Publications by authors named "Alexander Okrut"

A longstanding challenge in catalysis by noble metals has been to understand the origin of enhancements of rates of hydrogen transfer that result from the bonding of oxygen near metal sites. We investigated structurally well-defined catalysts consisting of supported tetrairidium carbonyl clusters with single-atom (apical iridium) catalytic sites for ethylene hydrogenation. Reaction of the clusters with ethylene and H followed by O led to the onset of catalytic activity as a terminal CO ligand at each apical Ir atom was removed and bridging dioxygen ligands replaced CO ligands at neighboring (basal-plane) sites.

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The strong affinity of water to zeolite adsorbents has made adsorption of CO from humid gas mixtures such as flue gas nearly impossible under equilibrated conditions. Here, in this manuscript, we describe a unique cooperative adsorption mechanism between HO and Cs cations on Cs-RHO zeolite, which actually facilitates the equilibrium adsorption of CO under humid conditions. Our data demonstrate that, at a relative humidity of 5%, Cs-RHO adsorbs 3-fold higher amounts of CO relative to dry conditions, at a temperature of 30 °C and CO pressure of 1 bar.

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Nests of three silanol groups are located on the internal pore surface of calcined zeolite SSZ-70. 2D H double/triple-quantum single-quantum correlation NMR experiments enable a rigorous identification of these silanol triad nests. They reveal a close proximity to the structure directing agent (SDA), that is, N,N'-diisobutyl imidazolium cations, in the as-synthesized material, in which the defects are negatively charged (silanol dyad plus one charged SiO siloxy group) for charge balance.

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Although oxygen is a common ligand in supported metal catalysts, its coordination has been challenging to elucidate. We now characterize a diiridium complex that has been previously shown by X-ray diffraction crystallography to incorporate a μ-η:η-peroxo ligand. We observe markedly enhanced intensity at 788 cm in the Raman spectrum of this complex, which is a consequence of bonding of the peroxo ligand but does not shift upon O labeling.

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Although essentially molecular noble metal species provide active sites and highly tunable platforms for the design of supported catalysts, the susceptibility of the metals to reduction and aggregation and the consequent loss of catalytic activity and selectivity limit opportunities for their application. Here, we demonstrate a new construct to stabilize supported molecular noble-metal catalysts, taking advantage of sterically bulky ligands on the metal that serve as surrogate supports and isolate the active sites under conditions involving steady-state catalytic turnover in a reducing environment. The result is demonstrated with an iridium pair-site catalyst incorporating P-bridging calix[4]arene ligands dispersed on siliceous supports, chosen as prototypes because they offer weakly interacting surfaces on which metal aggregation is prone to occur.

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We report a scalable delamination procedure for a SSZ-70-framework layered-zeolite precursor, which for the first time does not involve either sonication or long-chain surfactants. Our approach instead relies on the mild heating of layered zeolite precursor B-SSZ-70(P) in an aqueous solution containing Zn(NO3)2 and tetrabutylammonium fluoride. Powder X-ray diffraction data are consistent with a loss of long-range order along the z-direction, while 29Si MAS NMR spectroscopy demonstrates preservation of the zeolite framework crystallinity during delamination.

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The effect of outer-sphere environment on alkene epoxidation catalysis using an organic hydroperoxide oxidant is demonstrated for calix[4]arene-Ti single-sites grafted on amorphous vs crystalline delaminated zeotype (UCB-4) silicates as supports. A chelating calix[4]arene macrocyclic ligand helps enforce a constant Ti inner-sphere, as characterized by UV-visible and X-ray absorption spectroscopies, thus enabling the rigorous comparison of outer-sphere environments across different siliceous supports. These outer-sphere environments are characterized by solid-state H NMR spectroscopy to comprise proximally organized silanols confined within 12 membered-ring cups in crystalline UCB-4, and are responsible for up to 5-fold enhancements in rates of epoxidation by Ti centers.

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Article Synopsis
  • A closed Ir carbonyl cluster with a tetrahedral metal frame and bulky calixarene ligands was examined using C NMR spectroscopy, revealing distinct positions for CO ligands without scrambling up to 313 K.
  • The cluster showed selective reactivity and catalytic properties, particularly in reaction with TMAO and ethylene, leading to the formation of an ethyl ligand at the apex.
  • Distinct catalytic sites were identified on the cluster, differentiating active sites engaged in hydrogen transfer and hydrocarbon bonding from inactive reservoir sites, which explains the unique catalytic behavior compared to standard noble-metal catalysts.
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Article Synopsis
  • The study uses density functional theory (DFT) and coupled cluster CCSD(T) to investigate the low-energy isomers of Ir(CO)(NHC), focusing on their structures, energies, and ligand behavior.
  • Nitrogen heterocyclic carbene (NHC) ligands are found to be stronger sigma donors than carbonyl (CO) ligands, affecting ligand dissociation energies (LDEs) due to factors like π-back-bonding and electron repulsion.
  • The research also compares theoretical results with experimental data on mixed tetrairidium clusters involving calixarene ligands, showing consistency in ligand symmetry and infrared spectra.
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The active sites of enzymes are contained within nanoscale environments that exhibit exquisite levels of specificity to particular molecules. The development of such nanoscale environments on synthetic surfaces, which would be capable of discriminating between molecules that would nominally bind in a similar way to the surface, could be of use in nanosensing, selective catalysis and gas separation. However, mimicking such subtle behaviour, even crudely, with a synthetic system remains a significant challenge.

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We investigate the synthesis of accessible calix[4]arene-bound gold clusters consisting of open "coordinatively unsaturated" active sites, using a comparative approach that relies on calix[4]arene ligands with various upper- and lower-rim substituents. In contrast with a reported Au(I)-tert-butyl-calixarene phosphine complex, which exhibits a single cone conformer in solution, the H upper-rim analog exhibits multiple conformers in solution. This contrasts with observations of the tert-butyl upper-rim analog, which exhibits a single cone conformer in solution under similar conditions.

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An approach for the control and understanding of supported molecular catalysts is demonstrated with the design and synthesis of open and closed variants of a grafted Lewis acid active site, consisting of Al(III)-calix[4]arene complexes on the surface of silica. The calixarene acts as a molecular template that enforces open and closed resting-state coordination geometries surrounding the metal active sites, due to its lower-rim substituents as well as site isolation by virtue of its steric bulk. These sites are characterized and used to elucidate mechanistic details and connectivity requirements for reactions involving hydride and oxo transfer.

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The synthesis and characterization of new cluster compounds represented by the series Ir(4)(CO)(12-x)L(x) (L = tert-butyl-calix[4]-arene(OPr)(3)(OCH(2)PPh(2)); x = 2 and 3) is reported using ESI mass spectrometry, NMR spectroscopy, IR spectroscopy and single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Thermally driven decarbonylation of the cluster compound series represented by x = 1-3 according to the formula above is followed via FTIR and NMR spectroscopies, and dynamic light scattering in toluene solution. The propensity of these clusters to decarbonylate in solution is shown to be directly correlated with number density of adsorbed calixarene phosphine ligands and controlled via Pauli repulsion between metal d and CO 5σ orbitals.

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The five polyhalides [(Ph)(3)PBr][Br(7)], [(Bz)(Ph)(3)P](2)[Br(8)], [(n-Bu)(3)MeN](2)[Br(20)], [C(4)MPyr](2)[Br(20)] ([C(4)MPyr] = N-butyl-N-methylpyrrolidinium), and [(Ph)(3)PCl](2)[Cl(2)I(14)] were prepared by the reaction of dibromine and iodine monochloride in ionic liquids. The compounds [(Ph)(3)PBr][Br(7)] and [(Bz)(Ph)(3)P](2)[Br(8)] contain discrete pyramidal [Br(7)](-) and Z-shaped [Br(8)](2-) polybromide anions. [(n-Bu)(3)MeN](2)[Br(20)] and [C(4)MPyr](2)[Br(20)] exhibit new infinite two- and three-dimensional polybromide networks and contain the highest percentage of dibromine ever observed in a compound.

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Dark green cuboid-shaped crystals of the composition {[P(o-tolyl) 3]Br} 2[Cu 2Br 6](Br 2) are obtained by the reaction of P(o-tolyl) 3 and CuBr 2 with Br 2 in the ionic liquid [NMeBu 3][N(Tf) 2]. The bromocuprate crystallizes triclinic [space group P1; Z = 1; a = 10.667(2) A; b = 10.

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