Liberating hydrogen: Strong Lewis or Brønsted acids react with ammonia–borane (H3NBH3) to form an in situ boronium cation, resulting in the formation of a mixture of cyclic and acyclic BNHx oligomers and the liberation of H2 (see scheme). A proposed mechanism is supported by an examination of the reaction thermodynamics using density functional theory.
In situ(11)B NMR monitoring, computational modeling, and external trapping studies show that selectivity and extent of H(2) release in metal-catalysed dehydrogenation of ammonia borane, NH(3)BH(3), are determined by coordination of reactive aminoborane, NH(2)BH(2), to the metal center.
The reactions of LnCl(3) with molten boric acid result in the formation of Ln[B(4)O(6)(OH)(2)Cl] (Ln = La-Nd), Ln(4)[B(18)O(25)(OH)(13)Cl(3)] (Ln = Sm, Eu), or Ln[B(6)O(9)(OH)(3)] (Ln = Y, Eu-Lu). The reactions of AnCl(3) (An = Pu, Am, Cm) with molten boric acid under the same conditions yield Pu[B(4)O(6)(OH)(2)Cl] and Pu(2)[B(13)O(19)(OH)(5)Cl(2)(H(2)O)(3)], Am[B(9)O(13)(OH)(4)]·H(2)O, or Cm(2)[B(14)O(20)(OH)(7)(H(2)O)(2)Cl]. These compounds possess three-dimensional network structures where rare earth borate layers are joined together by BO(3) and/or BO(4) groups. There is a shift from 10-coordinate Ln(3+) and An(3+) cations with capped triangular cupola geometries for the early members of both series to 9-coordinate hula-hoop geometries for the later elements. Cm(3+) is anomalous in that it contains both 9- and 10-coordinate metal ions. Despite these materials being synthesized under identical conditions, the two series do not parallel one another. Electronic structure calculations with multireference, CASSCF, and density functional theory (DFT) methods reveal the An 5f orbitals to be localized and predominately uninvolved in bonding. For the Pu(III) borates, a Pu 6p orbital is observed with delocalized electron density on basal oxygen atoms contrasting the Am(III) and Cm(III) borates, where a basal O 2p orbital delocalizes to the An 6d orbital. The electronic structure of the Ce(III) borate is similar to the Pu(III) complexes in that the Ce 4f orbital is localized and noninteracting, but the Ce 5p orbital shows no interaction with the coordinating ligands. Natural bond orbital and natural population analyses at the DFT level illustrate distinctive larger Pu 5f atomic occupancy relative to Am and Cm 5f, as well as unique involvement and occupancy of the An 6d orbitals.
High-level electronic structure calculations have been used to map out the relevant portions of the potential energy surfaces for the release of H2 from dimers of ammonia borane, BH3NH3 (AB). Using the correlation-consistent aug-cc-pVTZ basis set at the second-order perturbation MP2 level, geometries of stationary points were optimized. Relative energies were computed at these points using coupled-cluster CCSD(T) theory with the correlation-consistent basis sets at least up to the aug-cc-pVTZ level and in some cases extrapolated to the complete basis set limit. The results show that there are a number of possible dimers involving different types of hydrogen-bonded interactions. The most stable gaseous phase (AB)2 dimer results from a head-to-tail cyclic conformation and is stabilized by 14.0 kcal/mol with respect to two AB monomers. (AB)2 can generate one or two H2 molecules via several direct pathways with energy barriers ranging from 44 to 50 kcal/mol. The diammoniate of diborane ion pair isomer, [BH4-][NH3BH2NH3+] (DADB), is 10.6 kcal/mol less stable than (AB)2 and can be formed from two AB monomers by overcoming an energy barrier of approximately 26 kcal/mol. DADB can also be generated from successive additions of two NH3 molecules to B2H6 and from condensation of AB with separated BH3 and NH3 molecules. The pathway for H2 elimination from DADB is characterized by a smaller energy barrier of 20.1 kcal/mol. The alternative ion pair [NH4+][BH3NH2BH3-] is calculated to be 16.4 kcal/mol above (AB)2 and undergoes H2 release with an energy barrier of 17.7 kcal/mol. H2 elimination from both ion pair isomers yields the chain BH3NH2BH2NH3 as product. Our results suggest that the neutral dimer will play a minor role in the release of H2 from ammonia borane, with a dominant role from the ion pairs as observed experimentally in ionic liquids and the solid state.
The sigma- and pi-bond strengths for the molecules BH2NH2, BH2PH2, AlH2NH2, and AlH2PH2 have been calculated by using ab initio molecular electronic structure theory at the CCSD(T)/CBS level. The adiabatic pi-bond energy is defined as the rotation barrier between the equilibrium ground-state configuration and the C(s)symmetry transition state for torsion about the A-X bond. We also report intrinsic pi-bond energies corresponding to the adiabatic rotation barrier corrected for the inversion barrier at N or P. The adiabatic sigma-bond energy is defined as the dissociation energy of AH2XH2 to AH2 + XH2 in their ground states minus the adiabatic pi-bond energy. The adiabatic sigma-bond strengths for the molecules BH2NH2, BH2PH2, AlH2NH2, and AlH2PH2 are 109.8, 98.8, 77.6, and 68.3 kcal/mol, respectively, and the corresponding adiabatic pi-bond strengths are 29.9, 10.5, 9.2, and 2.7 kcal/mol, respectively.
