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Dive into the research topics where Marco G. Crestani is active.

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Featured researches published by Marco G. Crestani.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2011

Synthesis and Characterization of Neutral Luminescent Diphosphine Pyrrole- and Indole-Aldimine Copper(I) Complexes

Marco G. Crestani; Gerald F. Manbeck; William W. Brennessel; Theresa M. McCormick; Richard Eisenberg

Heteroleptic copper(I) complexes of the types [Cu(N,N)(P,P)] and [Cu(N,O)(P,P)], where (P,P) = phosphine (PPh(3)) or diphosphine (dppb, DPEPHOS, XANTPHOS), (N,N) = pyrrole-2-phenylcarbaldimine, 2PyN: [Cu(2PyN)(PPh(3))(2)] (1), [Cu(2PyN) (dppb)] (2), [Cu(2PyN)(DPEPHOS)] (3), and [Cu(2PyN)(XANTPHOS)] (4), (N,N) = indole-2-phenylcarbaldimine, 2IndN: [Cu(2IndN)(DPEPHOS)] (8), and (N,O) = pyrrole-2-carboxaldehyde, 2PyO: [Cu(2PyO)(DPEPHOS)] (5), [Cu(2PyO)(XANTPHOS)] (6), or (N,O) = indole-2-carboxaldehyde, 2IndO: [Cu(2IndO)(DPEPHOS)] (7), were synthesized and characterized by multinuclear NMR spectroscopy, electronic absorption spectroscopy, fluorescence spectroscopy, and X-ray crystallography (1-3, 5-8). The complexes with aldimine ligands are thermally stable, and sublimation of 2-4 was possible at T = 230-250 °C under vacuum. All complexes exhibit long-lived emission in solution, in the solid state, and in frozen glasses. The excited states have been assigned as mixed intraligand and metal-to-ligand charge transfer (3)(MLCT + π-π*) transitions through analysis of the photophysical properties and DFT calculations on representative examples.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Evidence for the Existence of Terminal Scandium Imidos: Mechanistic Studies Involving Imido–Scandium Bond Formation and C–H Activation Reactions

Benjamin F. Wicker; Hongjun Fan; Anne Hickey; Marco G. Crestani; Jennifer Scott; Maren Pink; Daniel J. Mindiola

The anilide-methyl complex (PNP)Sc(NH[DIPP])(CH(3)) (1) [PNP(-) = bis(2-diisopropylphosphino-4-tolyl)amide, DIPP = 2,6-diisopropylphenyl] eliminates methane (k(avg) = 5.13 × 10(-4) M(-1) s(-1) at 50 °C) in the presence of pyridine to generate the transient scandium imido (PNP)Sc═N[DIPP](NC(5)H(5)) (A-py), which rapidly activates the C-H bond of pyridine in 1,2-addition fashion to form the stable pyridyl complex (PNP)Sc(NH[DIPP])(η(2)-NC(5)H(4)) (2). Mechanistic studies suggest the C-H activation process to be second order overall: first order in scandium and first order in substrate (pyridine). Pyridine binding precedes elimination of methane, and α-hydrogen abstraction is overall-rate-determining [the kinetic isotope effect (KIE) for 1-d(1) conversion to 2 was 5.37(6) at 35 °C and 4.9(14) at 50 °C] with activation parameters ΔH(‡) = 17.9(9) kcal/mol and ΔS(‡) = -18(3) cal/(mol K), consistent with an associative-type mechanism. No KIE or exchange with the anilide proton was observed when 1-d(3) was treated with pyridine or thermolyzed at 35 or 50 °C. The post-rate-determining step, C-H bond activation of pyridine, revealed a primary KIE of 1.1(2) at 35 °C for the intermolecular C-H activation reaction in pyridine versus pyridine-d(5). Complex 2 equilibrated back to the imide A-py slowly, as the isotopomer (PNP)Sc(ND[DIPP])(η(2)-NC(5)H(4)) (2-d(1)) converted to (PNP)Sc(NH[DIPP])(η(2)-NC(5)H(3)D) over 9 days at 60 °C. Molecular orbital analysis of A-py suggested that this species possesses a fairly linear scandium imido motif (169.7°) with a very short Sc-N distance of 1.84 Å. Substituted pyridines can also be activated, with the rates of C-H activation depending on both the steric and electronic properties of the substrate.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Room Temperature Dehydrogenation of Ethane to Ethylene

Vincent N. Cavaliere; Marco G. Crestani; Balazs Pinter; Maren Pink; Chun-Hsing Chen; Mu-Hyun Baik; Daniel J. Mindiola

The transient titanium alkylidyne, (PNP)Ti≡C(t)Bu (PNP = N[2-P(i)Pr(2)-4-methylphenyl](2)(-)), activates a C-H bond of ethane at room temperature, and a β-hydrogen of the resulting ethyl ligand is subsequently transferred to the adjacent alkylidene ligand to form an ethylene adduct of titanium. Treatment of the ethylene complex with two-electron oxidants such as organic azides results in extrusion of ethene concomitant with formation of a mononuclear titanium imido complex.


