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Dive into the research topics where Ryan M. Clarke is active.

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Featured researches published by Ryan M. Clarke.


Dalton Transactions | 2013

Synthesis, characterization and catalytic activity of copper(II) complexes containing a redox-active benzoxazole iminosemiquinone ligand

S. Esmael Balaghi; Elham Safaei; Linus Chiang; Edwin W. Y. Wong; Didier Savard; Ryan M. Clarke; Tim Storr

A tridentate benzoxazole-containing aminophenol ligand HL(BAP) was synthesized and complexed with Cu(II). The resulting Cu(II) complexes were characterized by X-ray, IR, UV-vis-NIR spectroscopies, and magnetic susceptibility studies, demonstrating that the ligand is oxidized to the o-iminosemiquinone form [L(BIS)](-) in the isolated complexes. L(BIS)Cu(II)Cl exhibits a distorted tetrahedral geometry, while L(BIS)Cu(II)OAc is square pyramidal. In both solid state structures the ligand is coordinated to Cu(II)via the benzoxazole, as well as the nitrogen and oxygen atoms from the o-iminosemiquinone moiety. The chloride, or acetate group occupies the fourth and/or fifth positions in L(BIS)Cu(II)Cl and L(BIS)Cu(II)OAc, respectively. Magnetic susceptibility measurements indicate that both complexes are diamagnetic due to antiferromagnetic coupling between the d(9) Cu(II) centre and iminosemiquinone ligand radical. Electrochemical studies of the complexes demonstrate both a quasi-reversible reduction and oxidation process for the Cu complexes. While L(BIS)Cu(II)X (X = Cl) is EPR-silent, chemical oxidation affords a species with an EPR signal consistent with ligand oxidation to form a d(9) Cu(II) iminoquinone species. In addition, chemical reduction results in a Cu(II) centre most likely bound to an amidophenoxide. Mild and efficient oxidation of alcohol substrates to the corresponding aldehydes was achieved with molecular oxygen as the oxidant and L(BIS)Cu(II)X-Cs2CO3 as the catalyst.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2016

Electronic Structure Description of a Doubly Oxidized Bimetallic Cobalt Complex with Proradical Ligands

Ryan M. Clarke; Khatera Hazin; John R. Thompson; Didier Savard; Kathleen E. Prosser; Tim Storr

The geometric and electronic structure of a doubly oxidized bimetallic Co complex containing two redox-active salen moieties connected via a 1,2-phenylene linker was investigated and compared to an oxidized monomeric analogue. Both complexes, namely, CoL(1) and Co2L(2), are oxidized to the mono- and dications, respectively, with AgSbF6 and characterized by X-ray crystallography for the monomer and by vis-NIR (NIR = near-infrared) spectroscopy, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) magnetometry, and density functional theory (DFT) calculations for both the monomer and dimer. Both complexes exhibit a water molecule coordinated in the apical position upon oxidation. [CoL(1)-H2O](+) displays a broad NIR band at 8500 cm(-1) (8400 M(-1) cm(-1)), which is consistent with recent reports on oxidized Co salen complexes (Kochem, A. et al., Inorg. Chem., 2012, 51, 10557-10571 and Kurahashi, T. et al., Inorg. Chem., 2013, 52, 3908-3919). DFT calculations predict a triplet ground state with significant ligand and metal contributions to the singularly occupied molecular orbitals. The majority (∼75%) of the total spin density is localized on the metal, highlighting both high-spin Co(III) and Co(II)L(•) character in the electronic ground state. Further oxidation of CoL(1) to the dication affords a low-spin Co(III) phenoxyl radical species. The NIR features for [Co2L(2)-2H2O](2+) at 8600 cm(-1) (17 800 M(-1) cm(-1)) are doubly intense in comparison to [CoL(1)-H2O](+) owing to the description of [Co2L(2)-2H2O](2+) as two non-interacting oxidized Co salen complexes bound via the central phenylene linker. Interestingly, TD-DFT calculations predict two electronic transitions that are 353 cm(-1) apart. The NIR spectrum of the analogous Ni complex, [Ni2L(2)](2+), exhibits two intense transitions (4890 cm(-1)/26 500 M(-1) cm(-1) and 4200 cm(-1)/21 200 M(-1) cm(-1)) due to exciton coupling in the excited state. Only one broad band is observed in the NIR spectrum for [Co2L(2)-2H2O](2+) as a result of the contracted donor and acceptor orbitals and overall CT character.


Dalton Transactions | 2014

The chemistry and applications of multimetallic salen complexes

Ryan M. Clarke; Tim Storr


European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry | 2014

A Copper Complex of a Noninnocent Iminophenol-Amidopyridine Hybrid Ligand: Synthesis, Characterization, and Aerobic Alcohol Oxidation

Zahra Alaji; Elham Safaei; Linus Chiang; Ryan M. Clarke; Changhua Mu; Tim Storr


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Tuning Electronic Structure To Control Manganese Nitride Activation

Ryan M. Clarke; Tim Storr


Polyhedron | 2017

Cobalt(III) complexes with 2-acetylpyridine-derived Schiff bases: Studies investigating ligand release upon reduction

Camila Vargas Garcia; Gabrieli L. Parrilha; Bernardo L. Rodrigues; Paulo J.S. Barbeira; Ryan M. Clarke; Tim Storr; Heloisa Beraldo


Chemical Communications | 2017

Mn(IV) and Mn(V)-radical species supported by the redox non-innocent bis(2-amino-3,5-di-tert-butylphenyl)amine pincer ligand

Nicolas Leconte; Jules Moutet; Khrystyna Herasymchuk; Ryan M. Clarke; Christian Philouze; Dominique Luneau; Tim Storr; Fabrice Thomas


Coordination Chemistry Reviews | 2017

Electronic structure elucidation in oxidized metal–salen complexes

Ryan M. Clarke; Khrystyna Herasymchuk; Tim Storr


European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry | 2016

Electronic Structure Evaluation of an Oxidized Tris(methoxy)-Substituted Ni Salen Complex

Linus Chiang; Ryan M. Clarke; Khrystyna Herasymchuk; Mathew Sutherland; Kathleen E. Prosser; Yuichi Shimazaki; Tim Storr


Chemical Science | 2018

Exploiting exciton coupling of ligand radical intervalence charge transfer transitions to tune NIR absorption

Ryan M. Clarke; Tiffany Jeen; Serena Rigo; John R. Thompson; Loren G. Kaake; Fabrice Thomas; Tim Storr

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Tim Storr

Simon Fraser University

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Linus Chiang

Simon Fraser University

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Fabrice Thomas

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Changhua Mu

Simon Fraser University

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