Thermochemical properties of a set of small boron (B(n)) and boron oxide (B(n)O(m)) clusters, with n = 1-4 and m = 0-3, their anions, and the B(4)(2-) dianion, were calculated by using coupled-cluster theory CCSD(T) calculations with the aug-cc-pVnZ (n = D, T, Q, 5) basis sets extrapolated to the complete basis set limit with additional corrections. Enthalpies of formation, bond dissociation energies, singlet-triplet or doublet-quartet separation gaps, adiabatic electron affinities (EA), and both vertical electron attachment and detachment energies were evaluated. The predicted heats of formation show agreement close to the error bars of the literature results for boron oxides with the largest error for OBO. Our calculated adiabatic EAs are in good agreement with recent experiments: B (calc, 0.26 eV; exptl, 0.28 eV), B(2) (1.95, 1.80), B(3) (2.88, 2.820 +/- 0.020), B(4) (1.68, 1.60 +/- 0.10), BO (2.50, 2.51), BO(2) (4.48, 4.51), BOB (0.07), B(2)O(2) (0.37), B(3)O (2.05), B(3)O(2) (2.94, 2.94), B(4)O (2.58), and B(4)O(2) (3.14, 3.160 +/- 0.015). The BO bond is strong, so this moiety is maintained in most of the clusters. Thermochemical parameters of clusters are not linearly additive with respect to the number of B atoms. The EA tends to be larger in the dioxides. The growth mechanism of small boron oxides should be determined by a number of factors: (i) formation of BO bonds, (ii) when possible, formation of a cyclic B(3) or B(4), and (iii) combination of a boron cycle and a BO bond. When these factors compete, the strength of the BO bonds tends to compensate the destabilization arising from a loss of binding in the cyclic boron clusters, in such a way that a linear boron oxide prevails. When the B(2) moiety is present in these linear clusters, the oxide derivatives prefer a high spin state.
Atomization energies at 0 K and heats of formation at 0 and 298 K are predicted from high level ab initio electronic structure calculations using the coupled cluster CCSD(T) method with augmented correlation-consistent basis sets extrapolated to the complete basis set (CBS) limit for the H(1,2)O(m)S(n) (m, n = 0-3) compounds, as well as various radicals involved in different bond breaking processes. To achieve near chemical accuracy (+/-1.0 kcal/mol), additional corrections were added to the CBS binding energies based on the frozen core CCSD(T) energies including corrections for core-valence, scalar relativistic, and first-order atomic spin-orbit effects. Geometries were optimized up through the CCSD(T)/aV(T+d)Z level. Vibrational zero point energies were computed at the MP2/aV(T+d)Z level. The calculated heats of formation are in excellent agreement with the available experimental data and allow the prediction of adiabatic bond dissociation energies (BDEs) to within +/-1.0 kcal/mol. The decomposition mechanisms were largely determined by a preference to maintain a strong S=O bond in the dissociated products as opposed to O=O and S=S bonds, exactly matching the ordering of the BDEs in the diatomics. For the H(2)X(2) and H(2)X(3) systems, as well as the HX(3) radicals, the energetically favorable decomposition pathway leads to the formation of XH radicals and breaking the X-X bond as opposed to breaking the X-H bond. For the HX(2) radicals, however, the more thermodynamically favorable pathway leads to a breaking of the H-X bond and forming X(2) molecules.
The accumulation of unfolded proteins in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is caused by many disease-relevant conditions, inducing conserved signaling events collectively known as the unfolded protein response. When ER stress is excessive or prolonged, cell death (usually occurring by apoptosis) is triggered. We undertook a chemical biology approach for investigating mechanisms of ER stress-induced cell death. Using a cell-based high throughput screening assay to identify compounds that rescued a neuronal cell line from thapsigargin-induced cell death, we identified benzodiazepinones that selectively inhibit cell death caused by inducers of ER stress (thapsigargin and tunicamycin) but not by inducers of extrinsic (tumor necrosis factor) or intrinsic (mitochondrial) cell death pathways. The compounds displayed activity in several cell lines and primary cultured neurons. Mechanism of action studies revealed that these compounds inhibit ER stress-induced activation of p38 MAPK and kinases responsible for c-Jun phosphorylation. Active benzodiazepinones suppressed cell death at the level of apoptotic signal kinase-1 (ASK1) within the IRE1 pathway but without directly inhibiting the kinase activity of ASK1 or >400 other kinases tested. Rather, active compounds enhanced phosphorylation of serine 967 of ASK1, promoting ASK1 binding to 14-3-3, an event associated with suppression of ASK1 function. Reducing ASK1 protein expression using small interfering RNA also protected cells from ER stress-induced apoptosis, confirming the importance of this protein kinase. Taken together, these findings demonstrate an essential role for ASK1 in cell death induced by ER stress. The compounds identified may prove useful for revealing endogenous mechanisms that regulate inhibitory phosphorylation of ASK1.
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