Synthesis, Characterization, and Catalytic Evaluation of Ruthenium Complexes Bearing Xanthinium-8-dithiocarboxylate Ligands Derived from Caffeine and Theophylline
François Mazars, Guillermo Zaragoza, Lionel Delaude
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Various experimental procedures and purification techniques were applied to alkylate or arylate the N7 and N9 positions of caffeine and theophylline into xanthinium salts. These N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) precursors were converted into xanthinium-8-dithiocarboxylate zwitterions using CS2 and either Cs2CO3 or NaOtBu. The NHC·CS2 betaines were employed as chelating ligands to prepare a wide variety of [RuX(p-cymene)(S2C·NHC)]Y (X = Cl, SAc; Y = Cl, PF6, [RuCl3(p-cymene)]) and [Ru(S2C·NHC)3]X2 (X = Cl, PF6) complexes that were characterized by NMR and HRMS. Moreover, the molecular structures of three betaines, one hetero-, and one homoleptic complex were determined by XRD. The catalytic potentials of all these complexes were investigated in the transfer hydrogenation of ketones with isopropanol, the synthesis of vinyl esters from benzoic acid and 1-hexyne, and the cyclopropanation of styrene with ethyl diazoacetate. The reduction of acetophenone into 1-phenylethanol was chosen as a model reaction for the former application. Monitoring the time course of this transformation showed that chelates bearing a NHC·CS2 ligand displayed an initial activity slightly higher than the analogous [RuCl2(p-cymene)(NHC)] complex. Contrastingly, for the last two catalytic processes, the Ru(S2C·NHC) chelates did not outperform their Ru–NHC counterparts.
期刊介绍:
Organometallics is the flagship journal of organometallic chemistry and records progress in one of the most active fields of science, bridging organic and inorganic chemistry. The journal publishes Articles, Communications, Reviews, and Tutorials (instructional overviews) that depict research on the synthesis, structure, bonding, chemical reactivity, and reaction mechanisms for a variety of applications, including catalyst design and catalytic processes; main-group, transition-metal, and lanthanide and actinide metal chemistry; synthetic aspects of polymer science and materials science; and bioorganometallic chemistry.