97-71-2Relevant articles and documents
Electrochemical Ring-Opening Dicarboxylation of Strained Carbon-Carbon Single Bonds with CO2: Facile Synthesis of Diacids and Derivatization into Polyesters
Liao, Li-Li,Wang, Zhe-Hao,Cao, Ke-Gong,Sun, Guo-Quan,Zhang, Wei,Ran, Chuan-Kun,Li, Yiwen,Chen, Li,Cao, Guang-Mei,Yu, Da-Gang
supporting information, p. 2062 - 2068 (2022/02/10)
Diacids are important monomers in the polymer industry to construct valuable materials. Dicarboxylation of unsaturated bonds, such as alkenes and alkynes, with CO2 has been demonstrated as a promising synthetic method. However, dicarboxylation of C-C single bonds with CO2 has rarely been investigated. Herein we report a novel electrochemical ring-opening dicarboxylation of C-C single bonds in strained rings with CO2. Structurally diverse glutaric acid and adipic acid derivatives were synthesized from substituted cyclopropanes and cyclobutanes in moderate to high yields. In contrast to oxidative ring openings, this is also the first realization of an electroreductive ring-opening reaction of strained rings, including commercialized ones. Control experiments suggested that radical anions and carbanions might be the key intermediates in this reaction. Moreover, this process features high step and atom economy, mild reaction conditions (1 atm, room temperature), good chemoselectivity and functional group tolerance, low electrolyte concentration, and easy derivatization of the products. Furthermore, we conducted polymerization of the corresponding diesters with diols to obtain a potential UV-shielding material with a self-healing function and a fluorine-containing polyester, whose performance tests showed promising applications.
Synthesis, structure and reactivity of iridium complexes containing a bis-cyclometalated tridentate C^N^C ligand
Cheng, Shun-Cheung,Cheung, Wai-Man,Chong, Man-Chun,Ko, Chi-Chiu,Leung, Wa-Hung,Sung, Herman H.-Y.,Williams, Ian D.
, p. 8512 - 8523 (2021/06/28)
In an effort to synthesize cyclometalated iridium complexes containing a tridentate C^N^C ligand, transmetallation of [Hg(HC^N^C)Cl] (1) (H2C^N^C = 2,6-bis(4-tert-butylphenyl)pyridine) with various organoiridium starting materials has been studied. The treatment of1with [Ir(cod)Cl]2(cod = 1,5-cyclooctadiene) in acetonitrile at room temperature afforded a hexanuclear Ir4Hg2complex, [Cl(κ2C,N-HC^N^C)(cod)IrHgIr(cod)Cl2]2(2), which features Ir-Hg-Ir and Ir-Cl-Ir bridges. Refluxing2with sodium acetate in tetrahydrofuran (thf) resulted in cyclometalation of the bidentate HC^N^C ligand and formation of trinuclear [(C^N^C)(cod)IrHgIr(cod)Cl2] (3). On the other hand, refluxing [Ir(cod)Cl]2with1and sodium acetate in thf yielded [Ir(C^N^C)(cod)(HgCl)] (4). Chlorination of4with PhICl2gave [Ir(C^N^C)(cod)Cl]·HgCl2(5·HgCl2) that reacted with tricyclohexylphosphine to yield Hg-free [Ir(C^N^C)(cod)Cl] (5). Chloride abstraction of5with silver(i) triflate (AgOTf) gave [Ir(C^N^C)(cod)(H2O)](OTf) (6) that can catalyze the cyclopropanation of styrene with ethyl diazoacetate. Reaction of1and [Ir(CO)2Cl(py)] (py = pyridine) with sodium acetate in refluxing thf afforded [Ir(C^N^C)(HgCl)(py)(CO)] (7), in which the carbonyl ligand is coplanar with the C^N^C ligand. On the other hand, refluxing1with (PPh4)[Ir(CO)2Cl2] and sodium acetate in acetonitrile gave [Ir(C^N^C)(κ2C,N-HC^N^C)(CO)] (8), the carbonyl ligand of which istransto the pyridyl ring of the bidentate HC^N^C ligand. Upon irradiation with UV light8in thf was isomerized to8′, in which the carbonyl istransto a phenyl group of the bidentate HC^N^C ligand. The isomer pair8and8′exhibited emission at 548 and 514 nm in EtOH/MeOH at 77 K with lifetime of 84.0 and 64.6 μs, respectively. Protonation of8withp-toluenesulfonic acid (TsOH) afforded the bis(bidentate) tosylate complex [Ir(κ2C,N-HC^N^C)2(CO)(OTs)] (9) that could be reconverted to8upon treatment with sodium acetate. The electrochemistry of the Ir(C^N^C) complexes has been studied using cyclic voltammetry. Reaction of [Ir(PPh3)3Cl] with1and sodium acetate in refluxing thf led to isolation of the previously reported compound [Ir(κ2P,C-C6H4PPh2)2(PPh3)Cl] (10). The crystal structures of2-5,8,8′,9and10have been determined.
Synthesis of ruthenium–dithiocarbamate chelates bearing diphosphine ligands and their use as latent initiators for atom transfer radical additions
Aldin, Mohammed Zain,Delaude, Lionel,Zaragoza, Guillermo
supporting information, (2021/08/03)
Nine representative [Ru(S2CNEt2)2(diphos)] complexes were prepared in almost quantitative yields (91–97%) from [RuCl2(p-cymene)]2, sodium diethyldithiocarbamate trihydrate, and a diphosphine (dppm, dppe, dppp, dppb, dpppe, dppen, dppbz, dppf, or DPEphos), using a novel, straightforward, one-pot procedure. The recourse to a monomodal microwave reactor was instrumental in reaching the thermodynamic equilibria favoring the targeted monometallic trichelates. All the products were fully characterized by using various analytical techniques and the molecular structures of seven of them were determined by X-ray crystallography. NMR, XRD, and IR spectroscopies evidenced a significant contribution of the thioureide resonance form Et2N+=CS22– to the electronic structure of the 1,1-dithiolate ligand. MS/MS spectrometry showed the formation of phosphine-free [Ru(S2CNEt2)2]+ cations in the gas phase, except when starting from [Ru(S2CNEt2)2(dppbz)]. The activity of the nine complexes was probed in three different catalytic processes, viz., the cyclopropanation of styrene with ethyl diazoacetate, the synthesis of vinyl esters from benzoic acid and 1-hexyne, and the atom transfer radical addition (ATRA) of carbon tetrachloride and methyl methacrylate. In the first two reactions, the saturated trichelates were poorly efficient. This was most likely due to their high stability, which prevented the formation of coordinatively unsaturated species. Contrastingly, with a turnover number of 2000 and an initial turnover frequency of 2080 h–1 for a 0.05 mol% catalyst loading, the [Ru(S2CNEt2)2(dppm)] complex emerged as a very robust, latent ATRA initiator, whose activity matched or outperformed those displayed by the most efficient ruthenium catalysts described so far.