Co-reporter:Andrew C. Serino, Mary E. Anderson, Liban M. A. Saleh, Rafal M. Dziedzic, Harrison Mills, Liv K. Heidenreich, Alexander M. Spokoyny, and Paul S. Weiss
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces October 11, 2017 Volume 9(Issue 40) pp:34592-34592
Publication Date(Web):September 18, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acsami.7b10596
Self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of carborane isomers with different dipole moments passivate germanium to modulate surface work function while maintaining chemical environment and surface energy. To identify head groups capable of monolayer formation on germanium surfaces, we studied thiol-, hydroxyl-, and carboxyl-terminated carboranes. These films were successfully formed with carboxylic acid head groups instead of the archetypal thiol, suggesting that the carborane cluster significantly affects headgroup reactivity. Film characterization included X-ray and ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopies as well as contact angle goniometry. Using these carboranes, the germanium surface work function was tailored over 0.4 eV without significant changes to wetting properties.Keywords: carborane; germanium; ligand; self-assembled monolayers; ultrathin film; work function;
Co-reporter:Jonathan C. Axtell, Kent O. Kirlikovali, Dahee Jung, Rafal M. Dziedzic, Arnold L. Rheingold, and Alexander M. Spokoyny
Organometallics March 27, 2017 Volume 36(Issue 6) pp:1204-1204
Publication Date(Web):March 10, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.organomet.7b00078
The synthesis of fully alkylated closo-hexaborate dianions is reported. The reaction of [NBu4][B6H6Hfac], benzyl bromide, and triethylamine under microwave heating conditions affords persubstituted [NBu4][B6(CH2Ar)6Hfac] (Ar = C6H5, 4–Br-C6H4), which have been isolated and characterized by NMR spectroscopy, mass spectrometry, single-crystal X-ray diffraction, and other spectroscopic techniques. Electrochemical studies of these clusters reveal an irreversible one-electron oxidation, likely indicating degradative cage rupture. The observed metal-free alkylation is proposed to proceed as a consequence of the pronounced nucleophilic character of the hexaborate anion. This work represents the first example of a perfunctionalized hexaborate cluster featuring B–C bonds.
Co-reporter:Rafal M. Dziedzic, Joshua L. Martin, Jonathan C. Axtell, Liban M. A. Saleh, Ta-Chung Ong, Yun-Fang Yang, Marco S. Messina, Arnold L. Rheingold, K. N. Houk, and Alexander M. Spokoyny
Journal of the American Chemical Society June 14, 2017 Volume 139(Issue 23) pp:7729-7729
Publication Date(Web):May 25, 2017
DOI:10.1021/jacs.7b04080
We report the first observed Pd-catalyzed isomerization (“cage-walking”) of B(9)-bromo-meta-carborane during Pd-catalyzed cross-coupling, which enables the formation of B–O and B–N bonds at all boron vertices (B(2), B(4), B(5), and B(9)) of meta-carborane. Experimental and theoretical studies suggest this isomerization mechanism is strongly influenced by the steric crowding at the Pd catalyst by either a biaryl phosphine ligand and/or substrate. Ultimately, this “cage-walking” process provides a unique pathway to preferentially introduce functional groups at the B(2) vertex using B(9)-bromo-meta-carborane as the sole starting material through substrate control.
Co-reporter:Kent O. Kirlikovali, Alexander M. Spokoyny
Chem 2017 Volume 3, Issue 3(Volume 3, Issue 3) pp:
Publication Date(Web):14 September 2017
DOI:10.1016/j.chempr.2017.08.013
In this issue of Chem, Wong et al. report a blue Ir(III)-based phosphorescent organic light-emitting diode (PHOLED) material with high efficiency and an operational lifetime of more than 2,200 hr in a working device. These characteristics make this material one of the most robust blue PHOLEDs reported to date.
Co-reporter:Marco S. Messina; Jonathan C. Axtell; Yiqun Wang; Paul Chong; Alex I. Wixtrom; Kent O. Kirlikovali; Brianna M. Upton; Bryan M. Hunter; Oliver S. Shafaat; Saeed I. Khan; Jay R. Winkler; Harry B. Gray; Anastassia N. Alexandrova; Heather D. Maynard
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2016 Volume 138(Issue 22) pp:6952-6955
Publication Date(Web):May 17, 2016
DOI:10.1021/jacs.6b03568
We report a discovery that perfunctionalized icosahedral dodecaborate clusters of the type B12(OCH2Ar)12 (Ar = Ph or C6F5) can undergo photo-excitation with visible light, leading to a new class of metal-free photooxidants. Excitation in these species occurs as a result of the charge transfer between low-lying orbitals located on the benzyl substituents and an unoccupied orbital delocalized throughout the boron cluster core. Here we show how these species, photo-excited with a benchtop blue LED source, can exhibit excited-state reduction potentials as high as 3 V and can participate in electron-transfer processes with a broad range of styrene monomers, initiating their polymerization. Initiation is observed in cases of both electron-rich and electron-deficient styrene monomers at cluster loadings as low as 0.005 mol%. Furthermore, photo-excitation of B12(OCH2C6F5)12 in the presence of a less activated olefin such as isobutylene results in the production of highly branched poly(isobutylene). This work introduces a new class of air-stable, metal-free photo-redox reagents capable of mediating chemical transformations.
