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Dive into the research topics where Richard T. Oakley is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard T. Oakley.


Journal of Organometallic Chemistry | 1987

Preparation of N,N,N′-tris(trimethylsilyl)amidines; a convenient route to unsubstituted amidines

René T. Boeré; Richard T. Oakley; Robert W. Reed

The tris(trimethylsilyl)amidines RC(NSiMe3)N(SiMe3)2 (R  C6H5, p-CH3C6-H4, p-ClC6H4, p-MeOC6H4, p-Me2NC6H4, p-CF3C6H4, p-C6H5C6H4 and CF3) are prepared by the reaction of the respective nitriles with (Me3Si)2NLi·OEt2 in ether to give intermediates RC(NLi)N(SiMe3)2. Heating these intermediates with ClSiMe3 in toluene affords the products, which are isolated by vacuum distillation, in high yield. With 1,4-dicyanobenzene, two equivalents of reagents affords the per(trimethylsilyl)-1,4-diamidine. Hydrolysis of the intermediates with 6N ethanolic HCl affords the unsubstituted amidine hydrochlorides RC(NH)NH2·HCl (R  C6-H5, p-MeOCh6H4, p-ClC6H4, p-O2NC6H4) in high yield.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Hysteretic spin crossover between a bisdithiazolyl radical and its hypervalent σ-dimer.

Kristina Lekin; Stephen M. Winter; L. E. Downie; Xuezhao Bao; John S. Tse; Serge Desgreniers; Richard A. Secco; Paul A. Dube; Richard T. Oakley

The bisdithiazolyl radical 1a is dimorphic, existing in two distinct molecular and crystal modifications. The α-phase crystallizes in the tetragonal space group P4̅2(1)m and consists of π-stacked radicals, tightly clustered about 4̅ points and running parallel to c. The β-phase belongs to the monoclinic space group P2(1)/c and, at ambient temperature and pressure, is composed of π-stacked dimers in which the radicals are linked laterally by hypervalent four-center six-electron S···S-S···S σ-bonds. Variable-temperature magnetic susceptibility χ measurements confirm that α-1a behaves as a Curie-Weiss paramagnet; the low-temperature variations in χ can be modeled in terms of a 1D Heisenberg chain of weakly coupled AFM S = (1)/(2) centers. The dimeric phase β-1a is essentially diamagnetic up to 380 K. Above this temperature there is a sharp hysteretic (T↑= 380 K, T↓ = 375 K) increase in χ and χT. Powder X-ray diffraction analysis of β-1a at 393 K has established that the phase transition corresponds to a dimer-to-radical conversion in which the hypervalent S···S-S···S σ-bond is cleaved. Variable-temperature and -pressure conductivity measurements indicate that α-1a behaves as a Mott insulator, but the ambient-temperature conductivity σ(RT) increases from near 10(-7) S cm(-1) at 0.5 GPa to near 10(-4) S cm(-1) at 5 GPa. The value of σ(RT) for β-1a (near 10(-4) S cm(-1) at 0.5 GPa) initially decreases with pressure as the phase change takes place, but beyond 1.5 GPa this trend reverses, and σ(RT) increases in a manner which parallels the behavior of α-1a. These changes in conductivity of β-1a are interpreted in terms of a pressure-induced dimer-to-radical phase change. High-pressure, ambient-temperature powder diffraction analysis of β-1a confirms such a transition between 0.65 and 0.98 GPa and establishes that the structural change involves rupture of the dimer in a manner akin to that observed at high temperature and ambient pressure. The response of the S···S-S···S σ-bond in β-1a to heat and pressure is compared to that of related dimers possessing S···Se-Se···S σ-bonds.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

From Magnets to Metals: The Response of Tetragonal Bisdiselenazolyl Radicals to Pressure

Alicea A. Leitch; Kristina Lekin; Stephen M. Winter; L. E. Downie; H. Tsuruda; John S. Tse; Masaki Mito; Serge Desgreniers; Paul A. Dube; S. Zhang; Q. Liu; Changqing Jin; Yasuo Ohishi; Richard T. Oakley

