(2)Me)(HC=CMe) is alpha-agostic only and that Tp(5)(-)(Me)NbCl(CH(2)Me)(HC=CMe), which has no methyl groups at the 3-positions of the pyrazole rings, is beta-agostic only. Analysis and discussion of the computational and experimental data indicate that the unique behavior observed for the secondary alkyl complexes stems from competition between electronic effects favoring a beta-agostic structure and steric effects directing a bulky substituent in the wedge between two pyrazole rings of Tp(Me2). All of the secondary alkyl complexes thermally rearrange to the corresponding linear alkyl complexes via a first-order reaction.  相似文献   

12.
The cheletropic decompositions of 1-nitrosoaziridine (1), 1-nitroso-Delta(3)-pyrroline (2), 7-nitroso-7-azabicyclo[2.2. 1]hepta-2,5-diene (3), and 6-nitroso-6-azabicyclo[2.1.1]hexa-4-ene (4) have been studied theoretically using high level ab initio computations. Activation parameters of the decomposition of nitrosoaziridine 1 were obtained experimentally in heptane (DeltaH()(298) = 18.6 kcal mol(-)(1), DeltaS()(298) = -7.6 cal mol(-)(1) K(-)(1)) and methanol (20.3 kcal mol(-)(1), 0.3 cal mol(-)(1) K(-)(1)). Among employed theoretical methods (B3LYP, MP2, CCD, CCSD(T)//CCD), the B3LYP method in conjunction with 6-31+G, 6-311+G, and 6-311++G(3df,2pd) basis sets gives the best agreement with experimental data. It was found that typical N-nitrosoheterocycles 2-4 which have high N-N bond rotation barriers (>16 kcal mol(-)(1)) extrude nitrous oxide via a highly asynchronous transition state with a planar ring nitrogen atom. Nitrosoaziridine 1, with a low rotation barrier (<9 kcal mol(-)(1)) represents a special case. This compound can eliminate N(2)O via a low energy linear synperiplanar transition state (DeltaH()(298) = 20.6 kcal mol(-)(1), DeltaS()(298) = 2.5 cal mol(-)(1) K(-)(1)). Two higher energy transition states are also available. The B3LYP activation barriers of the cheletropic fragmentation of nitrosoheterocycles 2-4 decrease in the series: 2 (58 kcal mol(-)(1)) > 3 (18 kcal mol(-)(1)) > 4 (12) kcal mol(-)(1). The relative strain energies increase in the same order: 2 (0 kcal mol(-)(1)) < 3 (39 kcal mol(-)(1)) < 4 (52 kcal mol(-)(1)). Comparison of the relative energies of 2-4 and their transition states on a common scale where the energy of nitrosopyrroline 2 is assumed as reference indicates that the thermal stability of the cyclic nitrosoamines toward cheletropic decomposition is almost entirely determined by the ring strain.  相似文献   

13.
We have used gas-phase infrared spectroscopy to determine the equilibrium constant (K(p)) for the formation of (CH(3))(3)Ga:NH(3) and (CH(3))(3)In:NH(3) adducts in the 80-230 degrees C range. In this temperature range, and at reactant concentrations typically used for metal organic chemical vapor deposition, the dominant chemical reaction is reversible adduct formation/dissociation. Reaction enthalpies and entropies are extracted from the temperature dependence of K(p), yielding DeltaH(Ga) = -16.3 +/- 0.5 kcal/mol, DeltaS(Ga) = -32.4 +/- 1.2 eu, and DeltaH(In) = -15.0 +/- 0.6 kcal/mol, DeltaS(In) = -30.3 +/- 1.4 eu. These results will aid current and future modeling efforts, as well as advance our general understanding of the group-III nitride deposition process.  相似文献   

