Mark D. Doherty
General Electric
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Featured researches published by Mark D. Doherty.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015
Peter John Bonitatibus; Sumit Chakraborty; Mark D. Doherty; Oltea Puica Siclovan; William D. Jones; Grigorii Lev Soloveichik
Significance Catalytic hydrogenation and dehydrogenation reactions are extremely important in organic chemistry and recently for energy storage in the form of chemical bonds. Although catalysts are known which catalyze both reactions, the rates and conditions required for the two are frequently very different due to the differences associated with the bonds to be activated (C–H/O–H/N–H and C = O/C = N/H–H). The use of a bifunctional catalyst would substantially simplify the design of processes related to energy storage. In this work, organometallic complexes of iron and iridium are shown to act as catalysts for reversible dehydrogenation of alcohols to carbonyl compounds. This finding opens a pathway to the development of catalysts for direct reversible electrochemical dehydrogenation of organic fuels in energy generation and storage reactions. Reversibility of a dehydrogenation/hydrogenation catalytic reaction has been an elusive target for homogeneous catalysis. In this report, reversible acceptorless dehydrogenation of secondary alcohols and diols on iron pincer complexes and reversible oxidative dehydrogenation of primary alcohols/reduction of aldehydes with separate transfer of protons and electrons on iridium complexes are shown. This reactivity suggests a strategy for the development of reversible fuel cell electrocatalysts for partial oxidation (dehydrogenation) of hydroxyl-containing fuels.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2013
Mark D. Doherty; David C. Grills; Kuo-Wei Huang; James T. Muckerman; Dmitry E. Polyansky; Rudi van Eldik; Etsuko Fujita
The kinetics and thermodynamics of the binding of several small molecules, L (L = N2, H2, D2, and C2H4), to the coordinatively unsaturated pincer-PCP rhodium(I) complexes Rh[(t)Bu2PCH2(C6H3)CH2P(t)Bu2] (1) and Rh[(t)Bu2P(CH2)2(CH)(CH2)2P(t)Bu2] (2) in organic solvents (n-heptane, toluene, THF, and cyclohexane-d12) have been investigated by a combination of kinetic flash photolysis methods, NMR equilibrium studies, and density functional theory (DFT) calculations. Using various gas mixtures and monitoring by NMR until equilibrium was established, the relative free energies of binding of N2, H2, and C2H4 in cyclohexane-d12 were found to increase in the order C2H4 < N2 < H2. Time-resolved infrared (TRIR) and UV-vis transient absorption spectroscopy revealed that 355 nm excitation of 1-L and 2-L results in the photoejection of ligand L. The subsequent mechanism of binding of L to 1 and 2 to regenerate 1-L and 2-L is determined by the structure of the PCP ligand framework and the nature of the solvent. In both cases, the primary transient is a long-lived, unsolvated species (τ = 50-800 ns, depending on L and its concentration in solution). For 2, this so-called less-reactive form (LRF) is in equilibrium with a more-reactive form (MRF), which reacts with L at diffusion-controlled rates to regenerate 2-L. These two intermediates are proposed to be different conformers of the three-coordinate (PCP)Rh fragment. For 1, a similar mechanism is proposed to occur, but the LRF to MRF step is irreversible. In addition, a parallel reaction pathway was observed that involves the direct reaction of the LRF of 1 with L, with second-order rate constants that vary by almost 3 orders of magnitude, depending on the nature of L (in n-heptane, k = 6.7 × 10(5) M(-1) s(-1) for L = C2H4; 4.0 × 10(6) M(-1) s(-1) for L = N2; 5.5 × 10(8) M(-1) s(-1) for L = H2). Experiments in the more coordinating solvent, THF, revealed the binding of THF to 1 to generate 1-THF, and its subsequent reaction with L, as a competing pathway.
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012
Steven J. Konezny; Mark D. Doherty; Oana R. Luca; Robert H. Crabtree; Grigorii Lev Soloveichik; Victor S. Batista
Dalton Transactions | 2012
C. Moysés Araújo; Mark D. Doherty; Steven J. Konezny; Oana R. Luca; Alex Usyatinsky; Hans Grade; Emil B. Lobkovsky; Grigorii Lev Soloveichik; Robert H. Crabtree; Victor S. Batista
Coordination Chemistry Reviews | 2010
Mark D. Doherty; David C. Grills; James T. Muckerman; Dmitry E. Polyansky; Etsuko Fujita
Energy & Fuels | 2016
Michael J. O’Brien; Robert James Perry; Mark D. Doherty; Jason Lee; Aman Dhuwe; Eric J. Beckman; Robert M. Enick
Chemical Communications | 2013
Peter John Bonitatibus; Matthew P. Rainka; Andrea Jeannine Peters; Davide Louis Simone; Mark D. Doherty
Journal of Supercritical Fluids | 2017
Jason Lee; Stephen D. Cummings; Eric J. Beckman; Robert M. Enick; Ward A. Burgess; Mark D. Doherty; Michael J. O’Brien; Robert James Perry
Energy & Fuels | 2016
Mark D. Doherty; Jason Lee; Aman Dhuwe; Michael J. O’Brien; Robert James Perry; Eric J. Beckman; Robert M. Enick
SPE Improved Oil Recovery Symposium | 2014
Jason Lee; Stephen D. Cummings; Aman Dhuwe; Robert M. Enick; Eric J. Beckman; Robert James Perry; Michael Joseph O'brien; Mark D. Doherty