A Carborane-Derived Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer Reagent
Abstract
Reagents capable of concerted proton–electron transfer (CPET) reactions can access reaction pathways with lower reaction barriers compared to stepwise pathways involving electron transfer (ET) and proton transfer (PT). To realize reductive multielectron/proton transformations involving CPET, one approach that has shown recent promise involves coupling a cobaltocene ET site with a protonated arylamine Brønsted acid PT site. This strategy colocalizes the electron/proton in a matter compatible with a CPET step and net reductive electrocatalysis. To probe the generality of such an approach a class of C,C′-diaryl-o-carboranes is herein explored as a conceptual substitute for the cobaltocene subunit, with an arylamine linkage still serving as a colocalized Brønsted base suitable for protonation. The featured o-carborane (PhCbPhN) can be reduced and protonated to generate an N–H bond with a weak effective bond dissociation free energy (BDFEeff) of 31 kcal/mol, estimated with measured thermodynamic data. This N–H bond is among the lowest measured element–H bonds for analyzed nonmetal compounds. Distinct solid-state crystal structures of the one- and two-electron reduced forms of diaryl-o-carboranes are disclosed to gain insight into their well-behaved redox characteristics. The singly reduced, protonated form of the diaryl-o-carborane can mediate multi-ET/PT reductions of azoarenes, diphenylfumarate, and nitrotoluene. In contrast to the aforementioned cobaltocene system, available mechanistic data disclosed herein support these reactions occurring by a rate-limiting ET step and not a CPET step. A relevant hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) reaction was also studied, with data pointing to a PT/ET/PT mechanism, where the reduced carborane core is itself highly stable to protonation.
Copyright and License
© 2024 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society. This publication is licensed under CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0
Acknowledgement
This work was supported by the Department of Energy Basic Enegy Sciences (DE-SC0019136). E.H.A. acknowledges the Resnick Sustainability Institute for support via a Cross-Resnick Fellowship and the Department of Defense for support via a National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship. The Beckman Institute at Caltech Supports the X-ray Crystallography Facility. JCP acknowledges the Resnick Sustainability Institute for enabling facilities and the Dow Next Generation Fund for support of Caltech’s EPR facility.
Supplemental Material
The Supporting Information is available free of charge at https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/jacs.4c09007.
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DFT Coordinates (TXT)
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The Supporting Information is available free of charge at Experimental procedures, characterization data, kinetic data, details of computational thermochemistry, X-ray crystallographic data (PDF)
Additional Information
2367450–2367452 contain the supplementary crystallographic data for this paper. These data can be obtained free of charge via the joint Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre (CCDC) and Fachinformationszentrum Karlsruhe Access Structures service.
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Additional details
- Office of Basic Energy Sciences
- DE-SC0019136
- Resnick Sustainability Institute
- National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate Fellowship -
- United States Department of Defense
- Accepted
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2024-10-14Accepted
- Available
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2024-10-28Published online
- Publication Status
- Published