14.
Clarifying the difference in redox reactivity between the metal oxo and metal hydroxo moieties for the same redox active metal ion in identical structures and oxidation states, that is, M(n+)O and M(n+)-OH, contributes to the understanding of nature's choice between them (M(n+)O or M(n+)-OH) as key active intermediates in redox enzymes and electron transfer enzymes, and provides a basis for the design of synthetic oxidation catalysts. The newly synthesized manganese(IV) complex having two hydroxide ligands, [Mn(Me(2)EBC)(2)(OH)(2)](PF(6))(2), serves as the prototypic example to address this issue, by investigating the difference in the hydrogen abstracting abilities of the Mn(IV)O and Mn(IV)-OH functional groups. Independent thermodynamic evaluations of the O-H bond dissociation energies (BDE(OH)) for the corresponding reduction products, Mn(III)-OH and Mn(III)-OH(2), reveal very similar oxidizing power for Mn(IV)O and Mn(IV)-OH (83 vs 84.3 kcal/mol). Experimental tests showed that hydrogen abstraction proceeds at reasonable rates for substrates having BDE(CH) values less than 82 kcal/mol. That is, no detectable reaction occurred with diphenyl methane (BDE(CH) = 82 kcal/mol) for both manganese(IV) species. However, kinetic measurements for hydrogen abstraction showed that at pH 13.4, the dominant species Mn(Me(2)EBC)(2)(O)(2), having only Mn(IV)O groups, reacts more than 40 times faster than the Mn(IV)-OH unit in Mn(Me(2)EBC)(2)(OH)(2)(2+), the dominant reactant at pH 4.0. The activation parameters for hydrogen abstraction from 9,10-dihydroanthracene were determined for both manganese(IV) moieties: over the temperature range 288-318 K for Mn(IV)(OH)(2)(2+), DeltaH(double dagger) = 13.1 +/- 0.7 kcal/mol, and DeltaS(double dagger) = -35.0 +/- 2.2 cal K(-1) mol(-1); and the temperature range 288-308 K for for Mn(IV)(O)(2), DeltaH(double dagger) = 12.1 +/- 1.8 kcal/mol, and DeltaS(double dagger) = -30.3 +/- 5.9 cal K(-1) mol(-1).  相似文献   

15.
2-pyridinethione (2-mercaptopyridine, H-2mp) undergoes rapid oxidative addition with 2 mol of the 17-electron organometallic radical *Cr(CO)3Cp (where Cp*=C5Me5), yielding hydride H-Cr(CO)3Cp* and thiolate (eta1-2mp)Cr(CO)3Cp*. In a slower secondary reaction, (eta1-2mp)Cr(CO)3Cp* loses CO generating the N,S-chelate complex (eta2-2mp)Cr(CO)2Cp* for which the crystal structure is reported. The rate of 2-pyridine thione oxidative addition with *Cr(CO)3Cp* (abbreviated *Cr) in toluene best fits rate=kobs[H-2mp][*Cr]; kobs(288 K)=22 +/- 4 M(-1) s(-1); DeltaH++=4 +/- 1 kcal/mol; DeltaS++=- 40 +/- 5 cal/mol K. The rate of reaction is the same under CO or Ar, and the reaction of deuterated 2-pyridine thione (D-2mp) shows a negligible (inverse) kinetic isotope effect (kD/kH=1.06 +/- 0.10). The rate of decarbonylation of (eta1-2mp)Cr(CO)3Cp* forming (eta2-2mp)Cr(CO)2Cp* obeys simple first-order kinetics with kobs (288 K)=3.1x10(-4) s(-1), DeltaH++=23 +/- 1 kcal/mol, and DeltaS++=+ 5.0 +/- 2 cal/mol K. Reaction of 4-pyridine thione (4-mercaptopyridine, H-4mp) with *Cr(CO)3Cp* in THF and CH2Cl2 also follows second-order kinetics and is approximately 2-5 times faster than H-2mp in the same solvents. The relatively rapid nature of the thione versus thiol reactions is attributed to differences in the proposed 19-electron intermediate complexes, [*(S=C5H4N-H)Cr(CO)3Cp*] versus [*(H-S-C6H5)Cr(CO)3Cp*]. In comparison, reactions of pyridyl disulfides occur by a mechanism similar to that followed by aryl disulfides involving direct attack of the sulfur-sulfur bond by the metal radical. Calorimetric data indicate Cr-SR bond strengths for aryl and pyridyl derivatives are similar. The experimental conclusions are supported by B3LYP/6-311+G(3df,2p) calculations, which also provide additional insight into the reaction pathways open to the thione/thiol tautomers. For example, the reaction between H* radical and the 2-pyridine thione S atom yielding a thionyl radical is exothermic by approximately 30 kcal/mol. In contrast, the thiuranyl radical formed from the addition of H* to the 2-pyridine thiol S atom is predicted to be unstable, eliminating either H* or HS* without barrier.  相似文献   