The bromo-substituted bisdiselenazolyl radical 4b (R(1) = Et, R(2) = Br) is isostructural with the corresponding chloro-derivative 4a (R(1) = Et, R(2) = Cl), both belonging to the tetragonal space group P(4)2(1)m and consisting of slipped π-stack arrays of undimerized radicals. Variable temperature, ambient pressure conductivity measurements indicate a similar room temperature conductivity near 10(-4) S cm(-1) for the two compounds, but 4b displays a slightly higher thermal activation energy E(act) (0.23 eV) than 4a (0.19 eV). Like 4a, radical 4b behaves as a bulk ferromagnet with an ordering temperature of T(C) = 17.5 K. The coercive field H(c) (at 2 K) of 1600 Oe for 4b is, however, significantly greater than that observed for 4a (1370 Oe). High pressure (0-15 GPa) structural studies on both compounds have shown that compression reduces the degree of slippage of the π-stacks, which gives rise to changes in the magnetic and conductive properties of the radicals. Relatively mild loadings (<2 GPa) cause an increase in T(C) for both compounds, that of 4b reaching a maximum value of 24 K; further compression to 5 GPa leads to a decrease in T(C) and loss of magnetization. Variable temperature and pressure conductivity measurements indicate a decrease in E(act) with increasing pressure, with eventual conversion of both compounds from a Mott insulating state to one displaying weakly metallic behavior in the region of 7 GPa (for 4a) and 9 GPa (for 4b).


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Semiquinone-Bridged Bisdithiazolyl Radicals as Neutral Radical Conductors

Xin Yu; Aaron Mailman; Kristina Lekin; Abdeljalil Assoud; Craig M. Robertson; Bruce C. Noll; Charles F. Campana; Judith A. K. Howard; Paul A. Dube; Richard T. Oakley

Semiquinone-bridged bisdithiazolyls 3 represent a new class of resonance-stabilized neutral radical for use in the design of single-component conductive materials. As such, they display electrochemical cell potentials lower than those of related pyridine-bridged bisdithiazolyls, a finding which heralds a reduced on-site Coulomb repulsion U. Crystallographic characterization of the chloro-substituted derivative 3a and its acetonitrile solvate 3a·MeCN, both of which crystallize in the polar orthorhombic space group Pna2(1), revealed the importance of intermolecular oxygen-to-sulfur (CO···SN) interactions in generating rigid, tightly packed radical π-stacks, including the structural motif found for 3a·MeCN in which radicals in neighboring π-stacks are locked into slipped-ribbon-like arrays. This architecture gives rise to strong intra- and interstack overlap and hence a large electronic bandwidth W. Variable-temperature conductivity measurements on 3a and 3a·MeCN indicated high values of σ(300 K) (>10(-3) S cm(-1)) with correspondingly low thermal activation energies E(act), reaching 0.11 eV in the case of 3a·MeCN. Overall, the strong performance of these materials as f = ½ conductors is attributed to a combination of low U and large W. Variable-temperature magnetic susceptibility measurements were performed on both 3a and 3a·MeCN. The unsolvated material 3a orders as a spin-canted antiferromagnet at 8 K, with a canting angle φ = 0.14° and a coercive field H(c) = 80 Oe at 2 K.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Crossing the Insulator-to-Metal Barrier with a Thiazyl Radical Conductor

Aaron Mailman; Stephen M. Winter; Xin Yu; Craig M. Robertson; Wenjun Yong; John S. Tse; Richard A. Secco; Zhenxian Liu; Paul A. Dube; Judith A. K. Howard; Richard T. Oakley

The layered-sheet architecture of the crystal structure of the fluoro-substituted oxobenzene-bridged bisdithiazolyl radical FBBO affords a 2D π-electronic structure with a large calculated bandwidth. The material displays high electrical conductivity for a f = 1/2 system, with σ(300 K) = 2 × 10(-2) S cm(-1). While the conductivity is thermally activated at ambient pressure, with E(act) = 0.10 eV at 300 K, indicative of a Mott insulating state, E(act) is eliminated at 3 GPa, suggesting the formation of a metallic state. The onset of metallization is supported by infrared measurements, which show closure of the Mott-Hubbard gap above 3 GPa.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Heavy Atom Ferromagnets under Pressure: Structural Changes and the Magnetic Response

