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Dive into the research topics where Mark R. Crimmin is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark R. Crimmin.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Intramolecular hydroamination of aminoalkenes by calcium and magnesium complexes: a synthetic and mechanistic study.

Mark R. Crimmin; Merle Arrowsmith; Anthony G. M. Barrett; Ian J. Casely; Michael S. Hill; Panayiotis A. Procopiou

The beta-diketiminate-stabilized calcium amide complex [{ArNC(Me)CHC(Me)NAr}Ca{N(SiMe(3))(2)}(THF)] (Ar = 2,6-diisopropylphenyl) and magnesium methyl complex [{ArNC(Me)CHC(Me)NAr}Mg(Me)(THF)] are reported as efficient precatalysts for hydroamination/cyclization of aminoalkenes. The reactions proceeded under mild conditions, allowing the synthesis of five-, six-, and seven-membered heterocyclic compounds. Qualitative assessment of these reactions revealed that the ease of catalytic turnover increases (i) for smaller ring sizes (5 > 6 > 7), (ii) substrates that benefit from favorable Thorpe-Ingold effects, and (iii) substrates that do not possess additional substitution on the alkene entity. Prochiral substrates may undergo diastereoselective hydroamination/cyclization depending upon the position of the existing stereocenter. Furthermore, a number of minor byproducts of these reactions, arising from competitive alkene isomerization reactions, were identified. A series of stoichiometric reactions between the precatalysts and primary amines provided an important model for catalyst initiation and suggested that these reactions are facile at room temperature, with the reaction of the calcium precatalyst with benzylamine proceeding with DeltaG(o)(298 K) = -2.7 kcal mol(-1). Both external amine/amide exchange and coordinated amine/amide exchange were observed in model complexes, and the data suggest that these processes occur via low-activation-energy pathways. As a result of the formation of potentially reactive byproducts such as hexamethyldisilazane, calcium-catalyst initiation is reversible, whereas for the magnesium precatalyst, this process is nonreversible. Further stoichiometric reactions of the two precatalysts with 1-amino-2,2-diphenyl-4-pentene demonstrated that the alkene insertion step proceeds via a highly reactive transient alkylmetal intermediate that readily reacts with N-H sigma bonds under catalytically relevant conditions. The results of deuterium-labeling studies are consistent with the formation of a single transient alkyl complex for both the magnesium and calcium precatalysts. Kinetic analysis of the nonreversible magnesium system revealed that the reaction rate depends directly upon catalyst concentration and inversely upon substrate concentration, suggesting that substrate-inhibited alkene insertion is rate-determining.


ChemInform | 2010

Heterofunctionalization catalysis with organometallic complexes of calcium, strontium and barium

Anthony G. M. Barrett; Mark R. Crimmin; Michael S. Hill; Panayiotis A. Procopiou

Despite the routine employment of Grignard reagents and Hauser bases as stoichiometric carbanion reagents in organic and inorganic synthesis, a defined reaction chemistry encompassing the heavier elements of Group II (M = Ca, Sr and Ba) has, until recently, remained unreported. This article provides details of the recent progress in heavier Group II catalysed small molecule transformations mediated by well-defined heteroleptic and homoleptic complexes of the form LMX or MX2; where L is a mono-anionic ligand and X is a reactive σ-bonded substituent. The intra- and intermolecular heterofunctionalization (hydroamination, hydrophosphination, hydrosilylation and hydrogenation) of alkenes, alkynes, dienes, carbodiimides, isocyanates and ketones is discussed.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2008

Triazenide complexes of the heavier alkaline earths: Synthesis, characterization, and suitability for hydroamination catalysis

Anthony G. M. Barrett; Mark R. Crimmin; Michael S. Hill; Peter B. Hitchcock; Gabriele Kociok-Köhn; Panayiotis A. Procopiou

A series of triazenide complexes of the heavier alkaline earths, Ca, Sr and Ba, have been synthesized by either protonolysis or salt metathesis routes. Although complexes of the form [{Ar 2N 3}M{N(SiMe 3) 2}(THF) n ] (M = Ca, n = 2; M = Sr, n = 3; Ar = 2,6-diisopropylphenyl) and [{Ar 2N 3}Ca(I)(THF) 2] 2 could be isolated and characterized by X-ray crystallography, solution studies revealed the propensity of these species to undergo Schlenk-like redistribution with the formation of [{Ar 2N 3} 2M(THF) n ] (M = Ca, n = 1; M = Sr, n = 2). The latter compounds have been synthesized independently. In the case of the large barium dication, attempts to synthesize the heaviest analogue of the series, [{Ar 2N 3} 2Ba(THF) n ], failed and led instead to the isolation of the potassium barate complex [K{Ar 2N 3}Ba{N(SiMe 3) 2} 2(THF) 4]. Single crystal X-ray diffraction studies demonstrated that, although in all the aforementioned cases the triazenide ligand binds to the electrophilic group 2 metal centers via symmetrical kappa (2)- N, N-chelates, in the latter compound an unprecedented bridging mode is observed in which the triazenide ligand coordinates through both terminal and internal nitrogen centers. A series of density-functional theory computational experiments have been undertaken to assist in our understanding of this phenomenon. In further experiments, the calcium and strontium amide derivatives [{Ar 2N 3}M{N(SiMe 3) 2}(THF) n ] (M = Ca, n = 2; M = Sr, n = 3) proved to be catalytically active for the intramolecular hydroamination of 1-amino-2,2-diphenylpent-4-ene to form 2-methyl-4,4-diphenylpyrrolidine, with the calcium species demonstrating a higher turnover number than the strontium analogue ( 2a, TOF = 500 h (-1); 2b, TOF = 75 h (-1)). In these instances, because of ambiguities in the structural charcterization of the precatalyst in solution, such quantification holds little value and detailed catalytic studies have not been conducted.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Heavier Group 2 Metals and Intermolecular Hydroamination: A Computational and Synthetic Assessment

Anthony G. M. Barrett; Christine Brinkmann; Mark R. Crimmin; Michael S. Hill; Patricia A. Hunt; Panayiotis A. Procopiou

A density functional theory assessment of the use of the group 2 elements Mg, Ca, Sr, and Ba for the intermolecular hydroamination of ethene indicated that the efficiency of the catalysis is dependent upon both the polarity and the deformability of the electron density within the metal-substituent bonds of key intermediates and transition states. The validity of this analysis was supplemented by a preliminary study of the use of group 2 amides for the intermolecular hydroamination of vinyl arenes. Although strontium was found to provide the highest catalytic activity, in line with the expectation provided by the theoretical study, a preliminary kinetic analysis demonstrated that this is possibly a consequence of the increased radius and accessibility of this cation rather than a reflection of a reduced barrier for rate-determining alkene insertion.


Angewandte Chemie | 2012

Zirconocene Dichloride Catalyzed Hydrodefluorination of C sp 2F bonds

Shuhui Yow; Sarah J. Gates; Andrew J. P. White; Mark R. Crimmin

A two-metal job: Four-coordinate aluminum dihydrides such as 1 are reported as terminal reductants for the selective title reaction. The heterobimetallic complex 2 has been isolated and shown to be catalytically competent.


European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry | 2008

Heavier group-2-element catalyzed hydroamination of carbodiimides

Jennifer R. Lachs; Anthony G. M. Barrett; Mark R. Crimmin; Gabriele Kociok-Köhn; Michael S. Hill; Mary F. Mahon; Panayiotis A. Procopiou

Abstract The heteroleptic calcium amide [{ArNC(Me)CHC(Me)NAr}Ca{N(SiMe3)2}(THF)] (Ar = 2,6‐diisopropylphenyl) and the homoleptic heavier alkaline earth amides, [M{N(SiMe3)2}2(THF)2] (M = Ca, Sr and Ba) are reported as competent pre‐catalysts for the hydroamination of 1,3‐carbodiimides. Whilst the reaction scope is currently limited to reactions of aromatic amines with 1,3‐dialkylcarbodiimides, in most cases preparations in hydrocarbon solvents proceed rapidly at room temperature with catalyst loadings as low as 0.2 mol‐% and the guanidine reaction products crystallize directly from the reaction mixture. Initial studies are consistent with the intermediacy of heavier group‐2 guanidinate complexes.(© Wiley‐VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 69451 Weinheim, Germany, 2008)


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

A Step beyond the Feltham–Enemark Notation: Spectroscopic and Correlated ab Initio Computational Support for an Antiferromagnetically Coupled M(II)–(NO)− Description of Tp*M(NO) (M = Co, Ni)

Neil C. Tomson; Mark R. Crimmin; Taras Petrenko; Lauren E. Rosebrugh; Stephen Sproules; W. Christopher Boyd; Robert G. Bergman; Serena DeBeer; F. Dean Toste; Karl Wieghardt

Multiple spectroscopic and computational methods were used to characterize the ground-state electronic structure of the novel {CoNO}(9) species Tp*Co(NO) (Tp* = hydro-tris(3,5-Me(2)-pyrazolyl)borate). The metric parameters about the metal center and the pre-edge region of the Co K-edge X-ray absorption spectrum were reproduced by density functional theory (DFT), providing a qualitative description of the Co-NO bonding interaction as a Co(II) (S(Co) = 3/2) metal center, antiferromagnetically coupled to a triplet NO(-) anion (S(NO) = 1), an interpretation of the electronic structure that was validated by ab initio multireference methods (CASSCF/MRCI). Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy revealed significant g-anisotropy in the S = ½ ground state, but the linear-response DFT performed poorly at calculating the g-values. Instead, CASSCF/MRCI computational studies in conjunction with quasi-degenerate perturbation theory with respect to spin-orbit coupling were required for obtaining accurate modeling of the molecular g-tensor. The computational portion of this work was extended to the diamagnetic Ni analogue of the Co complex, Tp*Ni(NO), which was found to consist of a Ni(II) (S(Ni) = 1) metal center antiferromagnetically coupled to an S(NO) = 1 NO(-). The similarity between the Co and Ni complexes contrasts with the previously studied Cu analogues, for which a Cu(I) bound to NO(0) formulation has been described. This discrepancy will be discussed along with a comparison of the DFT and ab initio computational methods for their ability to predict various spectroscopic and molecular features.


Dalton Transactions | 2005

Kinetic stability of heteroleptic (β-diketiminato) heavier alkaline-earth (Ca, Sr, Ba) amides

Anthony G. Avent; Mark R. Crimmin; Michael S. Hill; Peter B. Hitchcock

The potential of the heteroleptic heavier alkaline-earth hexamethyldisilazides [{HC(C(Me)2N-2,6-iPr2C6H3)2}Ae{N(SiMe3)2}(THF)](Ae = Ca, Sr, Ba) as kinetically-stable reagents for further protolytic reaction chemistry has been assessed. Only the previously reported calcium complex was found to be stable to solution dismutation and dynamic ligand exchange. The barium complex was isolated in sufficient purity to enable characterisation by an X-ray analysis. Reactions of the kinetically robust calcium complex with cyclohexylamine and tert-butylamine resulted in displacement of THF and formation of solvated structures, which could be characterised by 1H NMR spectroscopy. Attempts to isolate these solvated complexes were unsuccessful due to redistribution to the homoleptic complex [{HC(C(Me)2N-2,6-iPr2C6H3)2}2Ca]. In contrast, the more acidic amine [H2NCH2CH2OMe] was cleanly deprotonated resulting in the isolation of the first well defined primary amido derivative of a heavier alkaline-earth element, [{HC(C(Me)2N-2,6-iPr2C6H3)2}Ca{NHCH2CH2OMe}]2, which retains its dimeric constitution in solution and is stable to further intermolecular ligand exchange. Reactions of [{HC(C(Me)2N-2,6-iPr2C6H3)2}Ca{N(SiMe3)2}(THF)] with a variety of ortho-disubstituted anilines also resulted in immediate protonation of the hexamethyldisilazide ligand. Only the most sterically demanding 2,6-diisopropylphenyl anilide derivative possessed sufficient kinetic stability to allow isolation of the heteroleptic complex. The crystal structure of [{HC(C(Me)2N-2,6-iPr2C6H3)2}Ca{N(H)-2,6-iPrC6H3}(THF)] was shown to exist as a mononuclear, pseudo-five-coordinate complex in which the coordinative unsaturation of the calcium centre is relieved by a Ca...H-C agostic-type interaction to one of the ortho isopropyl groups of the anilide ligand. This interaction is not maintained in solution however and the complex slowly redistributes to the homoleptic beta-diketiminato species and ill-defined polymeric calcium anilido products.


ChemInform | 2013

Homogeneous Catalysis with Organometallic Complexes of Group 2

Mark R. Crimmin; Michael S. Hill

This chapter provides details of the recent progress in heavier Group 2-catalyzed small molecule transformations mediated by well-defined heteroleptic and homoleptic complexes of the form LMX or MX2, where L is a monoanionic ligand and X is a reactive σ-bonded substituent and M = Mg, Ca, Sr, and Ba. The intra- and intermolecular heterofunctionalization (hydroamination, hydrophosphination, hydrosilylation, hydroboration, hydrogenation, and hydroacetylation) of alkenes, alkynes, dienes, carbodiimides, isocyanates, pyridines, quinolines, and ketones is discussed, along with the dimerization of aldehydes, the trimerization of isocyanates, and the dehydrogenation of amine-boranes and the dehydrogenative coupling of amines with silanes. While studies in this field have focused largely on biocompatible and inexpensive catalysts of calcium and the heavier elements, the field has renewed interest in the chemistry of organomagnesium complexes.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2014

Ligand-Based Carbon–Nitrogen Bond Forming Reactions of Metal Dinitrosyl Complexes with Alkenes and Their Application to C–H Bond Functionalization

Chen Zhao; Mark R. Crimmin; F. Dean Toste; Robert G. Bergman

Over the past few decades, researchers have made substantial progress in the development of transition metal complexes that activate and functionalize C-H bonds. For the most part, chemists have focused on aliphatic and aromatic C-H bonds and have put less effort into complexes that activate and functionalize vinylic C-H bonds. Our groups have recently developed a novel method to functionalize vinylic C-H bonds that takes advantage of the unique ligand-based reactivity of a rare class of metal dinitrosyl complexes. In this Account, we compare and discuss the chemistry of cobalt and ruthenium dinitrosyl complexes, emphasizing alkene binding, C-H functionalization, and catalysis. Initially discovered in the early 1970s by Brunner and studied more extensively in the 1980s by the Bergman group, the cyclopentadienylcobalt dinitrosyl complex CpCo(NO)2 reacts reversibly with alkenes to give, in many cases, stable and isolable cobalt dinitrosoalkane complexes. More recently, we found that treatment with strong bases, such as lithium hexamethyldisilazide, Verkades base, and phosphazene bases, deprotonates these complexes and renders them nucleophilic at the carbon α to the nitroso group. This conjugate anion of metal dinitrosoalkanes can participate in conjugate addition to Michael acceptors to form new carbon-carbon bonds. These functionalized cobalt complexes can further react through alkene exchange to furnish the overall vinylic C-H functionalized organic product. This stepwise sequence of alkene binding, functionalization, and retrocycloaddition represents an overall vinylic C-H functionalization reaction of simple alkenes and does not require directing groups. We have also developed an asymmetric variant of this reaction sequence and have used this method to synthesize C1- and C2-symmetric diene ligands with high enantioinduction. Building upon these stepwise reactions, we eventually developed a simple one-pot procedure that uses stoichiometric amounts of a cobalt dinitrosoalkane complex for both inter- and intramolecular C-H functionalization. We can achieve catalysis in one-pot intramolecular reactions with a limited range of substrates. Our groups have also reported an analogous ruthenium dinitrosyl complex. In analogy to the cobalt complex, this ruthenium complex reacts with alkenes in the presence of neutral bidentate ligands, such as TMEDA, to give octahedral dinitrosoalkane complexes. Intramolecular functionalization or cyclization of numerous ruthenium dinitrosoalkane complexes proceeds under mild reaction conditions to give the functionalized organic products in excellent yields. However, despite extensive efforts, so far we have not been able to carry out intermolecular reactions of these complexes with a variety of electrophiles or C-H functionalization reactions. Although additional work is necessary to further boost the catalytic capabilities of both cobalt and ruthenium dinitrosyl complexes for vinylic C-H functionalization of simple alkenes, we believe this ligand-based vinylic C-H functionalization reaction has provided chemists with a useful set of tools for organic synthesis.

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Adi E. Nako

Imperial College London

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