16.
The temperature dependence of the solution equilibrium constants for [((t)Bu)(2)Al(OPh)]2(mu-4,4'-bipy)(1a), [((t)Bu)2Al(OPh)](2)(mu-bipetha)(2a, bipetha = 1,2-bis(4-pyridyl)ethane), and [((t)Bu)(2)Al(OPh)]2(mu-bipethe)(3a, bipethe =trans-1,2-bis(4-pyridyl)ethylene) in C6D6 and CDCl(3) allow for the determination of DeltaH and DeltaS for the dissociation of one Al(tBu)2OPh moiety from the bridging ligand, i.e., 2[(tBu)2AL(OPh)]2(mu-L)<==>(K1)2AL(OPh)(tBu)2(L)+[(tBu)2Al(mu-OPh)]2. For compounds and the DeltaH values in C6D6[99(2) kJ mol(-1)(2a) and 109(5) kJ mol(-1)(3a)] and CDCl3[115(5) kJ mol(-1)(2a) and 139(7) kJ mol(-1)(3a)] were found to be inversely proportional with the dielectric constant of the solvent. In contrast, the DeltaH value for 1a in CDCl3 is surprisingly small [14.9(7) kJ mol(-1)] and does not fit with the trends adopted by the bipetha and bipethe derivatives or the value obtained in C6D6[110(2) kJ mol(-1)]. Unlike the other compounds and the C6D6 solutions, the CDCl3 solution of 1a allows for the observation of a second equilibrium 2Al(OPh)(tBu)2(L)<==>(K2)[(tBu)2Al(mu-OPh)]2+2L, for which the DeltaH has been determined [4.5(3) kJ mol(-1)]. This result suggests that in CDCl3 bonding of the second Al(tBu)2OPh moiety to Al(OPh)(tBu)2(4,4'-bipy)(1b) is stabilized by the presence of the first aluminium, which is counter to ab initio calculations that predicts the aluminium in Al(OPh)((t)Bu)2(L) should destabilize the Al-N interaction with a second Al(tBu)2OPh group. The BDE for dissociation of both Al(tBu)2OPh moieties from 1a-3a, and the energy of formation of hydrogen bond interactions with CHCl3, has been calculated by ab initio methods, and no unusual effects are inherent in 1a.  相似文献   

17.
Ihm C  In Y  Park Y  Paek K 《Organic letters》2004,6(3):369-372
[structure: see text] Three new C(2v) cavitands based on resorcin[4]arene bind water specifically at low temperature in CD(2)Cl(2) or CDCl(3) due to their complementarity to water as well as the solvophobic interaction. The averaged DeltaH(o) and DeltaS(o) values are -2.3 kcal mol(-1) and -128 cal mol(-1) K(-1), which gave the averaged -DeltaG(o) of 1.9 kcal mol(-1) at -50 degrees C in water saturated CD(2)Cl(2).  相似文献   

18.
The rate constants of thermal (irreversible) damage of bacteriochlorin pigments (bacteriochlorophyll monomer [B], bacteriochlorophyll dimer [P] and bacteriopheophytine [H]) in reaction center [RC] protein from the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides were studied in the dark and during intense (400 mW x cm(-2)) laser light excitation (wavelengths 488 and 515 nm) under deoxygenated conditions. While the kinetics of degradation of P and B were monoexponential, the decay kinetics of H were overlapped by an initial lag phase at elevated (>40 degrees C) temperature. This is explained by removal of the central metal ion from the bacteriochlorophylls as part of their degradation processes. At all temperatures, the rates of damage were very similar for all bacteriochlorin pigments and were larger in the light than in the dark. The logarithm of the rate constant of pigment degradation and loss of photochemistry as a function of reciprocal (absolute) temperature (Arrhenius/Eyring plot) showed single phase in the light and double phases in the dark. Below 20 degrees C, the rate of pigment degradation in the RC decreased so dramatically in the dark that it became limited by the natural degradation process of bacteriochlorophyll measured in solution. The function of loss of photochemistry in the dark was also biphasic and had a break point at 40 degrees C. The damage in the dark required high enthalpy change (DeltaH(++) = 64 kcal/mol for P and DeltaH(++) = 60 kcal/mol for B) and entropy increase (T x DeltaS(++) = 38 kcal/mol for P and T x DeltaS(++) = 34 kcal/mol for B at T = 300 K), whereas significantly smaller enthalpy change (DeltaH(++) = 21 kcal/mol for P and B and DeltaH(++) = 13 kcal/mol for H) and practically no (T x DeltaS(++) = -1 kcal/mol for P and B at T = 300 K) or small (T x DeltaS(++) = -9 kcal/mol for H at T = 300 K) entropy change was needed in the light. The thermodynamic parameters of activation reveal major steps common in the degradation of all bacteriochlorin pigments: ring opening reactions at C5 or C20 meso-bridges (or both) and breaking/removal of the phytyl chain. Their contribution in the degradation is probably reflected in the observed enthalpy/entropy compensation at an almost constant (DeltaG(++) = 22-26 kcal/mol at T = 300 K) free energy change of activation.  相似文献   