Masaki Mito; Yuki Komorida; H. Tsuruda; John S. Tse; Serge Desgreniers; Yauso Ohishi; Alicea A. Leitch; Kristina Cvrkalj; Craig M. Robertson; Richard T. Oakley

Application of physical pressure to a ferromagnetic bisdiselenazolyl radical leads to a decrease in pi-stack slippage. Initially, this leads to an increase in the ferromagnetic ordering temperature T(C), which reaches a maximum of 21 K near 1 GPa. At higher pressures, as the pi-stacks become more nearly superimposed, the value of T(C) diminishes.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Trisphenalenyl-Based Neutral Radical Molecular Conductor

Sushanta K. Pal; Mikhail E. Itkis; Fook S. Tham; Robert W. Reed; Richard T. Oakley; Robert C. Haddon

We report the preparation, crystallization, and solid-state characterization of the first member of a new family of tris(1,9-disubstituted phenalenyl)silicon neutral radicals. In the solid state, the radical packs as weak partial pi-dimers with intermolecular carbon...carbon contacts that fall at the van der Waals atomic separation. Magnetic susceptibility measurements indicate approximately 0.7 Curie spins per molecule from room temperature down to 50 K, below which antiferromagnetic coupling becomes apparent; the compound has a room-temperature single-crystal conductivity of sigmaRT = 2.4 x 10(-6) S cm(-1).


Phosphorus Sulfur and Silicon and The Related Elements | 2004

A MOLECULE LIKE SODIUM

A. Wallace Cordes; Robert C. Haddon; Richard T. Oakley

The use of neutral π-radicals as building blocks for molecular conductors holds both appeal and challenge. Such systems obviate the need for counterions, as charge transfer is not required to generate charge carriers. Essentially an array of π-radicals should function like atoms in an elemental metal, e.g., sodium, affording a half-filled energy band. Most radicals, however, tend to dimerize, and even when association can be suppressed the resulting low bandwidth W, coupled with a high on-site Coulomb repulsion U, leads to a Mott insulating state. We are pursuing the design and synthesis of stable heterocyclic thiazyl radicals, with a view to generating stable, crystalline materials with a high W/U ratio. The search for these new radicals, the molecular analogues of sodium, is the subject of this presentation.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Magnetic anisotropy in a heavy atom radical ferromagnet.

Stephen M. Winter; Saiti Datta; Stephen Hill; Richard T. Oakley

High-field, single-crystal EPR spectroscopy on a tetragonal bisdiselenazolyl ferromagnet has provided evidence for the presence of easy-axis magnetic anisotropy, with the crystallographic c axis as the easy axis and the ab plane as the hard plane. The observation of a zero-field gap in the resonance frequency is interpreted in terms of an anisotropy field several orders of magnitude larger than that observed in light-heteroatom, nonmetallic ferromagnets and comparable (on a per-site basis) to that observed in hexagonal close packed cobalt. The results indicate that large spin-orbit-induced magnetic anisotropies, typically associated with 3d-orbital-based ferromagnets, can also be found in heavy p-block radicals, suggesting that there may be major opportunities for the development of heavy p-block organic magnetic materials.


Organic Letters | 2008

Tetrathiophenalenyl radical and its disulfide-bridged dimer.

Leanne Beer; Robert W. Reed; Craig M. Robertson; Richard T. Oakley; Fook S. Tham; Robert C. Haddon

The presence of two disulfide groups in the tetrathiophenalenyl radical TTPLY leads to a highly delocalized spin distribution and the lowest cell potential ever observed for a monofunctional phenalenyl derivative. While the heteroatom substituents successfully block C-C bond formation, TTPLY nonetheless associates in the solid state to afford the hypervalent S-S-bonded dimer (TTPLY)2.

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Norman L. Paddock

University of British Columbia

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