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Dive into the research topics where Igor E. Golub is active.

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Featured researches published by Igor E. Golub.


RSC Advances | 2016

A Heterometallic (Fe6Na8) Cage-like Silsesquioxane: Synthesis, Structure, Spin Glass Behavior and High Catalytic Activity

Alexey N. Bilyachenko; Mikhail M. Levitsky; Alexey I. Yalymov; Alexander A. Korlyukov; Anna V. Vologzhanina; Yuriy N. Kozlov; Lidia S. Shul'pina; Dmytro S. Nesterov; Armando J. L. Pombeiro; Frédéric Lamaty; Xavier Bantreil; Amandine Fetre; Diyang Liu; Jean Martinez; Jérôme Long; Joulia Larionova; Yannick Guari; A. L. Trigub; Yan V. Zubavichus; Igor E. Golub; O. A. Filippov; Elena S. Shubina; Georgiy B. Shul'pin

The exotic “Asian Lantern” heterometallic cage silsesquioxane [(PhSiO1.5)20(FeO1.5)6(NaO0.5)8(n-BuOH)9.6(C7H8)] (I) was obtained and characterized by X-ray diffraction, EXAFS, topological analyses and DFT calculation. The magnetic property investigations revealed that it shows an unusual spin glass-like behavior induced by a particular triangular arrangement of Fe(III) ions. Cyclohexane and other alkanes as well as benzene can be oxidized to the corresponding alkyl hydroperoxides and phenol, respectively, by hydrogen peroxide in air in the presence of catalytic amounts of complex I and nitric acid. The I-catalyzed reaction of cyclohexane, c-C6H12, with H216O2 in an atmosphere of 18O2 gave a mixture of labeled and non-labeled cyclohexyl hydroperoxides, c-C6H11–16O–16OH and c-C6H11–18O–18OH, respectively, with an 18O incorporation level of ca. 12%. Compound I also revealed high efficiency in the oxidative amidation of alcohols into amides: in the presence of complex I, only 500 ppm of iron was allowed to reach TON and TOF values of 1660 and 92 h−1.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2012

Dimerization Mechanism of Bis(triphenylphosphine)copper(I) Tetrahydroborate: Proton Transfer via a Dihydrogen Bond

Igor E. Golub; Oleg A. Filippov; Evgenii I. Gutsul; Natalia V. Belkova; Lina M. Epstein; Andrea Rossin; Maurizio Peruzzini; Elena S. Shubina

The mechanism of transition-metal tetrahydroborate dimerization was established for the first time on the example of (Ph(3)P)(2)Cu(η(2)-BH(4)) interaction with different proton donors [MeOH, CH(2)FCH(2)OH, CF(3)CH(2)OH, (CF(3))(2)CHOH, (CF(3))(3)CHOH, p-NO(2)C(6)H(4)OH, p-NO(2)C(6)H(4)N═NC(6)H(4)OH, p-NO(2)C(6)H(4)NH(2)] using the combination of experimental (IR, 190-300 K) and quantum-chemical (DFT/M06) methods. The formation of dihydrogen-bonded complexes as the first reaction step was established experimentally. Their structural, electronic, energetic, and spectroscopic features were thoroughly analyzed by means of quantum-chemical calculations. Bifurcate complexes involving both bridging and terminal hydride hydrogen atoms become thermodynamically preferred for strong proton donors. Their formation was found to be a prerequisite for the subsequent proton transfer and dimerization to occur. Reaction kinetics was studied at variable temperature, showing that proton transfer is the rate-determining step. This result is in agreement with the computed potential energy profile of (Ph(3)P)(2)Cu(η(2)-BH(4)) dimerization, yielding [{(Ph(3)P)(2)Cu}(2)(μ,η(4)-BH(4))](+).


