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Dive into the research topics where Stephen J. Tereniak is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen J. Tereniak.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Role of the metal in the bonding and properties of bimetallic complexes involving manganese, iron, and cobalt.

Stephen J. Tereniak; Rebecca K. Carlson; Laura J. Clouston; Victor G. Young; Eckhard Bill; Rémi Maurice; Yu-Sheng Chen; Hyun Kim; Laura Gagliardi; Connie C. Lu

A multidentate ligand platform is introduced that enables the isolation of both homo- and heterobimetallic complexes of divalent first-row transition metal ions such as Mn(II), Fe(II), and Co(II). By means of a two-step metalation strategy, five bimetallic coordination complexes were synthesized with the general formula M1M2Cl(py3tren), where py3tren is the triply deprotonated form of N,N,N-tris(2-(2-pyridylamino)ethyl)amine. The metal-metal pairings include dicobalt (1), cobalt-iron (2), cobalt-manganese (3), diiron (4), and iron-manganese (5). The bimetallic complexes have been investigated by X-ray diffraction and X-ray anomalous scattering studies, cyclic voltammetry, magnetometry, Mössbauer spectroscopy, UV-vis-NIR spectroscopy, NMR spectroscopy, combustion analyses, inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry, and ab initio quantum chemical methods. Only the diiron chloride complex in this series contains a metal-metal single bond (2.29 Å). The others show weak metal-metal interactions (2.49 to 2.53 Å). The diiron complex is also distinct with a septet ground state, while the other bimetallic species have much lower spin states from S = 0 to S = 1. We propose that the diiron system has delocalized metal-metal bonding electrons, which seems to correlate with a short metal-metal bond and a higher spin state. Multiconfigurational wave function calculations revealed that, indeed, the metal-metal bonding orbitals in the diiron complex are much more delocalized than those of the dicobalt analogue.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2011

First-Row Transition-Metal Chloride Complexes of the Wide Bite-Angle Diphosphine iPrDPDBFphos and Reactivity Studies of Monovalent Nickel

Elodie E. Marlier; Stephen J. Tereniak; Keying Ding; Jenna E. Milliken; Connie C. Lu

The diphosphine 4,6-bis(3-diisopropylphosphinophenyl)dibenzofuran (abbreviated as (iPr)DPDBFphos) has been metalated with transition metal dichlorides of zinc, cobalt, and nickel to yield ((iPr)DPDBFphos)MCl(2) complexes. Within these compounds, the diphosphine (iPr)DPDBFphos adapts a wide range of bite angles (115 to 180°) as determined by X-ray crystallography. A three-coordinate planar Ni(I) species was isolated from the reduction of ((iPr)DPDBFphos)NiCl(2) with KC(8). Low-temperature electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) measurements of ((iPr)DPDBFphos)NiCl allow the determination of g values (2.09, 2.14, 2.37) and hyperfine coupling constants to two (31)P nuclei, A(iso) = 46 × 10(-4) cm(-1), and one (37)Cl/(35)Cl nucleus, A = (12, 0.7, 35) × 10(-4) cm(-1). Density functional theory (DFT) studies reveal the nature of the magnetic orbital to be d(xy), which has σ-antibonding and π(∥)-antibonding interactions with the phosphorus and chloride atoms, respectively. The monovalent nickel complex reacts with substrates containing C-X bonds; and in the case of vinyl chloride, a Ni(II) vinyl species ((iPr)DPDBFphos)Ni(CH═CH(2))Cl is generated along with the Ni(II) dichloride complex. The monovalent Ni(I) chloride is an active catalyst in the Kumada cross-coupling reaction of vinyl chloride and phenyl Grignard reagent.


Dalton Transactions | 2012

One-electron Ni(II)/(I) redox couple: potential role in hydrogen activation and production

Stephen J. Tereniak; Elodie E. Marlier; Connie C. Lu

The three-coordinate Ni(I) complex Ni(Cl)(P(2)), where P(2) is the diphosphine (iPr)DPDBFphos, reacts with the acids HCl·(dioxane) and 2,6-lutidinium chloride to generate Ni(H)(Cl)(P(2)) and Ni(Cl)(2)(P(2)). Photolysis of the Ni(H)(X)(P(2)) (for X = Cl, Br) results in formation of H(2) and the Ni(I) halide. This reaction also proceeds in reverse when heated.


Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2015

Can Multiconfigurational Self-Consistent Field Theory and Density Functional Theory Correctly Predict the Ground State of Metal-Metal-Bonded Complexes?

