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Dive into the research topics where W. Hill Harman is active.

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Featured researches published by W. Hill Harman.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Slow magnetic relaxation in a high-spin iron(II) complex.

Danna E. Freedman; W. Hill Harman; T. David Harris; Gary J. Long; Christopher J. Chang; Jeffrey R. Long

Slow magnetic relaxation is observed for [(tpa(Mes))Fe](-), a trigonal pyramidal complex of high-spin iron(II), providing the first example of a mononuclear transition metal complex that behaves as a single-molecule magnet. Dc magnetic susceptibility and magnetization measurements reveal a strong uniaxial magnetic anisotropy (D = -39.6 cm(-1)) acting on the S = 2 ground state of the molecule. Ac magnetic susceptibility measurements indicate the absence of slow relaxation under zero applied dc field as a result of quantum tunneling of the magnetization. Application of a 1500 Oe dc field initiates slow magnetic relaxation, which follows a thermally activated tunneling mechanism at high temperature to give an effective spin-reversal barrier of U(eff) = 42 cm(-1) and follows a temperature-independent tunneling mechanism at low temperature. In addition, the magnetic relaxation time shows a pronounced dc-field dependence, with a maximum occurring at approximately 1500 Oe.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010

Slow Magnetic Relaxation in a Family of Trigonal Pyramidal Iron(II) Pyrrolide Complexes

W. Hill Harman; T. David Harris; Danna E. Freedman; Henry Fong; Alicia Chang; Jeffrey D. Rinehart; Andrew Ozarowski; Moulay Tahar Sougrati; Fernande Grandjean; Gary J. Long; Jeffrey R. Long; Christopher J. Chang

We present a family of trigonal pyramidal iron(II) complexes supported by tris(pyrrolyl-α-methyl)amine ligands of the general formula [M(solv)(n)][(tpa(R))Fe] (M = Na, R = tert-butyl (1), phenyl (4); M = K, R = mesityl (2), 2,4,6-triisopropylphenyl (3), 2,6-difluorophenyl (5)) and their characterization by X-ray crystallography, Mössbauer spectroscopy, and high-field EPR spectroscopy. Expanding on the discovery of slow magnetic relaxation in the recently reported mesityl derivative 2, this homologous series of high-spin iron(II) complexes enables an initial probe of how the ligand field influences the static and dynamic magnetic behavior. Magnetization experiments reveal large, uniaxial zero-field splitting parameters of D = -48, -44, -30, -26, and -6.2 cm(-1) for 1-5, respectively, demonstrating that the strength of axial magnetic anisotropy scales with increasing ligand field strength at the iron(II) center. In the case of 2,6-difluorophenyl substituted 5, high-field EPR experiments provide an independent determination of the zero-field splitting parameter (D = -4.397(9) cm(-1)) that is in reasonable agreement with that obtained from fits to magnetization data. Ac magnetic susceptibility measurements indicate field-dependent, thermally activated spin reversal barriers in complexes 1, 2, and 4 of U(eff) = 65, 42, and 25 cm(-1), respectively, with the barrier of 1 constituting the highest relaxation barrier yet observed for a mononuclear transition metal complex. In addition, in the case of 1, the large range of temperatures in which slow relaxation is observed has enabled us to fit the entire Arrhenius curve simultaneously to three distinct relaxation processes. Finally, zero-field Mössbauer spectra collected for 1 and 4 also reveal the presence of slow magnetic relaxation, with two independent relaxation barriers in 4 corresponding to the barrier obtained from ac susceptibility data and to the 3D energy gap between the M(S) = ±2 and ±1 levels, respectively.


Chemical Science | 2014

Facile Si–H bond activation and hydrosilylation catalysis mediated by a nickel–borane complex

Samantha N. MacMillan; W. Hill Harman; Jonas C. Peters

Metal–borane complexes are emerging as promising systems for study in the context of bifunctional catalysis. Herein we describe diphosphineborane nickel complexes that activate Si–H bonds and catalyze the hydrosilylation of aldehydes. Treatment of [MesDPBPh]Ni (1) ([MesDPBPh] = MesB(o-Ph2PC6H4)2) with organosilanes affords the complexes [MesDPBPh](μ-H)NiE (E = SiH2Ph (3), SiHPh2 (4)). Complex 4 is in solution equilibrium with 1 and the thermodynamic and kinetic parameters of their exchange have been characterized by NMR spectroscopy. Complex 1 is a catalyst for the hydrosilylation of a range of para-substituted benzaldehydes. Mechanistic studies on this reaction via multinuclear NMR spectroscopy are consistent with the intermediacy of a borohydrido-Ni-siloxyalkyl species.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

A structurally characterized nitrous oxide complex of vanadium.