19.
A series of stable complexes, (PMe(3))(3)Ru(SiR(3))(2)(H)(2) ((SiR(3))(2) = (SiH(2)Ph)(2), 3a; (SiHPh(2))(2), 3b; (SiMe(2)CH(2)CH(2)SiMe(2)), 3c), has been synthesized by the reaction of hydridosilanes with (PMe(3))(3)Ru(SiMe(3))H(3) or (PMe(3))(4)Ru(SiMe(3))H. Compounds 3a and 3c adopt overall pentagonal bipyramidal geometries in solution and the solid state, with phosphine and silyl ligands defining trigonal bipyramids and ruthenium hydrides arranged in the equatorial plane. Compound 3a exhibits meridional phosphines, with both silyl ligands equatorial, whereas the constraints of the chelate in 3c result in both axial and equatorial silyl environments and facial phosphines. Although there is no evidence for agostic Si-H interactions in 3a and 3b, the equatorial silyl group in 3c is in close contact with one hydride (1.81(4) A) and is moderately close to the other hydride (2.15(3) A) in the solid state and solution (nu(Ru.H.Si) = 1740 cm(-)(1) and nu(RuH) = 1940 cm(-)(1)). The analogous bis(silyl) dihydride, (PMe(3))(3)Ru(SiMe(3))(2)(H)(2) (3d), is not stable at room temperature, but can be generated in situ at low temperature from the 16e(-) complex (PMe(3))(3)Ru(SiMe(3))H (1) and HSiMe(3). Complexes 3b and 3d have been characterized by multinuclear, variable temperature NMR and appear to be isostructural with 3a. All four complexes exhibit dynamic NMR spectra, but the slow exchange limit could not be observed for 3c. Treatment of 1 with HSiMe(3) at room temperature leads to formation of (PMe(3))(3)Ru(SiMe(2)CH(2)SiMe(3))H(3) (4b) via a CH functionalization process critical to catalytic dehydrocoupling of HSiMe(3) at higher temperatures. Closer inspection of this reaction between -110 and -10 degrees C by NMR reveals a plethora of silyl hydride phosphine complexes formed by ligand redistribution prior to CH activation. Above ca. 0 degrees C this mixture converts cleanly via silane dehydrogenation to the very stable tris(phosphine) trihydride carbosilyl complex 4b. The structure of 4b was determined crystallographically and exhibits a tetrahedral P(3)Si environment around the metal with the three hydrides adjacent to silicon and capping the P(2)Si faces. Although strong Si.HRu interactions are not indicated in the structure or by IR, the HSi distances (2.00(4) - 2.09(4) A) and average coupling constant (J(SiH) = 25 Hz) suggest some degree of nonclassical SiH bonding in the RuH(3)Si moiety. The least hindered complex, 3a, reacts with carbon monoxide principally via an H(2) elimination pathway to yield mer-(PMe(3))(3)(CO)Ru(SiH(2)Ph)(2), with SiH elimination as a minor process. However, only SiH elimination and formation of (PMe(3))(3)(CO)Ru(SiR(3))H is observed for 3b-d. The most hindered bis(silyl) complex, 3d, is extremely labile and even in the absence of CO undergoes SiH reductive elimination to generate the 16e(-) species 1 (DeltaH(SiH)(-)(elim) = 11.0 +/- 0.6 kcal x mol(-)(1) and DeltaS(SiH)(-)(elim) = 40 +/- 2 cal x mol(-)(1) x K(-)(1); Delta = 9.2 +/- 0.8 kcal x mol(-)(1) and Delta = 9 +/- 3 cal x mol(-)(1).K(-)(1)). The minimum barrier for the H(2) reductive elimination can be estimated, and is higher than that for silane elimination at temperatures above ca. -50 degrees C. The thermodynamic preferences for oxidative additions to 1 are dominated by entropy contributions and steric effects. Addition of H(2) is by far most favorable, whereas the relative aptitudes for intramolecular silyl CH activation and intermolecular SiH addition are strongly dependent on temperature (DeltaH(SiH)(-)(add) = -11.0 +/- 0.6 kcal x mol(-)(1) and DeltaS(SiH)(-)(add) = -40 +/- 2 cal.mol(-)(1) x K(-)(1); DeltaH(beta)(-CH)(-)(add) = -2.7 +/- 0.3 kcal x mol(-)(1) and DeltaS(beta)(-CH)(-)(add) = -6 +/- 1 cal x mol(-)(1) x K(-)(1)). Kinetic preferences for oxidative additions to 1 - intermolecular SiH and intramolecular CH - have been also quantified: Delta = -1.8 +/- 0.8 kcal x mol(-)(1) and Delta = -31 +/- 3 cal x mol(-)(1).K(-)(1); Delta = 16.4 +/- 0.6 kcal x mol(-)(1) and Delta = -13 +/- 6 cal x mol(-)(1).K(-)(1). The relative enthalpies of activation (-)(1) x K(-)(1)). Kinetic preferences for oxidative additions to 1 - intermolecular SiH and intramolecular CH - have been also quantified: Delta (H)SiH(add) = 1.8 +/- 0.8 kcal x mol(-)(1) and Delta S((SiH-add) =31+/- 3 cal x mol(-)(1) x K(-)(1); Delta S (SiH -add) = 16.4 +/- 0.6 kcal x mol(-)(1) and =Delta S (SiH -CH -add) =13+/- 6 cal x mol(-)(1) x K(-)(1). The relative enthalpies of activation are interpreted in terms of strong SiH sigma-complex formation - and much weaker CH coordination - in the transition state for oxidative addition.  相似文献   

