pincer ligand
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Author(s):  
Kazimer L. Skubi ◽  
Reagan X. Hooper ◽  
Brandon Q. Mercado ◽  
Melissa M. Bollmeyer ◽  
Samantha N. MacMillan ◽  
...  

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Takayuki Itabashi ◽  
Kazuya Arashiba ◽  
Shogo Kuriyama ◽  
Yoshiaki Nishibayashi

A molybdenum-nitride complex bearing a pyridine-based PNP-type pincer ligand derived from dinitrogen is reacted with various kinds of carbon-centered electrophiles to functionalize the nitride ligand in the molybdenum complex. Methylation...


Author(s):  
Arnaud Clerc ◽  
Nathalie Saffon-Merceron ◽  
Julien Monot ◽  
Blanca Martin Vaca ◽  
Didier Bourissou

A dicationic PdII dimer, bis{2-[(diisopropylphosphanyl)methyl]quinoline-8-thiolato}palladium(II) bis(hexafluoridoantimonate) dichloromethane monosolvate, [Pd2(C32H42N2P2S2)](SbF6)2·CH2Cl2, containing a 2-[(diisopropylphosphanyl)methyl]quinoline-8-thiolate pincer ligand, was isolated and its crystal structure determined. The title compound crystallizes in the orthorhombic space group Pbca. A dimeric structure is formed by bridging coordination of the S atoms. The geometry of the butterfly-shaped Pd2S2 core is bent, with a hinge angle of 108.0 (1)° and a short Pd...Pd distance of 2.8425 (7) Å. These values are the lowest measured compared to ten dicationic dimers with a Pd2S2 core featuring sulfur atoms embedded in a chelating ligand. One of the two hexafluoridoantimonate anions is disordered over two sets of positions with site-occupancy factors of 0.711 (5) and 0.289 (5). The crystal structure is stabilized by many C—H...F and C—H...π interactions, forming a supramolecular network.


Author(s):  
Takayuki Itabashi ◽  
Kazuya Arashiba ◽  
Hiromasa Tanaka ◽  
Kazunari Yoshizawa ◽  
Yoshiaki Nishibayashi

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazimer Skubi ◽  
Reagan Hooper ◽  
Brandon Mercado ◽  
Melissa Bollmeyer ◽  
Samantha MacMillan ◽  
...  

SCS pincer ligands have an interesting combination of strong-field and weak-field donors that is also present in the nitrogenase active site. Here, we explore the electronic structures of iron(II) and iron(III) complexes with such a pincer ligand, bearing a monodentate phosphine, thiolate S donor, amide N donor, ammonia, or CO. The ligand scaffold features a protonresponsive thioamide site, and the protonation state of the ligand greatly influences the reduction potential of iron in the phosphine complex. The N–H bond dissociation free energy can be quantitated as 56 ± 2 kcal/mol. EPR spectroscopy and SQUID magnetometry measurements show that the iron(III) complexes with S and N as the fourth donors have an intermediate spin (S = 3/2) ground state with large zero field splitting, and X-ray absorption spectra show high Fe–S covalency. The Mössbauer spectrum changes drastically with the position of a nearby alkali metal cation in the iron(III) amido complex, and DFT calculations explain this phenomenon through a change between having the doubly-occupied orbital as dz2 or dyz, as the former is more influenced by the nearby positive charge.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yumiao Ma

A strategy to tune the catalytic behavior of a organometallic catalysts rather than ligand engineering is suggested in this work, by computationally studying the effect of (18-crown-6)K+, W(CO)3 and W(PMe3)3 on the reactivity of a Pincer-Co catalyzed nitrile hydroboration reaction through π-coordination to the ligand aromatic ring. These extra additives, as called by the partners, binds the central phenyl ring of the ligand by either dispersion or chemical bonding. The electron-richness of the cobalt center is tuned by the partner, and follows the order (18-crown-6)K+ > W(PMe3)3 > no partner > W(CO)3. While the influence of covalent W-containing partners parallels the electron-richness of W, the non-covalent partner, (18-crown-6)K+, surprisingly increases the donor ability of the Pincer ligand, through polarization effect. All the elementary steps involved in the nitrile hydroboration reaction are influenced by the partner, and the overall barrier is lowered by a surprisingly large extent of 4.9 kcal/mol in the presence of (18-crown-6)K+, suggesting a charming partner effect to be explored by experimentalists that the reactivity of a catalyst can be consecutively tuned without ligand modification.


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