Chemical Science | 2011

Methane activation and exchange by titanium-carbon multiple bonds

Jaime A. Flores; Vincent N. Cavaliere; Dominik M. Buck; Balazs Pinter; George Q. Chen; Marco G. Crestani; Mu-Hyun Baik; Daniel J. Mindiola

We demonstrate that a titanium-carbon multiple bond, specifically an alkylidyne ligand in the transient complex, (PNP)Ti≡C^(t)Bu (A) (PNP^− = N[2-P(CHMe_2)_(2)-4-methylphenyl]_2), can cleanly activate methane at room temperature with moderately elevated pressures to form (PNP)Ti=CHtBu(CH_3). Isotopic labeling and theoretical studies suggest that the alkylidene and methyl hydrogens exchange, either via tautomerization invoking a methylidene complex, (PNP)Ti=CH_(2)(CH_(2)^(t)Bu), or by forming the methane adduct (PNP)Ti≡C^(t)Bu(CH_4). The thermal, fluxional and chemical behavior of (PNP)Ti=CH^(t)Bu(CH_3) is also presented in this study.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Room Temperature Dehydrogenation of Ethane, Propane, Linear Alkanes C4–C8, and Some Cyclic Alkanes by Titanium–Carbon Multiple Bonds

Marco G. Crestani; Anne Hickey; Xinfeng Gao; Balazs Pinter; Vincent N. Cavaliere; Jun-ichi Ito; Chun-Hsing Chen; Daniel J. Mindiola

The transient titanium neopentylidyne, [(PNP)Ti≡C(t)Bu] (A; PNP(-)≡N[2-P(i)Pr2-4-methylphenyl]2(-)), dehydrogenates ethane to ethylene at room temperature over 24 h, by sequential 1,2-CH bond addition and β-hydrogen abstraction to afford [(PNP)Ti(η(2)-H2C═CH2)(CH2(t)Bu)] (1). Intermediate A can also dehydrogenate propane to propene, albeit not cleanly, as well as linear and volatile alkanes C4-C6 to form isolable α-olefin complexes of the type, [(PNP)Ti(η(2)-H2C═CHR)(CH2(t)Bu)] (R = CH3 (2), CH2CH3 (3), (n)Pr (4), and (n)Bu (5)). Complexes 1-5 can be independently prepared from [(PNP)Ti═CH(t)Bu(OTf)] and the corresponding alkylating reagents, LiCH2CHR (R = H, CH3(unstable), CH2CH3, (n)Pr, and (n)Bu). Olefin complexes 1 and 3-5 have all been characterized by a diverse array of multinuclear NMR spectroscopic experiments including (1)H-(31)P HOESY, and in the case of the α-olefin adducts 2-5, formation of mixtures of two diastereomers (each with their corresponding pair of enantiomers) has been unequivocally established. The latter has been spectroscopically elucidated by NMR via C-H coupled and decoupled (1)H-(13)C multiplicity edited gHSQC, (1)H-(31)P HMBC, and dqfCOSY experiments. Heavier linear alkanes (C7 and C8) are also dehydrogenated by A to form [(PNP)Ti(η(2)-H2C═CH(n)Pentyl)(CH2(t)Bu)] (6) and [(PNP)Ti(η(2)-H2C═CH(n)Hexyl)(CH2(t)Bu)] (7), respectively, but these species are unstable but can exchange with ethylene (1 atm) to form 1 and the free α-olefin. Complex 1 exchanges with D2C═CD2 with concomitant release of H2C═CH2. In addition, deuterium incorporation is observed in the neopentyl ligand as a result of this process. Cyclohexane and methylcyclohexane can be also dehydrogenated by transient A, and in the case of cyclohexane, ethylene (1 atm) can trap the [(PNP)Ti(CH2(t)Bu)] fragment to form 1. Dehydrogenation of the alkane is not rate-determining since pentane and pentane-d12 can be dehydrogenated to 4 and 4-d12 with comparable rates (KIE = 1.1(0) at ~29 °C). Computational studies have been applied to understand the formation and bonding pattern of the olefin complexes. Steric repulsion was shown to play an important role in determining the relative stability of several olefin adducts and their conformers. The olefin in 1 can be liberated by use of N2O, organic azides (N3R; R = 1-adamantyl or SiMe3), ketones (O═CPh2; 2 equiv) and the diazoalkane, N2CHtolyl2. For complexes 3-7, oxidation with N2O also liberates the α-olefin.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Phosphinoalkylidene and -alkylidyne Complexes of Titanium: Intermolecular C-H Bond Activation and Dehydrogenation Reactions.

