Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Pavel A. Dub is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Pavel A. Dub.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Unravelling the Mechanism of the Asymmetric Hydrogenation of Acetophenone by [RuX2(diphosphine)(1,2-diamine)] Catalysts

Pavel A. Dub; Neil J. Henson; Richard L. Martin; John C. Gordon

The mechanism of catalytic hydrogenation of acetophenone by the chiral complex trans-[RuCl2{(S)-binap}{(S,S)-dpen}] and KO-t-C4H9 in propan-2-ol is revised on the basis of DFT computations carried out in dielectric continuum and the most recent experimental observations. The results of these collective studies suggest that neither a six-membered pericyclic transition state nor any multibond concerted transition states are involved. Instead, a hydride moiety is transferred in an outer-sphere manner to afford an ion-pair, and the corresponding transition state is both enantio- and rate-determining. Heterolytic dihydrogen cleavage proceeds neither by a (two-bond) concerted, four-membered transition state, nor by a (three-bond) concerted, six-membered transition state mediated by a solvent molecule. Instead, cleavage of the H-H bond is achieved via deprotonation of the η(2)-H2 ligand within a cationic Ru complex by the chiral conjugate base of (R)-1-phenylethanol. Thus, protonation of the generated (R)-1-phenylethoxide anion originates from the η(2)-H2 ligand of the cationic Ru complex and not from NH protons of a neutral Ru trans-dihydride complex, as initially suggested within the framework of a metal-ligand bifunctional mechanism. Detailed computational analysis reveals that the 16e(-) Ru amido complex [RuH{(S)-binap}{(S,S)-HN(CHPh)2NH2}] and the 18e(-) Ru alkoxo complex trans-[RuH{OCH(CH3)(R)}{(S)-binap}{(S,S)-dpen}] (R = CH3 or C6H5) are not intermediates within the catalytic cycle, but rather are off-loop species. The accelerative effect of KO-t-C4H9 is explained by the reversible formation of the potassium amidato complexes trans-[RuH2{(S)-binap}{(S,S)-N(K)H(CHPh)2NH2}] or trans-[RuH2{(S)-binap}{(S,S)-N(K)H(CHPh)2NH(K)}]. The three-dimensional (3D) cavity observed within these molecules results in a chiral pocket stabilized via several different noncovalent interactions, including neutral and ionic hydrogen bonding, cation-π interactions, and π-π stacking interactions. Cooperatively, these interactions modify the catalyst structure, in turn lowering the relative activation barrier of hydride transfer by ~1-2 kcal mol(-1) and the following H-H bond cleavage by ~10 kcal mol(-1), respectively. A combined computational study and analysis of recent experimental data of the reaction pool results in new mechanistic insight into the catalytic cycle for hydrogenation of acetophenone by Noyoris catalyst, in the presence or absence of KO-t-C4H9.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Practical selective hydrogenation of α-fluorinated esters with bifunctional pincer-type ruthenium(II) catalysts leading to fluorinated alcohols or fluoral hemiacetals.

Takashi Otsuka; Akihiro Ishii; Pavel A. Dub; Takao Ikariya

Selective hydrogenation of fluorinated esters with pincer-type bifunctional catalysts RuHCl(CO)(dpa) 1a, trans-RuH2(CO)(dpa) 1b, and trans-RuCl2(CO)(dpa) 1c under mild conditions proceeds rapidly to give the corresponding fluorinated alcohols or hemiacetals in good to excellent yields. Under the optimized conditions, the hydrogenation of chiral (R)-2-fluoropropionate proceeds smoothly to give the corresponding chiral alcohol without any serious decrease of the ee value.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

The Pt-Catalyzed Ethylene Hydroamination by Aniline: A Computational Investigation of the Catalytic Cycle

