Amélie Kochem
Aix-Marseille University
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Inorganic Chemistry | 2013
Amélie Kochem; Fabrice Thomas; Olivier Jarjayes; Gisèle Gellon; Christian Philouze; Thomas Weyhermüller; Frank Neese; Maurice van Gastel
A Co(II) anilinosalen catalyst containing proton relays in the first coordination sphere has been synthesized that catalyzes the electrochemical production of hydrogen from acid in dichloromethane and acetonitrile solutions. The complex has been spectroscopically and theoretically characterized in different protonation and redox states. We show that both coordinated anilido groups of the neutral Co(II) complex can be protonated into aniline form. Protonation induces an anodic shift of more than 1 V of the reduction wave, which concomitantly becomes irreversible. Hydrogen evolution that originates from the aniline protons located in the first coordination sphere is observed upon bulk electrolysis at -1.5 V of the protonated complex in absence of external acid. Structures for intermediates in the catalytic reaction have been identified based on this data.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2018
Maria-Chrysanthi Kafentzi; Raffaello Papadakis; Federica Gennarini; Amélie Kochem; Olga Iranzo; Yves Le Mest; Nicolas Le Poul; Thierry Tron; Bruno Faure; A. Jalila Simaan; Marius Réglier
Water oxidation by copper-based complexes to form dioxygen has attracted attention in recent years, with the aim of developing efficient and cheap catalysts for chemical energy storage. In addition, high-valent metal-oxo species produced by the oxidation of metal complexes in the presence of water can be used to achieve substrate oxygenation with the use of H2 O as an oxygen source. To date, this strategy has not been reported for copper complexes. Herein, a copper(II) complex, [(RPY2)Cu(OTf)2 ] (RPY2=N-substituted bis[2-pyridyl(ethylamine)] ligands; R=indane; OTf=triflate), is used. This complex, which contains an oxidizable substrate moiety (indane), is used as a tool to monitor an intramolecular oxygen atom transfer reaction. Electrochemical properties were investigated and, upon electrolysis at 1.30 V versus a normal hydrogen electrode (NHE), both dioxygen production and oxygenation of the indane moiety were observed. The ligand was oxidized in a highly diastereoselective manner, which indicated that the observed reactivity was mediated by metal-centered reactive species. The pH dependence of the reactivity was monitored and correlated with speciation deduced from different techniques, ranging from potentiometric titrations to spectroscopic studies and DFT calculations. Water oxidation for dioxygen production occurs at neutral pH and is probably mediated by the oxidation of a mononuclear copper(II) precursor. It is achieved with a rather low overpotential (280 mV at pH 7), although with limited efficiency. On the other hand, oxygenation is maximum at pH 8-8.5 and is probably mediated by the electrochemical oxidation of an antiferromagnetically coupled dinuclear bis(μ-hydroxo) copper(II) precursor. This constitutes the first example of copper-centered oxidative water activation for a selective oxygenation reaction.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2018
Laureline Lecarme; Amélie Kochem; Linus Chiang; Jules Moutet; Florian Berthiol; Christian Philouze; Nicolas Leconte; Tim Storr; Fabrice Thomas
The sterically hindered bis(phenol)-dipyrrin ligands HLH3 and PhLH3 were reacted with 1 equiv of copper(II) under ambient conditions to produce the copper radical complexes [Cu(HL)] and [Cu(PhL)]. Their X-ray crystal structures show relatively short C-O bond distances (mean bond distances of 1.287 and 1.291 Å), reminiscent of mixed pyrrolyl-phenoxyl radical species. Complexes [Cu(HL)] and [Cu(PhL)] exhibit rich electronic spectra, with an intense near-IR (NIR) band (ε > 6 mM-1 cm-1) at 1346 and 1321 nm, respectively, assigned to a ligand-to-ligand charger-transfer transition. Both show a reversible oxidation wave ( E1/21,ox = 0.05 and 0.04 V), as well as a reversible reduction wave ( E1/21,red = -0.40 and -0.56 V versus ferrocenium/ferrocene, respectively). The cations ([Cu(HL)]+ and [Cu(PhL)]+) and anions ([Cu(HL)]- and [Cu(PhL)]-) were generated. They all display an axial ( S = 1/2) signal with a copper hyperfine structure in their electron paramagnetic resonance spectra, consistent with ligand-centered redox processes in both reduction and oxidation. Complex [Cu(HL)](SbF6) was cocrystallized with [Cu(HL)]. Oxidation is accompanied by a slight contraction of both the C-O bonds (mean bond distance of 1.280 Å) and the C-C bonds connecting the peripheral rings to the dipyrrin. The cations show vis-NIR bands of up to 1090 nm due to their quinoidal nature. The anions do not show a significant band above 700 nm, in agreement with their bis(phenolate)-dipyrrin character. The radical complexes efficiently catalyze the aerobic oxidation of benzyl alcohol, 1-phenylethanol, and unactivated 2-phenylethanol in basic conditions.
European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry | 2018
Amélie Kochem; Bruno Faure; Sylvain Bertaina; Eric Rivière; Michel Giorgi; Marius Réglier; Maylis Orio; A. Jalila Simaan
A tetranuclear copper(II) complex (1) was synthesized using 2-hydroxy-N-(quinolin-8-yl)acetamide ligand. Single-crystal X-ray diffraction studies revealed that the complex consists of a distorted Cu 4 O 4 core in which the four copper(II) ions are linked by alkoxo bridges. X-ray analysis also evidenced intra-molecular noncovalent carbonyl-π interactions. Those interactions that are encountered between lone-pair electrons (of the amide oxygen atoms here) and π* orbitals of aromatic rings,
Inorganic Chemistry | 2012
Amélie Kochem; Hussein Kanso; Benoit Baptiste; Himanshu Arora; Christian Philouze; Olivier Jarjayes; Hervé Vezin; Dominique Luneau; Maylis Orio; Fabrice Thomas
Dalton Transactions | 2014
Kazutaka Asami; Akiko Takashina; Misato Kobayashi; Satoshi Iwatsuki; Tatsuo Yajima; Amélie Kochem; Maurice van Gastel; Fumito Tani; Takamitsu Kohzuma; Fabrice Thomas; Yuichi Shimazaki
Chemical Communications | 2010
Amélie Kochem; Maylis Orio; Olivier Jarjayes; Frank Neese; Fabrice Thomas
Dalton Transactions | 2015
Amélie Kochem; Gisèle Gellon; Olivier Jarjayes; Christian Philouze; Amaury du Moulinet d'Hardemare; Maurice van Gastel; Fabrice Thomas
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2014
Amélie Kochem; Frank Neese; Maurice van Gastel
Chemical Communications | 2015
Amélie Kochem; Eckhard Bill; Frank Neese; M. van Gastel