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Dive into the research topics where Max C. Holthausen is active.

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Featured researches published by Max C. Holthausen.


Nature Chemistry | 2011

Ammonia formation by metal–ligand cooperative hydrogenolysis of a nitrido ligand

Bjorn Askevold; Jorge Torres Nieto; Samat Tussupbayev; Martin Diefenbach; Eberhardt Herdtweck; Max C. Holthausen; Sven Schneider

Bioinspired hydrogenation of N(2) to ammonia at ambient conditions by stepwise nitrogen protonation/reduction with metal complexes in solution has experienced remarkable progress. In contrast, the highly desirable direct hydrogenation with H(2) remains difficult. In analogy to the heterogeneously catalysed Haber-Bosch process, such a reaction is conceivable via metal-centred N(2) splitting and unprecedented hydrogenolysis of the nitrido ligands to ammonia. We report the synthesis of a ruthenium(IV) nitrido complex. The high nucleophilicity of the nitrido ligand is demonstrated by unusual N-C coupling with π-acidic CO. Furthermore, the terminal nitrido ligand undergoes facile hydrogenolysis with H(2) at ambient conditions to produce ammonia in high yield. Kinetic and quantum chemical examinations of this reaction suggest cooperative behaviour of a phosphorus-nitrogen-phosphorus pincer ligand in rate-determining heterolytic hydrogen splitting.


Angewandte Chemie | 2009

9,10-Dihydro-9,10-diboraanthracene: supramolecular structure and use as a building block for luminescent conjugated polymers.

Michael Bolte; Haiyan Li; Hans-Wolfram Lerner; Max C. Holthausen; Frieder Jäkle; Matthias Wagner

Building bridges: The title compound forms an unprecedented polymeric structure with bridging B-H-B three-center two-electron bonds in the solid state. This organoborane serves as an efficient precursor for the preparation of boron-doped pi-conjugated polymers by hydroboration polymerization with a functionalized 1,4-diethynylbenzene (see picture). These polymers form thin films that show intense green luminescence.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 1995

The performance of density‐functional/Hartree–Fock hybrid methods: Cationic transition‐metal methyl complexes MCH+3 (M=Sc–Cu,La,Hf–Au)

Max C. Holthausen; Christoph Heinemann; Hans H. Cornehl; Wolfram Koch; Helmut Schwarz

Hybrid methods, including a mixture of Hartree–Fock exchange and density functional exchange‐correlation treatment have been applied to the cationic methyl complexes MCH+3 of the first and third‐row transition metals (M=Sc–Cu,La,Hf–Au). Bond dissociation energies and optimum geometries obtained with the ‘‘Becke‐Half‐and‐Half‐Lee–Yang–Parr’’ and ‘‘Becke‐3‐Lee–Yang–Parr’’ functionals and from calibration calculations employing quadratic configuration interaction with single and double excitations and with a perturbative estimate of triple excitations are reported. A comparison of the results for the 3d‐block species to earlier high‐level ab initio calculations and experimental data is carried out in order to assess the reliability of hybrid methods as a practical tool in organometallic chemistry. Furthermore, the bond dissociation energies of the cationic 5d‐block transition‐metal methyl complexes, many of which have not been investigated so far, are predicted.


Chemical Physics Letters | 1995

The performance of density functional/Hartree-Fock hybrid methods: the bonding in cationic first-row transition metal methylene complexes

Max C. Holthausen; Matthias Mohr; Wolfram Koch

Abstract Density functional theory/Hartree-Fock hybrid methods have been applied to the cationic methylene complexes MCH 2 + of the first-row transition metals (M = Sc-Cu). A comparison of the computed results with earlier high-level ab initio MO calculations and experimental data is presented in order to assess the reliability of such hybrid methods as a practical tool in organometallic chemistry.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Main-chain boron-containing oligophenylenes via ring-opening polymerization of 9-H-9-borafluorene.

Alexander Hübner; Zheng‐Wang Qu; Ulli Englert; Michael Bolte; Hans-Wolfram Lerner; Max C. Holthausen; Matthias Wagner

