Synthesis of a solid chelating ligand for the formation of efficient heterogeneous catalysts is highly desired in the fields of organic transformation and solar energy conversion. Here, we report the surfactant-directed self-assembly of a novel periodic mesoporous organosilica (PMO) containing 2,2'-bipyridine (bpy) ligands within the framework (BPy-PMO) from a newly synthesized organosilane precursor [(i-PrO)3Si-C10H6N2-Si(Oi-Pr)3] without addition of any other silane precursors. BPy-PMO had a unique pore-wall structure in which bipyridine groups were densely and regularly packed and exposed on the surface. The high coordination ability to metals was also preserved. Various bipyridine-based metal complexes were prepared using BPy-PMO as a solid chelating ligand such as Ru(bpy)2(BPy-PMO), Ir(ppy)2(BPy-PMO) (ppy = 2-phenylpyridine), Ir(cod)(OMe)(BPy-PMO) (cod = 1,5-cyclooctadiene), Re(CO)3Cl(BPy-PMO), and Pd(OAc)2(BPy-PMO). BPy-PMO showed excellent ligand properties for heterogeneous Ir-catalyzed direct C-H borylation of arenes, resulting in superior activity, durability, and recyclability to the homogeneous analogous Ir catalyst. An efficient photocatalytic hydrogen evolution system was also constructed by integration of a Ru-complex as a photosensitizer and platinum as a catalyst on the pore surface of BPy-PMO without any electron relay molecules. These results demonstrate the great potential of BPy-PMO as a solid chelating ligand and a useful integration platform for construction of efficient molecular-based heterogeneous catalysis systems.
Silicon nanomaterials are encouraging candidates for application to photonic, electronic, or biosensing devices, due to their size-quantization effects. Two-dimensional silicon nanosheets could help to realize a widespread quantum field, because of their nanoscale thickness and microscale area. However, there has been no example of a successful synthesis of two-dimensional silicon nanomaterials with large lateral size and oxygen-free surfaces. Here we report that oxygen-free silicon nanosheets covered with organic groups can be obtained by exfoliation of layered polysilane as a result of reaction with n-decylamine and dissolution in an organic solvent. The amine residues are covalently bound to the Si(111) planes. It is estimated that there is ca. 0.7 mol of residue per mole of Si atoms in the reaction product. The amine-modified layered polysilane can dissolve in chloroform and exfoliate into nanosheets that are 1-2 microm wide in the lateral direction and with thicknesses on the order of nanometers. The nanosheets have very flat and smooth surfaces due to dense coverage of n-decylamine, and they are easily self-assembled in a concentrated state to form a regularly stacked structure. The nanosheets could be useful as building blocks to create various composite materials.
Boron clusters are proposed as a new concept for the design of magnesium-battery electrolytes that are magnesium-battery-compatible, highly stable, and noncorrosive. A novel carborane-based electrolyte incorporating an unprecedented magnesium-centered complex anion is reported and shown to perform well as a magnesium-battery electrolyte. This finding opens a new approach towards the design of electrolytes whose likelihood of meeting the challenging design targets for magnesium-battery electrolytes is very high.
The aromatic excimers of benzene, naphthalene, anthracene, pyrene, and perylene are systematically investigated using the multiconfiguration quasi-degenerate perturbation theory (MCQDPT) method, which is one of high-level ab initio quantum chemical methods. The reference configuration space for MCQDPT is carefully designed for an appropriate description of the target electronic state with a tractable computational cost. The dimers with eclipsed parallel arrangement are investigated. The basis set dependence of the selected spectroscopic parameters is examined for the benzene and naphthalene dimers, and that of the excimer binding energy is found to be significant. In contrast, the equilibrium intermolecular distance and excimer fluorescence energy are less sensitive to the size of the basis sets used, and they agree with the corresponding experimental values, even with a nonextensive basis set size. The calculated spectroscopic parameters for anthracene, pyrene, and perylene dimers are also in good agreement with the experimental results. The electronic properties of the excimers are discussed in relation to those of the corresponding monomers. The wave functions of the excimers are analyzed in detail to clarify the origin of the attractive nature between the two monomers.
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