20.
Tetranuclear complexes [Zn(4)(bdmap)(2)(OOCR)(6)] 1 (R = Me) and 2 (R = Et), where Hbdmap = 1,3-bis(dimethylamino)-2-propanol, were prepared from zinc carboxylates and Hbdmap in tetrahydrofuran (THF). The solid-state structures of isomers 1a and 2a consist of two pairs of zinc atoms, each bridged by two mu-1,2 and one mu-1,1 carboxylate ligands. Two pairs are connected by two tridentate bdmap ligands with oxygen acting as a bridging donating atom. The complexes retain the tetranuclear structure in solution and two dynamic processes are observed from variable-temperature (1)H and (13)C NMR spectra. A low-temperature process (LT dynamics) observed already below 200 K is a coalescence of the mu-1,2 and the mu-1,1 resonances to a single resonance. An additional dynamic process (HT dynamics) is observed above 247 K (1) and 263 K (2), leading to a coalescence of two dimethylamino resonances. Both dynamic processes are rationalized by a mechanism involving changes in the carboxylate coordination mode termed as carboxylate shift. The LT dynamics is ascribed to interconversions of a single mu-1,2 and a single mu-1,1 carboxylate ligation by rotations of 60 degrees. The interconversions involve all carboxylate ligands in 1 and 2. The HT dynamics is ascribed to the exchange of the coordinating geometries of two carboxylate-bridged zinc atoms. We propose a mechanism that starts with a cleavage of the Zn-N coordination bond. The resulting coordinatively unsaturated zinc atom acquires an additional oxygen donor atom by carboxylate shift of mu-1,2 carboxylate to mu-1,1 mode. The activation parameters (DeltaH values in kilocalories per mole, DeltaS values in calories per mole per kelvin) were determined by line-shape analysis of VT NMR spectra: for 1 in THF-d(8), DeltaH(LT) = 8.1(3), DeltaS(LT) = -12(2), DeltaH(HT) = 17.9(2), DeltaS(HT) = 14(1); for 1 in CDCl(3), DeltaH(HT) = 13.6(5), DeltaS(HT) = 3(3); for 1 in CD(2)Cl(2), DeltaH(HT) = 9.9(3), DeltaS(HT) = -8(2); for 2 in THF-d(8), DeltaH(LT) = 11(1), DeltaS(LT) = -5(3), DeltaH(HT) = 19.6(5), DeltaS(HT) = 18(3). Polymeric [Zn(4)(bdmap)(2)(OOCMe)(6)](n) 1-catena crystallizes from a dichloromethane solution of 1. In 1-catena, the zinc atoms are linked into a chain through mu-1,2 and mu-1,1 acetate alternated by mu-1,2 acetate and bdmap.  相似文献   

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