Co-reporter:Jonathan C. Axtell, Kent O. Kirlikovali, Peter I. Djurovich, Dahee Jung, Vinh T. Nguyen, Brian Munekiyo, A. Timothy Royappa, Arnold L. Rheingold, and Alexander M. Spokoyny
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2016 Volume 138(Issue 48) pp:15758-15765
Publication Date(Web):November 9, 2016
DOI:10.1021/jacs.6b10232
We report the development of a new class of phosphorescent zwitterionic bis(heteroleptic) Ir(III) compounds containing pyridyl ligands with weakly coordinating nido-carboranyl substituents. Treatment of phenylpyridine-based Ir(III) precursors with C-substituted ortho-carboranylpyridines in 2-ethoxyethanol results in a facile carborane deboronation and the formation of robust and highly luminescent metal complexes. The resulting nido-carboranyl fragments associate with the cationic Ir(III) center through primarily electrostatic interactions. These compounds phosphoresce at blue wavelengths (450–470 nm) both in a poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) matrix and in solution at 77 K. These complexes display structural stability at temperatures beyond 300 °C and quantum yields greater than 40%. Importantly, the observed quantum yields correspond to a dramatic 10-fold enhancement over the previously reported Ir(III) congeners featuring carboranyl-containing ligands in which the boron cluster is covalently attached to the metal. Ultimately, this work suggests that the use of a ligand framework containing a weakly coordinating anionic component can provide a new avenue for designing efficient Ir(III)-based phosphorescent emitters.
Co-reporter:Rafal M. Dziedzic; Liban M. A. Saleh; Jonathan C. Axtell; Joshua L. Martin; Simone L. Stevens; A. Timothy Royappa; Arnold L. Rheingold
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2016 Volume 138(Issue 29) pp:9081-9084
Publication Date(Web):July 6, 2016
DOI:10.1021/jacs.6b05505
Carboranes are boron-rich molecules that can be functionalized through metal-catalyzed cross-coupling. Here, for the first time, we report the use of bromo-carboranes in palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling for efficient B–N, B–O, and unprecedented B–CN bond formation. In many cases bromo-carboranes outperform the traditionally utilized iodo-carborane species. This marked difference in reactivity is leveraged to circumvent multistep functionalization by directly coupling small nucleophiles (-OH, -NH2, and -CN) and multiple functional groups onto the boron-rich clusters.
Co-reporter:Jeffrey J. Schwartz; Alexandra M. Mendoza; Natcha Wattanatorn; Yuxi Zhao; Vinh T. Nguyen; Alexander M. Spokoyny; Chad A. Mirkin; Tomáš Baše;Paul S. Weiss
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2016 Volume 138(Issue 18) pp:5957-5967
Publication Date(Web):April 19, 2016
DOI:10.1021/jacs.6b02026
Detailed understanding and control of the intermolecular forces that govern molecular assembly are necessary to engineer structure and function at the nanoscale. Liquid crystal (LC) assembly is exceptionally sensitive to surface properties, capable of transducing nanoscale intermolecular interactions into a macroscopic optical readout. Self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) modify surface interactions and are known to influence LC alignment. Here, we exploit the different dipole magnitudes and orientations of carboranethiol and -dithiol positional isomers to deconvolve the influence of SAM-LC dipolar coupling from variations in molecular geometry, tilt, and order. Director orientations and anchoring energies are measured for LC cells employing various carboranethiol and -dithiol isomer alignment layers. The normal component of the molecular dipole in the SAM, toward or away from the underlying substrate, was found to determine the in-plane LC director orientation relative to the anisotropy axis of the surface. By using LC alignment as a probe of interaction strength, we elucidate the role of dipolar coupling of molecular monolayers to their environment in determining molecular orientations. We apply this understanding to advance the engineering of molecular interactions at the nanoscale.
