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Dive into the research topics where Raúl Hernández Sánchez is active.

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Featured researches published by Raúl Hernández Sánchez.


Chemical Science | 2013

Disulfide reductive elimination from an iron(III) complex

Janice L. Wong; Raúl Hernández Sánchez; Jennifer Glancy Logan; Ryan A. Zarkesh; Joseph W. Ziller; Alan F. Heyduk

The redox-active pincer ligand derived from bis(3,5-di-tert-butyl-2-phenol)amine, [ONOcat]H3, enables reductive elimination of di-tert-butyldisulfide from a putative iron(III) dithiolate complex. The quinonate synthon of the ligand, [ONOq]K, was used to prepare [ONOq]FeX2 complexes (1, X = Cl; 2, X = N(SiMe3)2), which were characterized by single-crystal X-ray diffraction, EPR and Mossbauer spectroscopies and identified to be high-spin iron(III) complexes. The protonolysis of 2 with tetrachlorocatechol afforded either monomeric [ONOq]Fe(ortho-C6O2Cl4)(py) (3) or dimeric {[ONOq]Fe(ortho-C6O2Cl4)}2 (4). In contrast, the protonolysis of 2 with tert-butylthiol resulted in the extrusion of di-tert-butyldisulfide and the formation of a [ONOcat]Fe fragment trapped with pyridine as monomeric [ONOcat]Fe(py)3 (5) or dimeric {[ONOcat]Fe(py)}2 (6). These results indicate that the [ONO]Fe platform can promote reductive elimination of disulfide without incurring changes to the metal oxidation state.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Synthesis of Open-Shell, Bimetallic Mn/Fe Trinuclear Clusters

Tamara M. Powers; Nina Xiao Gu; Alison R. Fout; Anne M. Baldwin; Raúl Hernández Sánchez; Denise Marie Alfonso; Yu-Sheng Chen; Shao-Liang Zheng; Theodore A. Betley

Concomitant deprotonation and metalation of hexadentate ligand platform (tbs)LH6 ((tbs)LH6 = 1,3,5-C6H9(NHC6H4-o-NHSiMe2(t)Bu)3) with divalent transition metal starting materials Fe2(Mes)4 (Mes = mesityl) or Mn3(Mes)6 in the presence of tetrahydrofuran (THF) resulted in isolation of homotrinuclear complexes ((tbs)L)Fe3(THF) and ((tbs)L)Mn3(THF), respectively. In the absence of coordinating solvent (THF), the deprotonation and metalation exclusively afforded dinuclear complexes of the type ((tbs)LH2)M2 (M = Fe or Mn). The resulting dinuclear species were utilized as synthons to prepare bimetallic trinuclear clusters. Treatment of ((tbs)LH2)Fe2 complex with divalent Mn source (Mn2(N(SiMe3)2)4) afforded the bimetallic complex ((tbs)L)Fe2Mn(THF), which established the ability of hexamine ligand (tbs)LH6 to support mixed metal clusters. The substitutional homogeneity of ((tbs)L)Fe2Mn(THF) was determined by (1)H NMR, (57)Fe Mössbauer, and X-ray fluorescence. Anomalous scattering measurements were critical for the unambiguous assignment of the trinuclear core composition. Heating a solution of ((tbs)LH2)Mn2 with a stoichiometric amount of Fe2(Mes)4 (0.5 mol equiv) affords a mixture of both ((tbs)L)Mn2Fe(THF) and ((tbs)L)Fe2Mn(THF) as a result of the thermodynamic preference for heavier metal substitution within the hexa-anilido ligand framework. These results demonstrate for the first time the assembly of mixed metal cluster synthesis in an unbiased ligand platform.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2013

