A simple protocol that uses [Os(III)(OH)(H2O)(L-N4Me2)](PF6)2 (1; L-N4Me2 = N,N'-dimethyl-2,11-diaza[3.3](2,6)pyridinophane) as a catalyst and H2O2 as a terminal oxidant for efficient cis-1,2-dihydroxylation of alkenes is presented. Unfunctionalized (or aliphatic) alkenes and alkenes/styrenes containing electron-withdrawing groups are selectively oxidized to the corresponding vicinal diols in good to excellent yields (46-99 %). In the catalytic reactions, the stoichiometry of alkene:H2O2 is 1:1, and thus the oxidant efficiency is very high. For the dihydroxylation of cyclohexene, the catalytic amount of 1 can be reduced to 0.01 mol % to achieve a very high turnover number of 5500. The active oxidant is identified as the Os(V)(O)(OH) species (2), which is formed via the hydroperoxide adduct, an Os(III)(OOH) species. The active oxidant 2 is successfully isolated and crystallographically characterized.
A series of oxo-bridged diosmium complexes with tpa ligand (tpa = tris(2-pyridylmethyl)amine) are synthesized. The hydrolytic reaction of the mononuclear osmium complex [Os(III)Cl(2)(tpa)]PF(6) in aqueous solution containing a sodium carboxylate yields a μ-oxo-μ-carboxylato-diosmium(III) complex, [Os(III)(2)(μ-O)(μ-RCOO)(tpa)(2)](PF(6))(3) (R = C(3)H(7) (1), CH(3) (2), or C(6)H(5) (3)). One-electron oxidation of 1 with (NH(4))(2)Ce(IV)(NO(3))(6) gives a mixed-valent [Os(III)Os(IV)(μ-O)(μ-C(3)H(7)COO)(tpa)(2)](PF(6))(4) complex (4). A mixed-valent di-μ-oxo-diosmium complex, [Os(III)Os(IV)(μ-O)(2)(tpa)(2)](PF(6))(3) (5), is also synthesized from 1 in an aerobic alkaline solution (pH 13.5). All the complexes exhibit strong absorption bands in a visible-near-infrared region based on interactions of the osmium dπ and oxygen pπ orbitals of the Os-O-Os moiety. The X-ray crystallographic analysis of 1, 3, and 4 shows that the osmium centers take a pseudo-octahedral geometry in the μ-oxo-μ-carboxylato-diosmium core. The mixed-valent osmium(III)osmium(IV) complex 4 has a shorter osmium-oxo bond and a larger osmium-oxo-osmium angle as compared with those of the diosmium(III) complex 1 having the same bridging carboxylate. Crystal structure of 5 reveals that the two osmium ions are bridged by two oxo groups to give an Os(2)(μ-O)(2) core with the significantly short osmium-osmium distance (2.51784(7) Å), which is indicative of a direct osmium-osmium bond formation with the bond order of 1.5 (σ(2)π(2)δ(2)δ*(2)π*(1) configuration). In the electrochemical studies, the μ-oxo-μ-carboxylato-diosmium(III) complexes exhibit two reversible Os(III)Os(III)/Os(III)Os(IV) and Os(III)Os(IV)/Os(IV)Os(IV) oxidation couples and one irreversible redox wave for the Os(III)Os(III)/Os(II)Os(III) couple in CH(3)CN. The irreversible reductive process becomes reversible in CH(3)CN/H(2)O (1:1 Britton-Robinson buffer; pH 5-11), where the {1H(+)/2e(-)} transfer process is indicated by the plot of the redox potentials against the pH values of the solution of 1. Thus, the μ-oxo-μ-butyrato-diosmium(III) center undergoes proton-coupled electron transfer to yield a μ-hydroxo-μ-butyrato-diosmisum(II) species. The di(μ-oxo) complex 5 exhibits one reversible Os(III)Os(IV)/Os(IV)Os(IV) oxidation process and one reversible Os(III)Os(IV)/Os(III)Os(III) reduction process in CH(3)CN. The comproportionation constants K(com) of the Os(III)Os(IV) states for the present diosmium complexes are on the order of 10(19). The values are significantly larger when compared with those of similar oxo-bridged dimetal complexes of ruthenium and rhenium.
Oxidation of the hydroxoosmium(III) complex resulted in C-H bond activation of the methyl group of the supporting ligand (N,N'-dimethyl-2,11-diaza[3.3](2,6)pyridinophane). The product was an osmium(IV) complex exhibiting a seven-coordinate structure with an additional Os-CH(2) bond.
Oxo-sulfido- and oxo-selenido-molybdenum(VI) complexes with an ene-1,2-dithiolate ligand are generated as models of the active sites of molybdenum hydroxylases. The sulfide and selenide groups are highly reactive toward triphenylphosphine in the order of Se > S.
Selective cis‐dihydroxylation of alkenes has been achieved by a simple protocol in which an osmium complex supported by a cyclic tetradentate ligand was used as a catalyst and hydrogen peroxide as a terminal oxidant, as reported by Hideki Sugimoto et al. in their Full Paper on A number of alkenes including those that contain electron‐withdrawing groups were converted into the corresponding vicinal diols in a completely syn‐selective manner. The active oxidant was identified as the oxo‐hydroxo‐osmium(V) species, which is formed through the hydroperoxide adduct of the OsIII(OOH) species. The Cover picture illustrates vicinal diol production as hydrogen peroxide and an alkene pass the gate‐like shaped osmium catalyst on the conveyor belt.
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