Merle Arrowsmith
University of Bath
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Featured researches published by Merle Arrowsmith.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009
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.
Chemical Communications | 2012
Merle Arrowsmith; Terrance J. Hadlington; Michael S. Hill; Gabriele Kociok-Köhn
The heteroleptic magnesium alkyl complex [CH{C(Me)NAr}(2)Mg(n)Bu] (Ar = 2,6-(i)Pr(2)C(6)H(3)) is reported as a highly efficient pre-catalyst for the hydroboration of aldehydes and ketones with pinacolborane.
Angewandte Chemie | 2009
Merle Arrowsmith; Michael S. Hill; Dugald J. MacDougall; Mary F. Mahon
High-de-hydride! A straightforward reaction between a magnesium silylamido/N-heterocyclic carbene adduct and phenylsilane provides a {Mg(4)H(6)} cluster molecule that may be regarded as a combination of two magnesium dihydride and two magnesium monohydride moieties.
Angewandte Chemie | 2012
Merle Arrowsmith; Michael S. Hill; Gabriele Kociok-Köhn; Dugald J. MacDougall; Mary F. Mahon
Berylliant! Interaction of a well-defined adduct of MeBeH and an N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) with PhSiH 3 results in complete rupture of the heterocycle, and activation of the NHC through effective BeH 2 insertion into a C-N bond of the heterocycle (see scheme; Ar=2,6- diisopropylphenyl, IPr=1,3-bis(2,6-diisopropylphenyl)imidazol-2-ylidene).
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2013
Merle Arrowsmith; Michael S. Hill; Gabriele Kociok-Köhn
The β-diketiminato magnesium alkyl complex [LMgnBu] (L=CH{CMe(NDipp)}(2), Dipp=diisopropylphenyl) is shown to be a highly effective precatalyst for the hydroboration of alkyl and aryl substituted aldimines and ketimines with pinacol borane (HBpin). Catalysis is proposed to occur through a sequence of Mg-N/B-H metathesis and rate-determining Mg-H/N=C insertion steps, a proposal strongly supported by stoichiometric studies and kinetic analysis. The reactions are observed to proceed through the intermediacy of well-defined magnesium amides, two examples of which have been isolated and structurally characterized. Mechanistic investigations suggest that the catalytic rate-determining process occurs at an isolated magnesium center and requires the presence of two molecules of the imine substrate for effective turnover. This latter observation is rationalized as a requirement for the secondary substrate molecule to displace HBpin from the coordination sphere of the catalytic magnesium center.
Angewandte Chemie | 2017
Merle Arrowsmith; Holger Braunschweig; Tom E. Stennett
Recent years have seen rapid advances in the chemistry of small molecules containing electron-precise boron-boron bonds. This Review provides an overview of the latest methods for the controlled synthesis of B-B single and multiple bonds as well as the ever-expanding range of reactivity displayed by B-B multiple bonds.
Chemical Science | 2014
Mathew D. Anker; Merle Arrowsmith; Peter Bellham; Michael S. Hill; Gabriele Kociok-Köhn; David J. Liptrot; Mary F. Mahon; Catherine Weetman
Treatment of β-diketiminato Mg and Ca amidoborane compounds with B(C6F5)3 induces hydride elimination and formation of alkaline earth hydrido-tris(pentafluorophenyl)borate derivatives. Both species react with CO2 to provide formate complexes, one of which has been structurally characterised, and may be applied to the highly selective reductive hydroboration of CO2 with pinacolborane (HBpin) to provide the methanol equivalent, CH3OBpin.
Nature Chemistry | 2016
Merle Arrowsmith; Holger Braunschweig; Mehmet Ali Celik; Theresa Dellermann; Rian D. Dewhurst; William C. Ewing; Kai Hammond; Thomas Kramer; Ivo Krummenacher; Jan Mies; Krzysztof Radacki; Julia K. Schuster
The metals of the s block of the periodic table are well known to be exceptional electron donors, and the vast majority of their molecular complexes therefore contain these metals in their fully oxidized form. Low-valent main-group compounds have recently become desirable synthetic targets owing to their interesting reactivities, sometimes on a par with those of transition-metal complexes. In this work, we used stabilizing cyclic (alkyl)(amino)carbene ligands to isolate and characterize the first neutral compounds that contain a zero-valent s-block metal, beryllium. These brightly coloured complexes display very short beryllium-carbon bond lengths and linear beryllium coordination geometries, indicative of strong multiple Be-C bonding. Structural, spectroscopic and theoretical results show that the complexes adopt a closed-shell singlet configuration with a Be(0) metal centre. The surprising stability of the molecule can be ascribed to an unusually strong three-centre two-electron π bond across the C-Be-C unit.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2012
Merle Arrowsmith; Michael S. Hill; Gabriele Kociok-Köhn; Dugald J. MacDougall; Mary F. Mahon; Ian Mallov
A series of mononuclear, heteroleptic beryllium complexes supported by the monoanionic β-diketiminate ligand [HC{CMeNDipp}(2)](-) (L; Dipp = 2,6-diisopropylphenyl) have been synthesized. Halide complexes of the form [LBeX] (X = Cl, I) and a bis(trimethylsilyl)amide complex were produced via salt metathesis routes. Alkylberyllium β-diketiminate complexes of the form [LBeR] (R = Me, (n)Bu) were obtained by salt metathesis from the chloride precursor [LBeCl]. Controlled hydrolysis of [LBeMe] afforded an air-stable, monomeric β-diketiminatoberyllium hydroxide complex. [LBeMe] also underwent facile protonolysis with alcohols to form the corresponding β-diketiminatoberyllium alkoxides [LBeOR] (R = Me, (t)Bu, Ph). High temperatures and prolonged reaction times were required for protonolysis of [LBeMe] with primary amines to yield the β-diketiminatoberyllium amide complexes [LBeNHR] (R = (n)Bu, CH(2)Ph, Ph). No reactions were observed between [LBeMe] and silanes, terminal acetylenes, or secondary amines. All compounds were characterized by (1)H, (13)C, and (9)Be NMR spectroscopy and, in most cases, by X-ray crystallography. Reduction of the beryllium chloride complex with potassium metal resulted in apparent hydrogen-atom transfer between two β-diketiminate backbones, yielding two dimeric, potassium chloride bridged diamidoberyllium species. X-ray analysis of a cocrystallized mixture of the 18-crown-6 adducts of these species allowed unambiguous identification of the two reduced diketiminate ligands, one of which had been deprotonated at a backbone methyl substituent and the other reduced by hydride addition to the β-imine position. It is proposed that this process occurs by the formation of an unobserved radical anion species and intermolecular hydrogen-atom transfer by a radical-based hydrogen abstraction mechanism.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016
Merle Arrowsmith; Julian Böhnke; Holger Braunschweig; Mehmet Ali Celik; Theresa Dellermann; Kai Hammond
Room temperature hydrogenation of an SIDep-stabilized diboryne (SIDep=1,3-bis(diethylphenyl)-4,5-dihydroimidazol-2-ylidene) and a cAAC-supported diboracumulene (cAAC=1-(2,6-diisopropylphenyl)-3,3,5,5-tetramethylpyrrolidin-2-ylidene) provided the first selective route to the corresponding 1,2-dihydrodiborenes. DFT calculations showed an overall exothermic (ΔG=19.4 kcal mol-1 ) two-step asynchronous H2 addition mechanism proceeding via a bridging hydride.