Inorganic Chemistry | 2014

Dihydrogen Bonding in Complex (PP3)RuH(η1-BH4) Featuring Two Proton-Accepting Hydride Sites: Experimental and Theoretical Studies

Natalia V. Belkova; Ekaterina V. Bakhmutova-Albert; Evgenii I. Gutsul; Vladimir I. Bakhmutov; Igor E. Golub; Oleg A. Filippov; Lina M. Epstein; Maurizio Peruzzini; Andrea Rossin; Fabrizio Zanobini; Elena S. Shubina

Combining variable-temperature infrared and NMR spectroscopic studies with quantum-chemical calculations (density functional theory (DFT) and natural bond orbital) allowed us to address the problem of competition between MH (M = transition metal) and BH hydrogens as proton-accepting sites in dihydrogen bond (DHB) and to unravel the mechanism of proton transfer to complex (PP3)RuH(η(1)-BH4) (1, PP3 = κ(4)-P(CH2CH2PPh2)3). Interaction of complex 1 with CH3OH, fluorinated alcohols of variable acid strength [CH2FCH2OH, CF3CH2OH, (CF3)2CHOH (HFIP), (CF3)3COH], and CF3COOH leads to the medium-strength DHB complexes involving BH bonds (3-5 kcal/mol), whereas DHB complexes with RuH were not observed experimentally. The two proton-transfer pathways were considered in DFT/M06 calculations. The first one goes via more favorable bifurcate complexes to BHterm and high activation barriers (38.2 and 28.4 kcal/mol in case of HFIP) and leads directly to the thermodynamic product [(PP3)RuHeq(H2)](+)[OR](-). The second pathway starts from the less-favorable complex with RuH ligand but shows a lower activation barrier (23.5 kcal/mol for HFIP) and eventually leads to the final product via the isomerization of intermediate [(PP3)RuHax(H2)](+)[OR](-). The B-Hbr bond breaking is the common key step of all pathways investigated.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2017

Unusual Tri-, Hexa-, and Nonanuclear Cu(II) Cage Methylsilsesquioxanes: Synthesis, Structures, and Catalytic Activity in Oxidations with Peroxides

Alexey N. Bilyachenko; Alena N. Kulakova; Mikhail M. Levitsky; Artem A. Petrov; Alexander A. Korlyukov; Lidia S. Shul’pina; Victor N. Khrustalev; Pavel V. Dorovatovskii; Anna V. Vologzhanina; Ulyana S. Tsareva; Igor E. Golub; Ekaterina S. Gulyaeva; Elena S. Shubina; Georgiy B. Shul’pin

Three types of unusual cagelike copper(II) methylsilsesquioxanes, namely, nona- [(MeSiO1.5)18(CuO)9] 1, hexa- [(MeSiO1.5)10(HO0.5)2(CuO)6(C12H8N2)2(MeSiO1.5)10(HO0.5)1.33(CH3COO0.5)0.67(CuO)6(C12H8N2)2] 2, [(MeSiO1.5)10(CuO)6(MeO0.5)2(C10H8N2)2] 3, and trinuclear [(MeSiO1.5)8(CuO)3(C10H8N2)2] 4, were obtained in 44%, 27%, 20%, and 16% yields, respectively. Nuclearity and structural fashion of products was controlled by the choice of solvent system and ligand, specifically assisting the assembling of cage. Structures of 1-4 were determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. Compounds 1 and 4 are the first cage metallasilsesquioxanes, containing nine and three Cu ions, respectively. Product 1 is the first observation of nonanuclear metallasilsesquioxane ever. Unique architecture of 4 represents early unknown type of molecular geometry, based on two condensed pentamembered siloxane cycles. Topological analysis of metal clusters in products 1-4 is provided. Complex 1 efficiently catalyzes oxidation of alcohols with tert-butylhydroperoxide TBHP to ketones or alkanes with H2O2 to alkyl hydroperoxides in acetonitrile.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Cage-like Fe,Na-Germsesquioxanes: Structure, Magnetism, and Catalytic Activity

Alexey N. Bilyachenko; Mikhail M. Levitsky; Alexey I. Yalymov; Alexander A. Korlyukov; V. N. Khrustalev; Anna V. Vologzhanina; Lidia S. Shul'pina; Nikolay S. Ikonnikov; Alexander E. Trigub; Pavel V. Dorovatovskii; Xavier Bantreil; Frédéric Lamaty; Jérôme Long; Joulia Larionova; Igor E. Golub; Elena S. Shubina; Georgiy B. Shul'pin

A series of four unprecedented heterometallic metallagermsesquioxanes were synthesized. Their cage-like architectures have a unique type of molecular topology consisting of the hexairon oxo {Fe6 O19 } core surrounded in a triangular manner by three cyclic germoxanolates [PhGe(O)O]5 . This structural organization induces antiferromagnetic interactions between the FeIII ions through the oxygen atoms. Evaluated for this first time in catalysis, these compounds showed a high catalytic activity in the oxidation of alkanes and the oxidative formation of benzamides from alcohols.


