scholarly journals Reactivity of Iridium Complexes of a Triphosphorus-Pincer Ligand Based on a Secondary Phosphine. Catalytic Alkane Dehydrogenation and the Origin of Extremely High Activity

Author(s):  
Benjamin Gordon ◽  
Nicholas Lease ◽  
Thomas Emge ◽  
Faraj Hasanayn ◽  
Alan Goldman

The selective functionalization of alkanes and alkyl groups is a major goal of chemical catalysis. Toward this end, a bulky triphosphine with a central secondary phosphino group, bis(2 di-t-butyl-phosphinophenyl)phosphine (tBuPHPP), has been synthesized. When complexed to iridium it adopts a meridional (“pincer”) configuration. The secondary phosphino H atom can undergo migration to iridium to give an anionic phosphido-based-pincer (tBuPPP) complex. We describe novel metal-ligand cooperativity of the iridium-phosphido unit. Stoichiometric reactions of the (tBuPPP)Ir complexes reflect a distribution of steric bulk around the iridium center in which the coordination site trans to the phosphido group is quite crowded, one coordination site cis to the phosphido is even more crowded, while the remaining site is particularly open. The (tBuPPP)Ir precursors are the most active catalysts reported to date for dehydrogenation of n-alkanes, by about two orders of magnitude. The electronic properties of the iridium center are very similar to that of well-known analogous (RPCP)Ir catalysts. Accordingly, DFT calculations predict that (tBuPPP)Ir and (tBuPCP)Ir are, intrinsically, comparably active for alkane dehydrogenation. While dehydrogenation by (RPCP)Ir proceeds through an intermediate trans-(PCP)IrH2(alkene), (tBuPPP)Ir follows a pathway proceeding via cis-(PPP)IrH2(alkene), thereby circumventing unfavorable placement of the alkene at the bulky site trans to phosphorus. (tBuPPP)Ir and (tBuPCP)Ir, however, have analogous resting states: square planar (pincer)Ir(alkene). Alkene coordination at the crowded trans site is therefore unavoidable in the resting states. Thus the resting state of the (tBuPPP)Ir catalyst is destabilized by the unusual architecture of the ligand, and this is largely responsible for its unusually high catalytic activity.

ACS Catalysis ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 6475-6487 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Zhang ◽  
Song-Bai Wu ◽  
Xuebing Leng ◽  
Lung Wa Chung ◽  
Guixia Liu ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 48 (37) ◽  
pp. 13931-13942 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sebastian Sobottka ◽  
Margarethe Behr van der Meer ◽  
Estelle Glais ◽  
Uta Albold ◽  
Simon Suhr ◽  
...  

Metal–ligand cooperativity can be used in iridium complexes with an unsymmetrically substituted redox-active diamidobenzene ligand for bond activation reactions.


1982 ◽  
Vol 37 (12) ◽  
pp. 1573-1579 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jörn Müller ◽  
Wolfgang Hähnlein ◽  
Barbara Passon

Complexes of the type [L2IrR] (L = butadiene, isoprene, piperylene, 1,4- and 2,3- dimethylbutadiene; R = CH3, C6H5) have been synthesized by reactions of [L2IrCl] with LiR in hexane. With L = 2,3-dimethylbutadiene, [L2IrR] compounds with higher alkyl groups R (e.g. η-C3H7, η-C4H9) can be obtained which for steric reasons are inert against β-elimination. The system [L2IrCl]/L/LiAlH4 (L = 2,3-dimethylbutadiene) yields [L2IrR] with R = 2,3-dimethylbutene-2-yl. The complexes were characterized by NMR and mass spectra


2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (40) ◽  
pp. 19757-19766 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xue Yong ◽  
Wen Shi ◽  
Gang Wu ◽  
Shermin S. Goh ◽  
Shiqiang Bai ◽  
...  

A good frontier molecular orbital alignment between the square planar metal-tetrasulfide fragment and the organic π-conjugated spacers results in a weak electron-phonon coupling, a high mobility and eventually a higher thermoelectric power factor.


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