Co-reporter:Kent O. Kirlikovali, Jonathan C. Axtell, Alejandra Gonzalez, Alice C. Phung, Saeed I. Khan and Alexander M. Spokoyny
Chemical Science 2016 vol. 7(Issue 8) pp:5132-5138
Publication Date(Web):27 Apr 2016
DOI:10.1039/C6SC01146B
We report the synthesis and characterization of a series of d8 metal complexes featuring robust and photophysically innocent strong-field chelating 1,1′-bis(o-carborane) (bc) ligand frameworks. A combination of UV-Vis spectroscopy, single crystal X-ray structural analysis, and DFT calculations of these species suggest that the dianionic bc ligand does not contribute to any visible metal-to-ligand charge transfer (MLCT) transitions, yet it provides a strong ligand field in these complexes. Furthermore, a bc-based Pt(II) complex containing a 4,4′-di-tert-butyl-2,2′-bipyridine ligand (dtb-bpy) has been prepared and was found to display blue phosphorescent emission dominated by MLCT from the Pt(II) center to the dtb-bpy ligand. Importantly, the bulky three-dimensional nature of the bc ligand precludes intermolecular Pt(II)⋯Pt(II) interactions in the solid state where the resulting compounds retain their emission properties. This study opens a potentially new avenue for designing organic light-emitting diode (OLED) materials with tunable properties featuring photophysically innocent boron-rich cluster ligands.
Co-reporter:Dr. Liban M. A. Saleh;Rafal M. Dziedzic;Dr. Saeed I. Khan ;Dr. Alexer M. Spokoyny
Chemistry - A European Journal 2016 Volume 22( Issue 25) pp:8466-8470
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/chem.201601292
Abstract
In contrast to the plethora of metal-catalyzed cross-coupling methods available for the installation of functional groups on aromatic hydrocarbons, a comparable variety of methods are currently not available for icosahedral carboranes, which are boron-rich three-dimensional aromatic analogues of aryl groups. Part of this is due to the limited understanding of the elementary steps for cross-coupling involving carboranes. Here, we report our efforts in isolating metal-boryl complexes to further our understanding of one of these elementary steps, oxidative addition. Structurally characterized examples of group 10 M−B bonds featuring icosahedral carboranes are completely unknown. Use of mercurocarboranes as a reagent to deliver M−B bonds saw divergent reactivity for platinum and palladium, with a Pt−B bond being isolated for the former, and a rare Pd−Hg bond being formed for the latter.
Co-reporter:Kent O. Kirlikovali, Jonathan C. Axtell, Alejandra Gonzalez, Alice C. Phung, Saeed I. Khan and Alexander M. Spokoyny
Chemical Science (2010-Present) 2016 - vol. 7(Issue 8) pp:NaN5138-5138
Publication Date(Web):2016/04/27
DOI:10.1039/C6SC01146B
We report the synthesis and characterization of a series of d8 metal complexes featuring robust and photophysically innocent strong-field chelating 1,1′-bis(o-carborane) (bc) ligand frameworks. A combination of UV-Vis spectroscopy, single crystal X-ray structural analysis, and DFT calculations of these species suggest that the dianionic bc ligand does not contribute to any visible metal-to-ligand charge transfer (MLCT) transitions, yet it provides a strong ligand field in these complexes. Furthermore, a bc-based Pt(II) complex containing a 4,4′-di-tert-butyl-2,2′-bipyridine ligand (dtb-bpy) has been prepared and was found to display blue phosphorescent emission dominated by MLCT from the Pt(II) center to the dtb-bpy ligand. Importantly, the bulky three-dimensional nature of the bc ligand precludes intermolecular Pt(II)⋯Pt(II) interactions in the solid state where the resulting compounds retain their emission properties. This study opens a potentially new avenue for designing organic light-emitting diode (OLED) materials with tunable properties featuring photophysically innocent boron-rich cluster ligands.
Co-reporter:Alex I. Wixtrom, Yanwu Shao, Dahee Jung, Charles W. Machan, Shaunt N. Kevork, Elaine A. Qian, Jonathan C. Axtell, Saeed I. Khan, Clifford P. Kubiak and Alexander M. Spokoyny
Inorganic Chemistry Frontiers 2016 - vol. 3(Issue 5) pp:NaN717-717
Publication Date(Web):2016/03/03
DOI:10.1039/C5QI00263J
We have developed a fast and efficient route to obtain perfunctionalized ether-linked alkyl and benzyl derivatives of the closo-[B12(OH)12]2− icosahedral dodecaborate cluster via microwave-assisted synthesis. These icosahedral boron clusters exhibit three-dimensional delocalization of the cage-bonding electrons, tunable photophysical properties, and a high degree of stability in air in both the solid state and in solution. A series of closo-[B12(OR)12]2−, hypocloso-[B12(OR)12]1− and hypercloso-[B12(OR)12]0 clusters have been prepared with reaction times ranging from hours to several minutes. This method is superior to previously reported protocols since it dramatically decreases the reaction times required and eliminates the need for inert atmosphere conditions. The generality of the new microwave-based method has been further demonstrated through the synthesis of several new derivatives, which feature redox potentials up to 0.6 V more positive than previously known B12(OR)12 cluster compounds. We further show how this method can be applied to a one-pot synthesis of hybrid, vertex-differentiated species B12(OR)11(OR′) that was formerly accessible only via multi-step reaction sequence.