Rebecca K. Carlson; Samuel O. Odoh; Stephen J. Tereniak; Connie C. Lu; Laura Gagliardi

The electronic structure of a diiron (FeFe) complex with strong metal-metal interaction and those of analogous complexes (CoCo, CoMn, CoFe, and FeMn) with much weaker metal-metal bonding are investigated with wave function-based methods and density functional theory. The delocalization and bonding between the metal centers in the diiron complex is only fully captured after inclusion of the complete set of 3d and 4d orbitals in the active space, a situation best suited for restricted active space (RAS) approaches. Truncation of the included set of 4d orbitals results in inappropriate localization of some 3d orbitals, incorrect description of the ground spin state as well as wrong spin state energetics, as compared to experiment. Using density functional theory, some local functionals are able to predict the correct ground spin states, and describe the chemical bonding and structural properties of all the metal-metal complexes considered in this work. In contrast, the introduction of some exact exchange results in increased localization of 3d orbitals and wrong spin state energetics, a situation that is particularly troublesome for the diiron complex.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Mechanistic Basis for Efficient, Site-Selective, Aerobic Catalytic Turnover in Pd-Catalyzed C–H Imidoylation of Heterocycle-Containing Molecules

Stephen J. Tereniak; Shannon S. Stahl

A recently reported Pd-catalyzed method for oxidative imidoylation of C-H bonds exhibits unique features that have important implications for Pd-catalyzed aerobic oxidation catalysis: (1) The reaction tolerates heterocycles that commonly poison Pd catalysts. (2) The site selectivity of C-H activation is controlled by an N-methoxyamide group rather than a suitably positioned heterocycle. (3) A Pd0 source, Pd2(dba)3 (dba = dibenzylideneacetone), is superior to Pd(OAc)2 as a precatalyst, and other PdII sources are ineffective. (4) The reaction performs better with air, rather than pure O2. The present study elucidates the origin of these features. Kinetic, mechanistic, and in situ spectroscopic studies establish that PdII-mediated C-H activation is the turnover-limiting step. The tBuNC substrate is shown to coordinate more strongly to PdII than pyridine, thereby contributing to the lack of heterocycle catalyst poisoning. A well-defined PdII-peroxo complex is a competent intermediate that promotes substrate coordination via proton-coupled ligand exchange. The effectiveness of this substrate coordination step correlates with the basicity of the anionic ligands coordinated to PdII, and Pd0 catalyst precursors are most effective because they selectively afford the PdII-peroxo in situ. Finally, elevated O2 pressures are shown to contribute to background oxidation of the isonitrile, thereby explaining the improved performance of reactions conducted with air rather than 1 atm O2. These collective results explain the unique features of the aerobic C-H imidoylation of N-methoxybenzamides and have important implications for other Pd-catalyzed aerobic C-H oxidation reactions.


Chemistry of Materials | 2016

Installing Heterobimetallic Cobalt-Aluminum Single Sites on a Metal Organic Framework Support

Anthony B. Thompson; Dale R. Pahls; Varinia Bernales; Leighanne C. Gallington; Camille D. Malonzo; Thomas Webber; Stephen J. Tereniak; Timothy C. Wang; Sai Puneet Desai; Zhanyong Li; In Soo Kim; Laura Gagliardi; R. Lee Penn; Karena W. Chapman; Andreas Stein; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp; Alex B. F. Martinson; Connie C. Lu


Faraday Discussions | 2017

Assembly of dicobalt and cobalt–aluminum oxide clusters on metal–organic framework and nanocast silica supports

Sai Puneet Desai; Camille D. Malonzo; Thomas Webber; Jiaxin Duan; Anthony B. Thompson; Stephen J. Tereniak; Matthew R. DeStefano; Cassandra T. Buru; Zhanyong Li; R. Lee Penn; Omar K. Farha; Joseph T. Hupp; Andreas Stein; Connie C. Lu


Inorganic Chemistry | 2011

Erratum: Correction to first-row transition-metal chloride complexes of the wide bite-angle diphosphine iPrDPDBFphos and reactivity studies of monovalent nickel (Inorganic Chemistry (2011) 50:19 (9290-9299)

Elodie E. Marlier; Stephen J. Tereniak; Keying Ding; Jenna E. Milliken; Connie C. Lu


Molecular Metal-Metal Bonds | 2015

Group 8 Metal–Metal Bonds

Stephen J. Tereniak; Connie C. Lu


ACS Catalysis | 2018

Are Phosphines Viable Ligands for Pd-Catalyzed Aerobic Oxidation Reactions? Contrasting Insights from a Survey of Six Reactions

Stephen J. Tereniak; Clark R. Landis; Shannon S. Stahl

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Connie C. Lu

University of Minnesota

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R. Lee Penn

University of Minnesota

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