Metal Atom Lability in Polynuclear Complexes

Emily V. Eames; Raúl Hernández Sánchez; Theodore A. Betley

The asymmetric oxidation product [((Ph)L)Fe3(μ-Cl)]2 [(Ph)LH6 = MeC(CH2NHPh-o-NHPh)3], where each trinuclear core is comprised of an oxidized diiron unit [Fe2](5+) and an isolated trigonal pyramidal ferrous site, reacts with MCl2 salts to afford heptanuclear bridged structures of the type ((Ph)L)2Fe6M(μ-Cl)4(thf)2, where M = Fe or Co. Zero-field, (57)Fe Mössbauer analysis revealed the Co resides within the trinuclear core subunits, not at the octahedral, halide-bridged MCl4(thf)2 position indicating Co migration into the trinuclear subunits has occurred. Reaction of [((Ph)L)Fe3(μ-Cl)]2 with CoCl2 (2 or 5 equivalents) followed by precipitation via addition of acetonitrile afforded trinuclear products where one or two irons, respectively, can be substituted within the trinuclear core. Metal atom substitution was verified by (1)H NMR, (57)Fe Mossbauer, single crystal X-ray diffraction, X-ray fluorescence, and magnetometry analysis. Spectroscopic analysis revealed that the Co atom(s) substitute(s) into the oxidized dimetal unit ([M2](5+)), while the M(2+) site remains iron-substituted. Magnetic data acquired for the series are consistent with this analysis revealing the oxidized dimetal unit comprises a strongly coupled S = 1 unit ([FeCo](5+)) or S = 1/2 ([Co2](5+)) that is weakly antiferromagnetically coupled to the high spin (S = 2) ferrous site. The kinetic pathway for metal substitution was probed via reaction of [((Ph)L)Fe3(μ-Cl)]2 with isotopically enriched (57)FeCl2(thf)2, the results of which suggest rapid equilibration of (57)Fe into both the M(2+) site and oxidized diiron site, achieving a 1:1 mixture.


Chemical Communications | 2011

Expanded redox accessibility via ligand substitution in an octahedral Fe6Br6 cluster

T. David Harris; Qinliang Zhao; Raúl Hernández Sánchez; Theodore A. Betley

Oxidation of the nominally all-ferrous hexanuclear cluster ((H)L)(2)Fe(6) with six equivalents of ferrocenium in the presence of bromide ions results in a six-electron oxidation of the Fe(6) core to afford the nominally all-ferric cluster ((H)L)(2)Fe(6)Br(6). The hexabromide cluster is also structurally characterized in a 4+ core oxidation state. A structural comparison of these two clusters provides an insight into the Fe(6) core electronic structure.


Nano Letters | 2017

Single-Walled Carbon Nanotubes: Mimics of Biological Ion Channels

Hasti Amiri; Kenneth L. Shepard; Colin Nuckolls; Raúl Hernández Sánchez

Here we report on the ion conductance through individual, small diameter single-walled carbon nanotubes. We find that they are mimics of ion channels found in natural systems. We explore the factors governing the ion selectivity and permeation through single-walled carbon nanotubes by considering an electrostatic mechanism built around a simplified version of the Gouy–Chapman theory. We find that the single-walled carbon nanotubes preferentially transported cations and that the cation permeability is size-dependent. The ionic conductance increases as the absolute hydration enthalpy decreases for monovalent cations with similar solid-state radii, hydrated radii, and bulk mobility. Charge screening experiments using either the addition of cationic or anionic polymers, divalent metal cations, or changes in pH reveal the enormous impact of the negatively charged carboxylates at the entrance of the single-walled carbon nanotubes. These observations were modeled in the low-to-medium concentration range (0.1–2.0 M) by an electrostatic mechanism that mimics the behavior observed in many biological ion channel-forming proteins. Moreover, multi-ion conduction in the high concentration range (>2.0 M) further reinforces the similarity between single-walled carbon nanotubes and protein ion channels.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Maximizing Electron Exchange in a [Fe3] Cluster

Raúl Hernández Sánchez; Amymarie Kathryn Bartholomew; Tamara M. Powers; Gabriel Ménard; Theodore A. Betley

The one-electron reduction of ((tbs)L)Fe₃(thf)¹ furnishes [M][((tbs)L)Fe₃] ([M]⁺ = [(18-C-6)K(thf)₂]⁺ (1, 76%) or [(crypt-222)K]⁺ (2, 54%)). Upon reduction, the ligand (tbs)L⁶⁻ rearranges around the triiron core to adopt an almost ideal C₃-symmetry. Accompanying the ((tbs)L) ligand rearrangement, the THF bound to the neutral starting material is expelled, and the Fe-Fe distances within the trinuclear cluster contract by ∼0.13 Å in 1. Variable-temperature magnetic susceptibility data indicates a well-isolated S = 11/2 spin ground state that persists to room temperature. Slow magnetic relaxation is observed at low temperature as evidenced by the out-of-phase (χ(M)″) component of the alternating current (ac) magnetic susceptibility data and by the appearance of hyperfine splitting in the zero-field ⁵⁷Fe Mössbauer spectra at 4.2 K. Analysis of the ac magnetic susceptibility yields an effective spin reversal barrier (U(eff)) of 22.6(2) cm⁻¹, nearly matching the theoretical barrier of 38.7 cm⁻¹ calculated from the axial zero-field splitting parameter (D = -1.29 cm⁻¹) extracted from the reduced magnetization data. A polycrystalline sample of 1 displays three sextets in the Mössbauer spectrum at 4.2 K (H(ext) = 0) which converge to a single six-line pattern in a frozen 2-MeTHF glass sample, indicating a unique iron environment and thus strong electron delocalization. The spin ground state and ligand rearrangement are discussed within the framework of a fully delocalized cluster exhibiting strong double and direct exchange interactions.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2014