9-H-9-Borafluorene (H(8)C(12)BH; 5) can be generated in situ from 9-Br-9-borafluorene and Et(3)SiH in benzene or hexane. Monitoring of the reaction by NMR spectroscopy at rt in C(6)D(6) reveals that 5 forms C(1)-symmetric dimers (5)(2) under these conditions. DFT calculations on conceivable isomers of (5)(2) and a comparison of calculated and experimentally determined (1)H, (13)C, and (11)B NMR shift values lead to the conclusion that (5)(2) is not a classical dimer H(8)C(12)B(μ-H)(2)BC(12)H(8), but contains one B-H-B three-center, two-electron bond together with a boron-bridging phenyl ring. Addition of 1 equiv of pyridine to (5)(2) leads to the clean formation of the pyridine adduct H(8)C(12)BH(py) (5·py). Likewise, (5)(2) can be employed in hydroboration reactions, as evidenced by its transformation with 0.5 equiv of tert-butylacetylene, which gives the hydroboration products tBuC(H)(2)C(H)(BC(12)H(8))(2) (9) and tBuC(H)C(H)BC(12)H(8) in almost quantitative yield. (5)(2) is not long-term stable in benzene solution. Addition of pyridine to aged reaction mixtures allowed the isolation of the adduct (py)H(2)B-C(6)H(4)-C(6)H(4)-(py)BC(12)H(8) (10·py(2)) of a ring-opened dimer of 5. Storage of a hexane solution of 9-Br-9-borafluorene and Et(3)SiH for 1-2 weeks at rt leads to the formation of crystals of a ring-opened pentamer H[-(H)B-(C(6)H(4))(2)-](4)BC(12)H(8) (11) of 5 (preparative yields are obtained after 1-4 months). The polymer main chain of 11 is reinforced by four intrastrand B-H-B three-center, two-electron bonds. Apart from the main product 11, we have also isolated minor amounts of closely related oligomers carrying different chain ends, i.e., H(8)C(12)B-(C(6)H(4))(2)[-(H)B-(C(6)H(4))(2)-](2)BC(12)H(8) (12) and H[-(H)B-(C(6)H(4))(2)-](5)BH(2) (13). When the reaction between 9-Br-9-borafluorene and Et(3)SiH is carried out in refluxing toluene, the cyclic dimer [-(μ-H)B-(C(6)H(4))(2)-](2) (14) can be obtained in a crystalline yield of 25%. The compounds 9, 10·py(2), 11, 12, 13, and 14 have been structurally characterized by X-ray crystallography. The entire reaction pathway leading from 5 to 10, 11, 12, 13, and 14 has been thoroughly elucidated by DFT calculations and we propose a general mechanistic scenario applicable for ring-opening polymerization reactions of 9-borafluorenes.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2010

Spectroscopic and Computational Studies of an End-on Bound Superoxo-Cu(II) Complex: Geometric and Electronic Factors that Determine the Ground State

Julia S. Woertink; Li Tian; Debabrata Maiti; Heather R. Lucas; Richard A. Himes; Kenneth D. Karlin; Frank Neese; Christian Würtele; Max C. Holthausen; Eckhard Bill; Jörg Sundermeyer; Siegfried Schindler; Edward I. Solomon

A variety of techniques including absorption, magnetic circular dichroism (MCD), variable-temperature, variable-field MCD (VTVH-MCD), and resonance Raman (rR) spectroscopies are combined with density functional theory (DFT) calculations to elucidate the electronic structure of the end-on (η(1)) bound superoxo-Cu(II) complex [TMG(3)trenCuO(2)](+) (where TMG(3)tren is 1,1,1-tris[2-[N(2)-(1,1,3,3-tetramethylguanidino)]ethyl]amine). The spectral features of [TMG(3)trenCuO(2)](+) are assigned, including the first definitive assignment of a superoxo intraligand transition in a metal-superoxo complex, and a detailed description of end-on superoxo-Cu(II) bonding is developed. The lack of overlap between the two magnetic orbitals of [TMG(3)trenCuO(2)](+) eliminates antiferromagnetic coupling between the copper(II) and the superoxide, while the significant superoxo π*(σ) character of the copper dz(2) orbital leads to its ferromagnetically coupled, triplet, ground state.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Confirmed by X‐ray Crystallography: The B⋅B One‐Electron σ Bond

Alexander Hübner; Andreas M. Diehl; Martin Diefenbach; Burkhard Endeward; Michael Bolte; Hans-Wolfram Lerner; Max C. Holthausen; Matthias Wagner

Is one electron sufficient to bring about significant σ bonding between two atoms? The chemists view on the chemical bond is usually tied to the concept of shared electron pairs, and not too much experimental evidence exists to challenge this firm belief. Whilst species with the unusual one-electron σ-bonding motif between homonuclear atoms have so far been identified mainly by spectroscopic evidence, we present herein the first crystallographic characterization, augmented by a detailed quantum-chemical validation, for a radical anion featuring a B⋅B one-electron-two-center σ bond.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2012

A Mechanistic Study of the Utilization of arachno‐Diruthenaborane [(Cp*RuCO)2B2H6] as an Active Alkyne‐Cyclotrimerization Catalyst

