Correlation between the C-C Cross-Coupling Activity and C-to-Ni Charge Transfer Transition of High-Valent Ni Complexes.
Jeongcheol ShinSuyeon GwonSamhwan KimJiseon LeeKiyoung ParkPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2020)
High-valent Ni complexes have proven to be good platforms for diverse cross-coupling reactions that are otherwise difficult to be achieved with conventional low-valent catalysts. However, their reductive elimination (RE) activities are still significantly variable by up to 5 orders of magnitude, depending on the supporting ligand and oxidation state of the Ni center. To elucidate frontier molecular orbitals (FMOs) that determine the RE activity of the Ni center, the electronic structures of cycloneophyl (CH2C(CH3)2-o-C6H4) NiIII and NiIV complexes have been characterized by utilizing various transition metal-based spectroscopic techniques such as electronic absorption, magnetic circular dichroism, electron paramagnetic resonance, resonance Raman, and X-ray absorption spectroscopies. In combination with density functional theory computations, the spectroscopic analyses have shown that the energies of the C-to-Ni charge-transfer (CT) electronic transitions are strongly correlated to the rates of C-C bond-forming RE reaction. This correlation suggests that the kinetic barrier of the RE reaction is determined by energy cost for internal CT (ICT) from the coordinated carbon moiety to the Ni center, and that FMOs involved in the RE reaction and the C-to-Ni CT electronic transitions are essentially identical. This FMO determination has led us to discover that photoexcitation to the C-to-Ni CT excited states accelerates the C-C cross-coupling reaction by up to 105 times, as the CT electronic transition can substitute for the rate-determining ICT step of the RE reaction at the ground electronic state.
Keyphrases
- transition metal
- dual energy
- density functional theory
- computed tomography
- metal organic framework
- image quality
- contrast enhanced
- electron transfer
- positron emission tomography
- high resolution
- magnetic resonance imaging
- molecular docking
- mass spectrometry
- room temperature
- simultaneous determination
- ionic liquid
- molecular dynamics simulations