Redox noninnocent ligands are a promising tool to moderate electron transfer processes within base-metal catalysts. This report introduces bis(imino)acenaphthene (BIAN) cobaltate complexes as hydrogenation catalysts. Sterically hindered trisubstituted alkenes, imines, and quinolines underwent clean hydrogenation under mild conditions (2−10 bar, 20−80°C) by use of the stable catalyst precursor [(Dipp BIAN)CoBr 2 ] and the cocatalyst LiEt 3 BH. Mechanistic studies support a homogeneous catalysis pathway involving alkene and hydrido cobaltates as active catalyst species. Furthermore, considerable reaction acceleration by alkali cations and Lewis acids was observed. The dinuclear hydridocobaltate anion with bridging hydride ligands was isolated and fully characterized.
Efficient electronic communication over long distances is a desirable property of molecular wires. Charge delocalization in mixed-valence (MV) compounds where two redox centers are linked by a molecular bridge is a particularly well-controlled instance of such electronic communication, thus lending itself to comparisons between theory and experiment. We study how to achieve and control longrange charge delocalization in cationic organic MV systems by means of Kohn−Sham density functional theory (DFT) and show that a captodative substitution approach recently suggested for molecular conductance (Stuyver et al. J. Phys. Chem. C 2018, 122, 3194) greatly enhances charge delocalization in p-phenylene-based wires. To ensure the adequacy of our DFT methods, we validate different protocols for organic MV systems of different lengths. The BLYP35 hybrid functional combined with a polarizable continuum model, established by Renz and Kaupp, is indeed capable of correctly describing experimentally observed length-dependent charge delocalization, in contrast to the long-range corrected functionals ω-B97X-D and ω-PBE. We also discuss the implications of these results for a first-principles description of the transition between coherent tunneling and incoherent hopping regimes in molecular conductance.
Understanding charge transport through molecular wires is important for nanoscale electronics and biochemistry. Our goal is to establish a simple first-principles protocol for predicting the charge transport mechanism in such wires, in particular the crossover from coherent tunneling for short wires to incoherent hopping for longer wires. This protocol is based on a combination of density-functional theory with a polarizable continuum model introduced by Kaupp et al. for mixed-valence molecules, which we had previously found to work well for length-dependent charge delocalization in such systems. We combine this protocol with a new charge delocalization measure tailored for molecular wires, and we show that it can predict the tunneling-to hopping transition length with a maximum error of one subunit in five sets of molecular wires studied experimentally in molecular junctions at room temperature. This suggests that the protocol is also well suited for estimating the extent of hopping sites as relevant, e.g., for the intermediate tunneling-hopping regime in DNA. File list (3) download file view on ChemRxiv ms.pdf (1.59 MiB) download file view on ChemRxiv supporting_information.pdf (3.90 MiB) download file view on ChemRxiv cartesian_coordinates.zip (33.23 KiB)
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