Russian Chemical Bulletin | 2014

Activation of M—H bond upon the complexation of transition metal hydrides with acids and bases

Oleg A. Filippov; Igor E. Golub; Elena S. Osipova; Vladislava A. Kirkina; Evgenii I. Gutsul; Natalia V. Belkova

Features of the electronic structure of adducts of transition metal hydride complexes (Cp*M(dppe)H, dppe is the 1,2-(diphenylphosphino)ethane, M = Fe, Ru, Os; CpM(CO)3H, M = Mo, W) with acids and bases were analyzed with the ADF2014 program using energy decomposition analysis (EDA) by the Ziegler-Rauk method combined with the natural orbitals for chemical valence theory (ETS-NOCV). The nature of orbital interactions in the complex determines the reaction pathway: σMH → σ*OH interaction leads to the proton transfer to hydride ligand, nM → σ*OH leads to the metal atom protonation, nN → σ*MH implies the metal hydride deprotonation, and σMH → n*B corresponds to the hydride transfer to Lewis acid. It was shown that M-H bond polarization change has the similar character upon the formation of complexes with Brønsted and Lewis acids. The ease of polarization of M-H bonds in complexes CpM(CO)3H determines their reactivity as proton and hydride ion donors.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2015

Dihydrogen bond intermediated alcoholysis of dimethylamine-borane in nonaqueous media.

Igor E. Golub; Ekaterina S. Gulyaeva; Oleg A. Filippov; V. P. Dyadchenko; Natalia V. Belkova; Lina M. Epstein; Dmitry E. Arkhipov; Elena S. Shubina


Dalton Transactions | 2016

First cage-like pentanuclear Co(II)-silsesquioxane

Alexey N. Bilyachenko; Alexey I. Yalymov; Mikhail M. Levitsky; Alexander A. Korlyukov; Marina A. Eskova; Jérôme Long; Joulia Larionova; Yannick Guari; Lidia S. Shul'pina; Nikolay S. Ikonnikov; A. L. Trigub; Yan V. Zubavichus; Igor E. Golub; Elena S. Shubina; Georgiy B. Shul'pin


Inorganica Chimica Acta | 2017

The interplay of proton accepting and hydride donor abilities in the mechanism of step-wise boron hydrides alcoholysis

Igor E. Golub; Oleg A. Filippov; Ekaterina S. Gulyaeva; Evgenii I. Gutsul; Natalia V. Belkova


Inorganic Chemistry | 2017

Ammonia Borane Dehydrogenation Catalyzed by (κ4-EP3)Co(H) [EP3 = E(CH2CH2PPh2)3; E = N, P] and H2 Evolution from Their Interaction with NH Acids

Stefano Todisco; Lapo Luconi; Giuliano Giambastiani; Andrea Rossin; Maurizio Peruzzini; Igor E. Golub; Oleg A. Filippov; Natalia V. Belkova; Elena S. Shubina

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Elena S. Shubina

A. N. Nesmeyanov Institute of Organoelement Compounds

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Natalia V. Belkova

A. N. Nesmeyanov Institute of Organoelement Compounds

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Oleg A. Filippov

A. N. Nesmeyanov Institute of Organoelement Compounds

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Alexander A. Korlyukov

Russian National Research Medical University

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Alexey N. Bilyachenko

Peoples' Friendship University of Russia

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Lina M. Epstein

A. N. Nesmeyanov Institute of Organoelement Compounds

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Alexey I. Yalymov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Evgenii I. Gutsul

Russian Academy of Sciences

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