Formation of Heterobimetallic Zirconium/Cobalt Diimido Complexes via a Four-Electron Transformation

Bing Wu; Raúl Hernández Sánchez; Mark W. Bezpalko; Bruce M. Foxman; Christine M. Thomas

The reactivity of the reduced heterobimetallic complex Zr((i)PrNP(i)Pr2)3CoN2 (1) toward aryl azides was examined, revealing a four-electron redox transformation to afford unusual heterobimetallic zirconium/cobalt diimido complexes. In the case of p-tolyl azide, the diamagnetic C3-symmetric bis(terminal imido) complex 3 is formed, but mesityl azide instead leads to asymmetric complex 4 featuring a bridging imido fragment.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Meta-Atom Behavior in Clusters Revealing Large Spin Ground States.

Raúl Hernández Sánchez; Theodore A. Betley

The field of single molecule magnetism remains predicated on super- and double exchange mechanisms to engender large spin ground states. An alternative approach to achieving high-spin architectures involves synthesizing weak-field clusters featuring close M-M interactions to produce a single valence orbital manifold. Population of this orbital manifold in accordance with Hunds rules could potentially yield thermally persistent high-spin ground states under which the valence electrons remain coupled. We now demonstrate this effect with a reduced hexanuclear iron cluster that achieves an S = 19/2 (χ(M)T ≈ 53 cm(3) K/mol) ground state that persists to 300 K, representing the largest spin ground state persistent to room temperature reported to date. The reduced cluster displays single molecule magnet behavior manifest in both variable-temperature zero-field (57)Fe Mössbauer and magnetometry with a spin reversal barrier of 42.5(8) cm(-1) and a magnetic blocking temperature of 2.9 K (0.059 K/min).


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Synthesis of Well‐Defined Bicapped Octahedral Iron Clusters [(trenL)2Fe8(PMe2Ph)2]n (n=0, −1)

Raúl Hernández Sánchez; Alexander M. Willis; Shao-Liang Zheng; Theodore A. Betley

The synthesis of polynuclear clusters with control over size and cluster geometry remains an unsolved challenge. Herein, we report the synthesis and characterization of open-shell octairon clusters supported by two heptaamine ligands [o-H2 NC6 H4 NH(CH2 )2 ]3 N ((tren) LH9 ). The crystal structure of the all-ferrous species ([(tren) L)2 Fe8 (PMe2 Ph)2 ] (1) displays a bicapped octahedral geometry with FeFe distances ranging from 2.4071(6) to 2.8236(5) Å, where the ligand amine units are formally in amine, amide, and imide oxidation states. Several redox states of the octairon cluster are accessible, as ascertained using cyclic voltammetry. The one-electron-reduced clusters [M](+) [((tren) L)2 Fe8 (PMe2 Ph)2 ](-) (M=Bu4 N (2 a); (15-crown-5)Na(thf) (2 b)) were isolated and characterized. Variable-temperature magnetic susceptibility data indicates that the exchange coupling within the [Fe8 ] core is antiferromagnetic which is attenuated upon reduction to the mixed valent anion.


Nano Letters | 2017

Molecular Materials for Nonaqueous Flow Batteries with a High Coulombic Efficiency and Stable Cycling

Margarita Milton; Qian Cheng; Yuan Yang; Colin Nuckolls; Raúl Hernández Sánchez; Thomas J. Sisto

This manuscript presents a working redox battery in organic media that possesses remarkable cycling stability. The redox molecules have a solubility over 1 mol electrons/liter, and a cell with 0.4 M electron concentration is demonstrated with steady performance >450 cycles (>74 days). Such a concentration is among the highest values reported in redox flow batteries with organic electrolytes. The average Coulombic efficiency of this cell during cycling is 99.868%. The stability of the cell approaches the level necessary for a long lifetime nonaqueous redox flow battery. For the membrane, we employ a low cost size exclusion cellulose membrane. With this membrane, we couple the preparation of nanoscale macromolecular electrolytes to successfully avoid active material crossover. We show that this cellulose-based membrane can support high voltages in excess of 3 V and extreme temperatures (-20 to 110 °C). These extremes in temperature and voltage are not possible with aqueous systems. Most importantly, the nanoscale macromolecular platforms we present here for our electrolytes can be readily tuned through derivatization to realize the promise of organic redox flow batteries.

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Fay Ng

Columbia University

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Guang Wu

University of California

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