K. Geetharani; Samat Tussupbayev; Julia Borowka; Max C. Holthausen; Sundargopal Ghosh

The reaction of nido-[1,2-(Cp*RuH)(2)B(3)H(7)] (1a, Cp*=η(5)-C(5)Me(5)) with [Mo(CO)(3)(CH(3)CN)(3)] under mild conditions yields the new metallaborane arachno-[(Cp*RuCO)(2)B(2)H(6)] (2). Compound 2 catalyzes the cyclotrimerization of a variety of internal- and terminal alkynes to yield mixtures of 1,3,5- and 1,2,4-substituted benzenes. The reactivities of nido-1a and arachno-2 with alkynes demonstrates that a change in geometry from nido to arachno drives a change in the reaction from alkyne-insertion to catalytic cyclotrimerization, respectively. Density functional calculations have been used to evaluate the reaction pathways of the cyclotrimerization of alkynes catalyzed by compound 2. The reaction involves the formation of a ruthenacyclic intermediate and the subsequent alkyne-insertion step is initiated by a [2+2] cycloaddition between this intermediate and an alkyne. The experimental and quantum-chemical results also show that the stability of the metallacyclic intermediate is strongly dependent on the nature of the substituents that are present on the alkyne.


Journal of Computational Chemistry | 2005

Benchmarking approximate density functional theory. I. s/d excitation energies in 3d transition metal cations.

Max C. Holthausen

The performance of a number of different implementations of density functional theory (DFT) for predicting the s/d interconfigurational energies of the 3d transition metal cations is investigated. Systematic comparisons of computed results with experimental data indicate that gradient corrected correlation functionals, like the LYP GGA, efficiently correct the flaws of the LDA, but reveal shortcomings in the treatment of exchange by currently available GGAs. The admixture of exact exchange in hybrid functionals eventually leads to largely reduced errors. Several basis sets available for the 3d elements are tested in combination with the B3LYP functional. Finally, the influence of variations of the admixture of exact exchange is systematically tested. The results reveal that computed s/d excitation energies obtained for the individual ions depend in markedly different ways on the amount of exact exchange admixture and that there is no single optimal and transferable exchange parameter to create a hybrid functional that yields improved results for all ions alike. Several of the recently devised functionals perform as good as or slightly better than the B3LYP functional in the present study. But given the fact that the B3LYP functional has been identified as the most successful DFT method in an overwhelming number of systematic investigations in very many areas of chemical research, there is no persuasive motivation to recommend its replacement by one of the other functionals, as much less is known about their robustness.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

A preorganized ditopic borane as highly efficient one- or two-electron trap.

Alexander Hübner; Thomas Kaese; Martin Diefenbach; Burkhard Endeward; Michael Bolte; Hans-Wolfram Lerner; Max C. Holthausen; Matthias Wagner

Reduction of the bis(9-borafluorenyl)methane 1 with excess lithium furnishes the red dianion salt Li2[1]. The corresponding dark green monoanion radical Li[1] is accessible through the comproportionation reaction between 1 and Li2[1]. EPR spectroscopy on Li[1] reveals hyperfine coupling of the unpaired electron to two magnetically equivalent boron nuclei (a((11)B) = 5.1 ± 0.1 G, a((10)B) = 1.7 ± 0.2 G). Further coupling is observed to the unique B-CH-B bridgehead proton (a((1)H) = 7.2 ± 0.2 G) and to eight aromatic protons (a((1)H) = 1.4 ± 0.1 G). According to X-ray crystallography, the B···B distances continuously decrease along the sequence 1 → [1](•-) → [1](2-) with values of 2.534(2), 2.166(4), and 1.906(3) Å, respectively. Protonation of Li2[1] leads to the cyclic borohydride species Li[1H] featuring a B-H-B two-electron-three-center bond. This result strongly indicates a nucleophilic character of the boron atoms; the reaction can also be viewed as rare example of the protonation of an element-element σ bond. According to NMR spectroscopy, EPR spectroscopy, and quantum-chemical calculations, [1](2-) represents a closed-shell singlet without any spin contamination. Detailed wave function analyses of [1](•-) and [1](2-) reveal strongly localized interactions of the two boron pz-type orbitals, with small delocalized contributions of the 9-borafluorenyl π systems. Overall, our results provide evidence for a direct B-B one-electron and two-electron bonding interaction in [1](•-) and [1](2-), respectively.

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Michael Bolte

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Matthias Wagner

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Wolfram Koch

Gesellschaft Deutscher Chemiker

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Martin Diefenbach

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Helmut Schwarz

Technical University of Berlin

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Sven Schneider

University of Göttingen

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