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Highly Active Superbulky Alkaline Earth Metal Amide Catalysts for Hydrogenation of Challenging Alkenes and Aromatic Rings

Two series of bulky alkaline earth (Ae) metal amide complexes have been prepared: Ae[N(TRIP)(2)](2) (1‐Ae) and Ae[N(TRIP)(DIPP)](2) (2‐Ae) (Ae=Mg, Ca, Sr, Ba; TRIP=SiiPr(3), DIPP=2,6‐diisopropylphenyl). While monomeric 1‐Ca was already known, the new complexes have been structurally characterized. M...

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Autores principales: Martin, Johannes, Knüpfer, Christian, Eyselein, Jonathan, Färber, Christian, Grams, Samuel, Langer, Jens, Thum, Katharina, Wiesinger, Michael, Harder, Sjoerd
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7318605/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32045078
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.202001160
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author Martin, Johannes
Knüpfer, Christian
Eyselein, Jonathan
Färber, Christian
Grams, Samuel
Langer, Jens
Thum, Katharina
Wiesinger, Michael
Harder, Sjoerd
author_facet Martin, Johannes
Knüpfer, Christian
Eyselein, Jonathan
Färber, Christian
Grams, Samuel
Langer, Jens
Thum, Katharina
Wiesinger, Michael
Harder, Sjoerd
author_sort Martin, Johannes
collection PubMed
description Two series of bulky alkaline earth (Ae) metal amide complexes have been prepared: Ae[N(TRIP)(2)](2) (1‐Ae) and Ae[N(TRIP)(DIPP)](2) (2‐Ae) (Ae=Mg, Ca, Sr, Ba; TRIP=SiiPr(3), DIPP=2,6‐diisopropylphenyl). While monomeric 1‐Ca was already known, the new complexes have been structurally characterized. Monomers 1‐Ae are highly linear while the monomers 2‐Ae are slightly bent. The bulkier amide complexes 1‐Ae are by far the most active catalysts in alkene hydrogenation with activities increasing from Mg to Ba. Catalyst 1‐Ba can reduce internal alkenes like cyclohexene or 3‐hexene and highly challenging substrates like 1‐Me‐cyclohexene or tetraphenylethylene. It is also active in arene hydrogenation reducing anthracene and naphthalene (even when substituted with an alkyl) as well as biphenyl. Benzene could be reduced to cyclohexane but full conversion was not reached. The first step in catalytic hydrogenation is formation of an (amide)AeH species, which can form larger aggregates. Increasing the bulk of the amide ligand decreases aggregate size but it is unclear what the true catalyst(s) is (are). DFT calculations suggest that amide bulk also has a noticeable influence on the thermodynamics for formation of the (amide)AeH species. Complex 1‐Ba is currently the most powerful Ae metal hydrogenation catalyst. Due to tremendously increased activities in comparison to those of previously reported catalysts, the substrate scope in hydrogenation catalysis could be extended to challenging multi‐substituted unactivated alkenes and even to arenes among which benzene.
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spelling pubmed-73186052020-06-29 Highly Active Superbulky Alkaline Earth Metal Amide Catalysts for Hydrogenation of Challenging Alkenes and Aromatic Rings Martin, Johannes Knüpfer, Christian Eyselein, Jonathan Färber, Christian Grams, Samuel Langer, Jens Thum, Katharina Wiesinger, Michael Harder, Sjoerd Angew Chem Int Ed Engl Research Articles Two series of bulky alkaline earth (Ae) metal amide complexes have been prepared: Ae[N(TRIP)(2)](2) (1‐Ae) and Ae[N(TRIP)(DIPP)](2) (2‐Ae) (Ae=Mg, Ca, Sr, Ba; TRIP=SiiPr(3), DIPP=2,6‐diisopropylphenyl). While monomeric 1‐Ca was already known, the new complexes have been structurally characterized. Monomers 1‐Ae are highly linear while the monomers 2‐Ae are slightly bent. The bulkier amide complexes 1‐Ae are by far the most active catalysts in alkene hydrogenation with activities increasing from Mg to Ba. Catalyst 1‐Ba can reduce internal alkenes like cyclohexene or 3‐hexene and highly challenging substrates like 1‐Me‐cyclohexene or tetraphenylethylene. It is also active in arene hydrogenation reducing anthracene and naphthalene (even when substituted with an alkyl) as well as biphenyl. Benzene could be reduced to cyclohexane but full conversion was not reached. The first step in catalytic hydrogenation is formation of an (amide)AeH species, which can form larger aggregates. Increasing the bulk of the amide ligand decreases aggregate size but it is unclear what the true catalyst(s) is (are). DFT calculations suggest that amide bulk also has a noticeable influence on the thermodynamics for formation of the (amide)AeH species. Complex 1‐Ba is currently the most powerful Ae metal hydrogenation catalyst. Due to tremendously increased activities in comparison to those of previously reported catalysts, the substrate scope in hydrogenation catalysis could be extended to challenging multi‐substituted unactivated alkenes and even to arenes among which benzene. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-03-27 2020-06-02 /pmc/articles/PMC7318605/ /pubmed/32045078 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.202001160 Text en © 2020 The Authors. Published by Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Martin, Johannes
Knüpfer, Christian
Eyselein, Jonathan
Färber, Christian
Grams, Samuel
Langer, Jens
Thum, Katharina
Wiesinger, Michael
Harder, Sjoerd
Highly Active Superbulky Alkaline Earth Metal Amide Catalysts for Hydrogenation of Challenging Alkenes and Aromatic Rings
title Highly Active Superbulky Alkaline Earth Metal Amide Catalysts for Hydrogenation of Challenging Alkenes and Aromatic Rings
title_full Highly Active Superbulky Alkaline Earth Metal Amide Catalysts for Hydrogenation of Challenging Alkenes and Aromatic Rings
title_fullStr Highly Active Superbulky Alkaline Earth Metal Amide Catalysts for Hydrogenation of Challenging Alkenes and Aromatic Rings
title_full_unstemmed Highly Active Superbulky Alkaline Earth Metal Amide Catalysts for Hydrogenation of Challenging Alkenes and Aromatic Rings
title_short Highly Active Superbulky Alkaline Earth Metal Amide Catalysts for Hydrogenation of Challenging Alkenes and Aromatic Rings
title_sort highly active superbulky alkaline earth metal amide catalysts for hydrogenation of challenging alkenes and aromatic rings
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7318605/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32045078
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.202001160
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