News Release

Phenyl addition made a poison useful for a chemical reaction in catalysis

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology

Poisoned Apple

image: Take for example a poisoned apple, it can emit an intoxicating mellow aroma just by sticking a pen and change to be delicious. view more 

Credit: Figure adapted with permission from Organometallics, 2018, 10.1021/acs.organomet.8b00645. Copyright © 2018 American Chemical Society

Scientists from Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology (TUAT), Japan, have discovered that a catalyst poison, which deactivates homogeneous catalysts, can be "reborn" as an efficient ligand by introduction of a substituent, in chemical reactions. This finding is of service to expand the ligand design in homogeneous catalysts. This research was published online in the journal Organometallics.

A group of substances that completely or partly shut down a catalysis by contamination is widely known as catalyst poison. Typical examples of catalyst poison are mercury and sulfured compounds for heterogeneous catalysis and a chemical substance called dibenzocyclooctatetraene for homogeneous catalysis. These substances deactivate the catalyst by binding to the active site very tightly. The homogenous catalyst poison, however, can be changed as an efficient ligand by introduction of a substituent.

A research team at TUAT was looking for cyclic diene ligands for a ruthenium (Ru) catalyst to synthesize skipped dienes, which are known to be substructures of many natural products and pharmaceutical molecules. By accident, they came across dibenzocyclooctatetraene, a homogenous catalyst poison, to work as a ligand . After screening, they finally found that phenyl attachement to the catalyst poison was a very efficient ligand. Technically, reaction of β-myrcene (one of the most widespread group of natural products) with methyl acrylate catalyzed by a Ru complex with 1,5-cyclooctadiene (1 mol %; a typical cyclic diene ligand) produced the linear coupling product only in 23% yield at 30 °C for 7 hours. However, the 5-phenyldibenzocyclooctatetraene (dibenzocyclooctatetraene was attached to a phenyl group) complex of Ru catalyzed the reaction to give the product in 97% yield within 1 hour under the same conditions.

The dibenzocyclooctatetraene tightly binds to the Ru center by its nature. One of the keys for this high catalytic activity probably arises from the steric effect of the phenyl group. In the presence catalysis giving skipped dienes, the formed skipped diene molecules are prone to stay on the catalyst as a stable intermediate but the phenyl group sweeps the product molecule away from the catalyst. As the result, the catalyst can take actions for further catalysis.

"Before a catalytic process, one normally has to remove substances that work as the catalyst poisons not to deactivate the catalyst. They are nuisances in catalyses because they tightly bound to the active site in catalysts. However, the strongly bind nature to the catalyst is an advantage as a ligand in homogeneous catalysts. Our finding let us know a small alteration of a catalyst poison, not only do-not-hampers the catalysis, but brings acceleration of the catalysis as a ligand of catalyst. Our results are surely service to the further development on the design of tough ligands for catalysts. In other words, a catalyst poison is not "Born This Way" but can be "Reborn" as an efficient ligand" said Masafumi Hirano, a TUAT professor of chemistry and a principal of the study.

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Original publication:

Synthesis of and Catalytic Linear Cross-Dimerizations by an Electron-Deficient Cyclic Diene Complex of Ruthenium(0)

Masafumi Hirano, Yukino Tanaka, and Nobuyuki Komine

Organometallics, published online November 6, 2018

DOI: 10.1021/acs.organomet.8b00645

This study's other authors are Ms. Yukino Tanaka a graduate student at TUAT, and Dr. Nobuyuki Komine, a research associate at TUAT.

For information about the Hirano laboratory, please visit http://web.tuat.ac.jp/~hirano/kohrc/English.html#00

Contact:

Masafumi Hirano, Professor, Department of Applied Chemistry, Graduate School of Engineering, Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology, Japan hrc@cc.tuat.ac.jp

Funding for the study was provided by Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST), ACT-C JPMJCR12Z2, Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (B) 17H0351, and Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research on Innovative Areas, "3D Active-Site Science" 26105003 from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan.

About Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology:

Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology (TUAT) is a distinguished university in Japan dedicated to science and technology. TUAT focuses on agriculture and engineering that form the foundation of industry, and promotes education and research fields that incorporate them. Boasting a history of over 140 years since our founding in 1874, TUAT continues to boldly take on new challenges and steadily promote fields. For more information, please visit http://www.tuat.ac.jp/en/.


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