03 Fakultät Chemie
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Item Open Access Macrocyclization of dienes under confinement with cationic tungsten imido/oxo alkylidene N‐heterocyclic carbene complexes(2023) Ziegler, Felix; Bruckner, Johanna R.; Nowakowski, Michal; Bauer, Matthias; Probst, Patrick; Atwi, Boshra; Buchmeiser, Michael R.Macrocyclization reactions are still challenging due to competing oligomerization, which requires the use of small substrate concentrations. Here, the cationic tungsten imido and tungsten oxo alkylidene N-heterocyclic carbene complexes [[W(N-2,6-Cl2-C6H3)(CHCMe2Ph(OC6F5)(pivalonitrile)(IMes)+ B(ArF)4-] (W1) and [W(O (CHCMe2Ph(OCMe(CF3)2)(IMes)(CH3CN)+ B(ArF)4-] (W2) (IMes=1,3-dimesitylimidazol-2-ylidene; B(ArF)4-=tetrakis(3,5-bis(trifluoromethyl)phenyl borate) have been immobilized inside the pores of ordered mesoporous silica (OMS) with pore diameters of 3.3 and 6.8 nm, respectively, using a pore-selective immobilization protocol. X-ray absorption spectroscopy of W1@OMS showed that even though the catalyst structure is contracted due to confinement by the mesopores, both the oxidation state and structure of the catalyst stayed intact upon immobilization. Catalytic testing with four differently sized α,ω-dienes revealed a dramatically increased macrocyclization (MC) and Z-selectivity of the supported catalysts compared to the homogenous progenitors, allowing high substrate concentrations of 25 mM. With the supported complexes, a maximum increase in MC-selectivity from 27 to 81 % and in Z-selectivity from 17 to 34 % was achieved. In general, smaller mesopores exhibited a stronger confinement effect. A comparison of the two supported tungsten-based catalysts showed that W1@OMS possesses a higher MC-selectivity, while W2@OMS exhibits a higher Z-selectivity which can be rationalized by the structures of the catalysts.Item Open Access Asymmetric Rh diene catalysis under confinement : isoxazole ring‐contraction in mesoporous solids(2024) Marshall, Max; Dilruba, Zarfishan; Beurer, Ann‐Katrin; Bieck, Kira; Emmerling, Sebastian; Markus, Felix; Vogler, Charlotte; Ziegler, Felix; Fuhrer, Marina; Liu, Sherri S. Y.; Kousik, Shravan R.; Frey, Wolfgang; Traa, Yvonne; Bruckner, Johanna R.; Plietker, Bernd; Buchmeiser, Michael R.; Ludwigs, Sabine; Naumann, Stefan; Atanasova, Petia; Lotsch, Bettina V.; Zens, Anna; Laschat, SabineCovalent immobilization of chiral dienes in mesoporous solids for asymmetric heterogeneous catalysis is highly attractive. In order to study confinement effects in bimolecular vs monomolecular reactions, a series of pseudo‐C2‐symmetrical tetrahydropentalenes was synthesized and immobilized via click reaction on different mesoporous solids (silica, carbon, covalent organic frameworks) and compared with homogeneous conditions. Two types of Rh‐catalyzed reactions were studied: (a) bimolecular nucleophilic 1,2‐additions of phenylboroxine to N‐tosylimine and (b) monomolecular isomerization of isoxazole to 2H‐azirne. Polar support materials performed better than non‐polar ones. Under confinement, bimolecular reactions showed decreased yields, whereas yields in monomolecular reactions were only little affected. Regarding enantioselectivity the opposite trend was observed, i. e. effective enantiocontrol for bimolecular reactions but only little control for monomolecular reactions was found.Item Open Access Cationic molybdenum imido alkylidene N‐heterocyclic carbene complexes confined in mesoporous silica : tuning transition states towards Z‐selective ring‐opening cross‐metathesis(2022) Goldstein, Elizabeth L.; Ziegler, Felix; Beurer, Ann‐Katrin; Traa, Yvonne; Bruckner, Johanna R.; Buchmeiser, Michael R.We recently reported a method for selective macro(mono)cyclization of dienes utilizing catalysts confined inside the pores of mesoporous silica, which we believe occurs due to suppression of oligomerization due to pore size. We hypothesized, however, that the system of cationic molybdenum imido alkylidene N‐heterocyclic carbene (NHC) catalysts immobilized selectively inside the mesopores of silica materials could address much more subtle selectivity differences, such as E/Z selectivity in ring‐opening/cross‐metathesis (ROCM). Upon investigation, we observed that surface‐bound cationic molybdenum imido alkylidene NHC catalysts indeed display an increased Z‐selectivity, especially during the early stages of the reaction. This effect was present when the catalyst was confined inside a pore, as well as when the catalyst was bound to non‐porous silica, which led us to conclude it is an effect caused by the catalyst being bound directly to the surface of a silica material where the proximity of the catalyst to the surface governs the transition state. Kinetic investigations revealed that significant post‐metathesis olefin isomerization occurs, the amount of which seems to be governed by the rate of diffusion of the product away from the active catalyst, with smaller pore sizes resulting in higher Z‐selectivity at higher conversion, attributable to faster diffusion of the product out of the pore than diffusion back into the pore.