Masahiro Kamitani; Balazs Pinter; Keith Searles; Marco G. Crestani; Anne Hickey; Brian C. Manor; Patrick J. Carroll; Daniel J. Mindiola

The ethylene complex (PNP)Ti(η(2)-H2C═CH2)(CH2(t)Bu) or (PNP)Ti═CH(t)Bu(CH2(t)Bu) (PNP(-) = N[2-P(CHMe2)2-4-methylphenyl]2) reacts with H2CPPh3 to form the κ(2)-phosphinoalkylidene (PNP)Ti═CHPPh2(Ph) (1). Compound 1 activates benzene via the transient intermediate [(PNP)Ti≡CPPh2] (C). By treatment of (PNP)Ti═CH(t)Bu(OTf) with LiCH2PPh2, 1 or its isotopologue (PNP)Ti═CDPPh2(C6D5) (1-d6) can be produced by an independent route involving intermediate C, which activates benzene or benzene-d6 and dehydrogenates cyclohexane-d12. Addition of MeOTf to 1 results in elimination of benzene concomitant with the formation of the phosphonioalkylidyne complex, [(PNP)Ti≡CPPh2Me(OTf) (2). Theoretical studies of 2 suggest a resonance structure having dominant Ti-C triple-bond character with some contribution also from a C-P multiple bond.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Fully Borylated Methane and Ethane by Ruthenium‐Mediated Cleavage and Coupling of CO

Andrei S. Batsanov; Javier A. Cabeza; Marco G. Crestani; Manuel R. Fructos; Pablo García-Álvarez; Marie Gille; Zhenyang Lin; Todd B. Marder

Many transition-metal complexes and some metal-free compounds are able to bind carbon monoxide, a molecule which has the strongest chemical bond in nature. However, very few of them have been shown to induce the cleavage of its C-O bond and even fewer are those that are able to transform CO into organic reagents with potential in organic synthesis. This work shows that bis(pinacolato)diboron, B2pin2, reacts with ruthenium carbonyl to give metallic complexes containing borylmethylidyne (CBpin) and diborylethyne (pinBC≡CBpin) ligands and also metal-free perborylated C1 and C2 products, such as C(Bpin)4 and C2 (Bpin)6, respectively, which have great potential as building blocks for Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling and other reactions. The use of (13)CO-enriched ruthenium carbonyl has demonstrated that the boron-bound carbon atoms of all of these reaction products arise from CO ligands.


Chemical Science | 2013

Understanding the competitive dehydroalkoxylation and dehydrogenation of ethers with Ti–C multiple bonds

Marco G. Crestani; András Olasz; Balazs Pinter; Brad C. Bailey; Skye Fortier; Xinfeng Gao; Chun Hsing Chen; Mu-Hyun Baik; Daniel J. Mindiola

The divergent reactivity of a transient titanium neopentylidyne, (PNP)TiCtBu (A) (PNP = N[2-PiPr2-4-methylphenyl]2−), that exhibits competing dehydrogenation and dehydroalkoxylation reaction pathways in the presence of acyclic ethers (Et2O, nPr2O, nBu2O, tBuOMe, tBuOEt, iPr2O) is presented. Although dehydrogenation takes place also in long-chain linear ethers, dehydroalkoxylation is disfavoured and takes place preferentially or even exclusively in the case of branched ethers. In all cases, dehydrogenation occurs at the terminal position of the aliphatic chain. Kinetics analyses performed using the alkylidene-alkyl precursor, (PNP)TiCHtBu(CH2tBu), show pseudo first-order decay rates on titanium (kavg = 6.2 ± 0.3 × 10−5 s−1, at 29.5 ± 0.1 °C, overall), regardless of the substrate or reaction pathway that ensues. Also, no significant kinetic isotope effect (kH/kD ∼ 1.1) was found between the activations of Et2O and Et2O-d10, in accord with dehydrogenation (C–H activation and abstraction) not being the slowest steps, but also consistent with formation of the transient alkylidyne A being rate-determining. An overall decay rate of (PNP)TiCHtBu(CH2tBu) with a t1/2 = 3.2 ± 0.4 h, across all ethers, confirms formation of A being a common intermediate. Isolated alkylidene-alkoxides, (PNP)TiCHtBu(OR) (R = Me, Et, nPr, nBu, iPr, tBu) formed from dehydroalkoxylation reactions were also independently prepared by salt metatheses, and extensive NMR characterization of these products is provided. Finally, combining theory and experiment we discuss how each reaction pathway can be altered and how the binding event of ethers plays a critical role in the outcome of the reaction.


Advanced Synthesis & Catalysis | 2006

Catalytic Hydration of Benzonitrile and Acetonitrile using Nickel(0)

Marco G. Crestani; Alma Arévalo; Juventino J. García


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2005

σ-Borane Coordinated to Nickel(0) and Some Related Nickel(II) Trihydride Complexes

Marco G. Crestani; Miguel A. Muñoz-Hernández; Alma Arévalo; † and Alberto Acosta-Ramírez; Juventino J. García

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Juventino J. García

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Balazs Pinter

Vrije Universiteit Brussel

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Anne Hickey

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Alma Arévalo

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Vincent N. Cavaliere

Indiana University Bloomington

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Carmela Crisóstomo

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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David Morales-Morales

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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