Nicholas A. Piro; Michael F. Lichterman; W. Hill Harman; Christopher J. Chang

Nitrous oxide (N(2)O), a widespread greenhouse gas, is a thermodynamically potent and environmentally green oxidant that is an attractive target for activation by metal centers. However, N(2)O remains underutilized owing to its high kinetic stability, and the poor ligand properties of this molecule have made well-characterized metal-N(2)O complexes a rarity. We now report a vanadium-pyrrolide system that reversibly binds N(2)O at room temperature and provide the first single-crystal X-ray structure of such a complex. Further characterization by vibrational spectroscopy and DFT calculations strongly favor assignment as a linear, N-bound metal-N(2)O complex.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

A Terminal N2 Complex of High-Spin Iron(I) in a Weak, Trigonal Ligand Field

Alex McSkimming; W. Hill Harman

The role of Fe in biological and industrial N2 fixation has inspired the intense study of small molecule analogues of Fe-(NxHy) intermediates of potential relevance to these processes. Although a number of low-coordinate Fe-(N2) featuring varying degrees of fidelity to the nitrogenase active site are now known, these complexes frequently feature strongly donating ligands that either enforce low- or intermediate-spin states or result in linear Fe-(N2)-Fe bridging motifs. Given that the nitrogenase active site uses weak-field sulfide ligands to stabilize its reactive Fe center(s), N2 binding to high-spin Fe is of great interest. Herein, we report the synthesis and characterization of the first terminal N2 complex of high-spin (S = 3/2) Fe(I) as well as a bridging Fe-(N2)-Fe analogue. Electron paramagnetic resonance and solution magnetic moment determination confirm the high-spin state, and vibrational experiments indicate a substantial degree of activation of the N≡N bond in these complexes. Density functional theory calculations reveal an electronic structure for the terminal adduct featuring substantial delocalization of unpaired spin onto the N2 ligand.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

N-Heterocyclic Carbene-Stabilized Boranthrene as a Metal-Free Platform for the Activation of Small Molecules

Jordan W. Taylor; Alex McSkimming; Camilo F. Guzman; W. Hill Harman

The multielectron reduction of small molecules (e.g., CO2) is a key aspect of fuel synthesis from renewable electricity. Transition metals have been researched extensively in this role due to their intrinsic redox properties and reactivity, but more recently, strategies that forego transition metal ions for p-block elements have emerged. In this vein, we report an analogue of boranthrene (9,10-diboraanthracene) stabilized by N-heterocyclic carbenes and its one- and two-electron oxidized congeners. This platform exhibits reversible, two-electron redox chemistry at mild potentials and reacts with O2, CO2, and ethylene via formal [4+2] cycloaddition to the central diborabutadiene core. In an area traditionally dominated by transition metals, these results outline an approach for the redox activation of small molecules at mild potentials based on conjugated, light element scaffolds.


Angewandte Chemie | 2017

A Molecular Boroauride: A Donor-Acceptor Complex of Anionic Gold

Jordan W. Taylor; Alex McSkimming; Marc-Etienne Moret; W. Hill Harman

Gold is unique among the transition metals in that it is stable as an isolated anion (auride). Despite this fact, the coordination chemistry of anionic gold is virtually nonexistent, and this unique oxidation state is not readily exploited in conventional solution chemistry owing to its high reactivity. Through the use of a new molecular scaffold based on diboraanthracene (B2 P2 , 1), we have overcome these issues by avoiding the intermediacy of zerovalent gold and stabilizing the highly reduced gold anion through acceptor interactions. We have thus synthesized a molecular boroauride [(B2 P2 )Au]- ([2]- ) and showed its reversible conversion between Au-I and AuI states. Through a combination of spectroscopic and computational studies, we show the neutral state to be a AuI complex with a ligand radical anion. Bonding analyses (NBO and QTAIM) and the isolobal relationship between gold and hydrogen provide support for the description of [2]- as a boroauride complex.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Reversible H2 Addition across a Nickel–Borane Unit as a Promising Strategy for Catalysis

W. Hill Harman; Jonas C. Peters


Chemical Communications | 2010

Electrocatalytic reduction of protons to hydrogen by a water-compatible cobalt polypyridyl platform

Julian P. Bigi; Tamara E. Hanna; W. Hill Harman; Alicia Chang; Christopher J. Chang


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2007

N2O Activation and Oxidation Reactivity from a Non-Heme Iron Pyrrole Platform

W. Hill Harman; Christopher J. Chang

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Alicia Chang

University of California

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Gary J. Long

Missouri University of Science and Technology

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Jeffrey R. Long

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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