Pavel A. Dub; Rinaldo Poli

A full QM DFT study without system simplification and with the inclusion of solvation effects in aniline as solvent has addressed the addition of aniline to ethylene catalyzed by PtBr(2)/Br(-). The resting state of the catalytic cycle is the [PtBr(3)(C(2)H(4))](-) complex (II). A cycle involving aniline activation by N-H oxidative addition was found energetically prohibitive. The operating cycle involves ethylene activation followed by nucleophilic addition of aniline to the coordinated ethylene, intramolecular transfer of the ammonium proton to the metal center to generate a 5-coordinate (16-electron) Pt(IV)-H intermediate, and final reductive elimination of the PhNHEt product. Several low-energy ethylene complexes, namely trans- and cis-PtBr(2)(C(2)H(4))(PhNH(2)) (IV and V) and trans- and cis-PtBr(2)(C(2)H(4))(2) (VII and VIII) are susceptible to aniline nucleophilic addition to generate zwitterionic intermediates. However, only [PtBr(3)CH(2)CH(2)NH(2)Ph](-) (IX) derived from PhNH(2) addition to II is the productive intermediate. It easily transfers a proton to the Pt atom to yield [PtHBr(3)(CH(2)CH(2)NHPh)](-) (XX), which leads to rate-determining C-H reductive elimination through transition state TS(XX-L) with formation of the σ-complex [PtBr(3)(κ(2):C,H-HCH(2)CH(2)NHPh)](-) (L), from which the product can be liberated via ligand substitution by a new C(2)H(4) molecule to regenerate II. Saturated (18-electron) Pt(IV)-hydride complexes obtained by ligand addition or by chelation of the aminoalkyl ligand liberate the product through higher-energy pathways. Other pathways starting from the zwitterionic intermediates were also explored (intermolecular N deprotonation followed by C protonation or chelation to produce platina(II)azacyclobutane derivatives; intramolecular proton transfer from N to C, either direct or assisted by an external aniline molecule) but all gave higher-energy intermediates or led to the same rate-determining TS(XX-L).


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Why Does Alkylation of the N–H Functionality within M/NH Bifunctional Noyori-Type Catalysts Lead to Turnover?

Pavel A. Dub; Brian L. Scott; John C. Gordon

Molecular metal/NH bifunctional Noyori-type catalysts are remarkable in that they are among the most efficient artificial catalysts developed to date for the hydrogenation of carbonyl functionalities (loadings up to ∼10-5 mol %). In addition, these catalysts typically exhibit high C═O/C═C chemo- and enantioselectivities. This unique set of properties is traditionally associated with the operation of an unconventional mechanism for homogeneous catalysts in which the chelating ligand plays a key role in facilitating the catalytic reaction and enabling the aforementioned selectivities by delivering/accepting a proton (H+) via its N-H bond cleavage/formation. A recently revised mechanism of the Noyori hydrogenation reaction (Dub, P. A. et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2014, 136, 3505) suggests that the N-H bond is not cleaved but serves to stabilize the turnover-determining transition states (TDTSs) via strong N-H···O hydrogen-bonding interactions (HBIs). The present paper shows that this is consistent with the largely ignored experimental fact that alkylation of the N-H functionality within M/NH bifunctional Noyori-type catalysts leads to detrimental catalytic activity. The purpose of this work is to demonstrate that decreasing the strength of this HBI, ultimately to the limit of its complete absence, are conditions under which the same alkylation may lead to beneficial catalytic activity.


ACS Catalysis | 2012

Catalytic Reductive Transformations of Carboxylic and Carbonic Acid Derivatives Using Molecular Hydrogen

Pavel A. Dub; Takao Ikariya


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Quantum chemical calculations with the inclusion of nonspecific and specific solvation: asymmetric transfer hydrogenation with bifunctional ruthenium catalysts.

Pavel A. Dub; Takao Ikariya


ACS Catalysis | 2017

Metal–Ligand Bifunctional Catalysis: The “Accepted” Mechanism, the Issue of Concertedness, and the Function of the Ligand in Catalytic Cycles Involving Hydrogen Atoms

Pavel A. Dub; John C. Gordon


Organometallics | 2012

DFT and Experimental Studies on the PtX2/X–-Catalyzed Olefin Hydroamination: Effect of Halogen, Amine Basicity, and Olefin on Activity, Regioselectivity, and Catalyst Deactivation

Pavel A. Dub; Aurélien Béthegnies; Rinaldo Poli


Organometallics | 2015

Air-Stable NNS (ENENES) Ligands and Their Well-Defined Ruthenium and Iridium Complexes for Molecular Catalysis

Pavel A. Dub; Brian L. Scott; John C. Gordon


Tetrahedron Letters | 2012

A practical asymmetric conjugate addition to cyclic enones with chiral bifunctional Ru amido catalysts

Pavel A. Dub; Hui Wang; Masahito Watanabe; Ilya D. Gridnev; Takao Ikariya

Collaboration


Dive into the Pavel A. Dub's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Takao Ikariya

Tokyo Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John C. Gordon

Los Alamos National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hui Wang

Tokyo Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brian L. Scott

Los Alamos National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Masahito Watanabe

Tokyo Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shigeki Kuwata

Tokyo Institute of Technology

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge