The rate of interconversion of the two inequivalent edges of the pyridine rings in the trigonal prism 3c, self-assembled from 3 equiv of the star connector, tetrakis[4-(4-pyridylethynyl)phenyl]cyclobutadienecyclopentadienylcobalt, and 6 equiv of a platinum linker, cis-(Me3P)2Pt(2+) 2 TfO(-), was determined by DNMR in nitromethane. It exhibits a highly unusual bilinear Eyring plot. In the low temperature regime, the activation enthalpy DeltaH(double dagger) is approximately 12 kcal/mol and an activation entropy DeltaS(double dagger) ranges from approximately -15 to approximately 0 cal/mol x K as a function of the nature and concentration of the anions present. The reaction is attributed to hindered rotation of the pyridine rings about the Pt-N bond, facilitated by a tight pairing with a counterion. Above a counterion-dependent limiting temperature, DeltaH(double dagger) and DeltaS(double dagger) change abruptly to approximately 35 kcal/mol and approximately 60 cal/mol x K, respectively. The changes largely compensate, such that the reactions have comparable rates in the two regimes, both amenable to DNMR measurement, but their mechanisms clearly differ. Several kinetic models for the involvement of ion pairing equilibria fit the observed data nearly equally well, and they all contain a reaction step with high DeltaH(double dagger) and DeltaS(double dagger) values in the high-temperature regime. Its mechanism is proposed to involve a counterion-assisted reversible dissociation of one or two adjacent Pt-N bonds, followed by nearly free rotation of the terminal pyridine ring or rings and subsequent bond reclosure, which is similar to the last presumed step in the initial prism assembly. An interpretation of the very high DeltaS(double dagger) value is suggested by molecular dynamics calculations: at equilibrium, there is a bubble of gaseous nitromethane solvent inside the prism, and it collapses when the prism opens as the transition state is reached. A simple calculation of the entropy of cavitation provides quantitative support for this tentative proposal. The presence of such voids might be generally important for the formation and properties of self-assembled cages.
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Faraday Discuss
September 2013
Department of Chemistry, University of Utah, 315 S. 1400 E. RM 2020, Salt Lake City, UT 84112, USA.
Cholesterol is a major constituent of biological membranes in mammalian cells. Experiments have shown that cholesterol influences the physical properties of the plasma membrane, such as lateral diffusion and phase equilibrium. In addition to controlling the 2-dimensional phase behaviour and mobility of lipids in membranes, cholesterol has also been implicated in the transbilayer diffusion of lipids across the bilayer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
September 2011
Department of Chemistry, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912, United States.
The diamagnetic cobalt(III) dimethyl complex, cis,mer-(PMe(3))(3)Co(CH(3))(2)I, was found to promote selective C-C bond formation, affording ethane and triplet (PMe(3))(3)CoI. The mechanism of reductive elimination has been investigated by a series of kinetic and isotopic-labeling experiments. Ethane formation proceeds with a rate constant of 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInorg Chem
March 2011
Dipartimento di Chimica Inorganica, Chimica Analitica e Chimica Fisica, Università di Messina, Viale F. Stagno D'Alcontres 31, Vill. S. Agata, I-98166 Messina, Italy.
Low-temperature NMR measurements showed that protonolysis and deuterolysis by H(D)X acids on meta- and para-substituted dibenzylplatinum(II) complexes cis-[Pt(CH(2)Ar)(2)(PEt(3))(2)] (Ar = C(6)H(4)Y(-); Y = 4-Me, 1a; 3-Me, 1b; H, 1c; 4-F, 1d; 3-F, 1e; 4-Cl, 1f; 3-Cl, 1g; 3-CF(3), 1h) in CD(3)OD leads directly to the formation of trans-[Pt(CH(2)Ar)(PEt(3))(2)(CD(3)OD)]X (4a-4h) and toluene derivatives. The reaction obeys the rate law k(obsd) = k(H)[H(+)]. For CH(2)Ar = CH(2)C(6)H(5)(-), k(H) = 176 ± 3 M(-1) s(-1) and k(D) = 185 ± 5 M(-1) s(-1) at 298.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
February 2011
Department of Chemistry, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado 80523-1872, United States.
Activation of 12 group IV metallocene bis(ester enolate) complexes with B(C(6)F(5))(3) at room temperature (RT) affords quantitatively the corresponding isolable cationic eight-membered ester enolate metallacycles. This rapid two-step reaction consists of vinylogous hydride abstraction to form the anion [HB(C(6)F(5))(3)](-), and nucleophilic addition of the second enolate ligand to the methacrylate resulted from loss of a hydride in the first enolate ligand to form the chelating cation. This activation methodology for generating the active species (structural models for resting intermediates involved in methacrylate polymerization) is rather general, as demonstrated by a broad substrate scope examined in this study, including group IV metallocene bis(ester enolate) complexes that varied metals (Ti, Zr, Hf), bridging atoms (Ph(2)C<, Ph(2)Si<, Me(2)C<, -CH(2)CH(2)-), substituents ((t)Bu, Et(3)Si), substitution patterns (on 3-Cp and 2,7-Flu ring positions), and ligand symmetries (C(2), C(2v), C(1), and C(s)), all of which lead to the clean formation of their corresponding cationic metallacycles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
November 2010
Department of Chemistry, University of Warwick, Gibbet Hill Road, Coventry CV7 4AL, UK.
The mechanism of hydroamination/cyclization of primary aminoalkenes by catalysts based on Cp*LZr(NMe(2))(2) (L = κ(2)-salicyloxazoline) is investigated in a range of kinetic, stoichiometric, and structural studies. The rate law is found to be d[substrate]/dt = k[catalyst](1)[substrate](0) for all catalysts and aminoalkenes studied. The overall rate is similar for formation of five- and six-membered rings, and a substantial KIE (k(H)/k(D)) is observed, indicating the involvement of N-H bond-breaking in a rate-determining step (RDS) which is not ring-closure.
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