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Neutral and ionic ruthenium and iron aliphatic PNHP-type pincer complexes (PNHP = NH(CH2CH2PiPr2)2) bearing benzyl, n-butyl or tert-butyl isocyanide ancillary ligands have been prepared and characterized. Reaction of [RuCl2(PNHP)]2 with one equivalent CN-R per ruthenium center affords complexes [RuCl2(PNHP)(CNR)] (R = benzyl, 1a, R = n-butyl, 1b, R = t-butyl, 1c), with cationic [RuCl(PNHP)(CNR)2]Cl 2a-c as side-products. Dichloride species 1a-c react with excess NaBH4 to afford [RuH(PNHP)(BH4)(CN-R)] 3a-c, analogues to benchmark Takasago catalyst [RuH(PNHP)(BH4)(CO)]. Reaction of 1a-c with a single equivalent of NaBH4 results in formation of [RuHCl(PNHP) (CN-R)] (4a-c), from which 3a-c can be prepared upon reaction with excess NaBH4. Use of one equivalent of NaHBEt3 with 4a and 4c affords bishydrides [Ru(H)2(PNHP)(CN-R)] 5a and 5c. Deprotonation of 4c by KOtBu generates amido derivative [RuH(PNP)(CN-t-Bu)] (6, PNP = -N(CH2CH2PiPr2)2), unstable in solution. Addition of excess benzylisonitrile to 4a provides cationic hydride [RuH(PNHP) (CN-CH2Ph)2]Cl (7). Concerning iron chemistry, [Fe(PNHP)Br2] reacts with one equivalent of benzylisonitrile to afford [FeBr(PNHP)(CNCH2Ph)2]Br (8). The outer-sphere bromide anion can be exchanged by salt metathesis with NaBPh4 to generate [FeBr(PNHP) (CNCH2Ph)2](BPh4) (9). Cationic hydride species [FeH(PNHP) (CN-t-Bu)2](BH4) (10) is prepared from consecutive addition of excess CN-t-Bu and NaBH4 on [Fe(PNPH)Br2]. Ruthenium complexes 3a-c are active in acceptorless alcohol dehydrogenative coupling into ester under base-free conditions. From kinetic follow-up, the trend in initial activity is 3a ≈ 3b > [RuH(PNHP)(BH4)(CO)] ≫ 3c; for robustness, [RuH(BH4)(CO)(PNHP)] > 3a > 3b ≫ 3c. Hypotheses are given to account for the observed deactivation. Complexes 3b, 3c, 4a, 4c, 5c, 7, cis-8 and 9 were characterized by X-ray crystallography.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1dt01722e | DOI Listing |
Environ Sci Technol
September 2025
CAS Key Laboratory of Urban Pollutant Conversion, Department of Environmental Science and Engineering, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei 230026, China.
Nanomaterial-mediated Fenton-like reactions, central tools to address the increasing prevalence of micropollutants, predominantly use chemically stable hydrogen peroxide (HO) as the oxidant despite its high activation energy that leads to rather low catalytic activity. Here, we report that the efficiency of Fenton-like reaction can be substantially increased through the localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) effect, initiated by a plasmonic catalyst comprising a ruthenium nanocluster anchored on titanium dioxide nanobelt (TNB-Ru). Experimental results and simulation studies unravel the formation of LSPR on the catalyst surface upon visible light irradiation, which promises the conversion of photon energy into localized heat, contributing to remarkable catalytic performance and high utilization rate of HO (40%) in Fenton-like reaction.
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August 2025
Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, University of Malta Msida MSD 2080 Malta +(356) 2340 2276.
1,8-Naphthalimides with an organometallic moiety with anticancer and luminescence or photoactive properties are reviewed. Primarily highlighted are 1,8-naphthalimide complexes with iron, platinum, and ruthenium, while honourable mentions are given to iridium, rhenium and rhodium complexes. The cytotoxicity, mechanism of action and cell selectivity of the compounds are discussed alongside their photophysical properties for monitoring interactions with biomolecules, most notably DNA, by absorption, fluorescence and dichroism spectroscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPharmaceutics
July 2025
BioChem Lab, Department of Pharmacy, School of Medicine and Surgery, University "Federico II" of Naples, 80131 Naples, Italy.
: In the context of preclinical studies, we have hitherto showcased that a low-molecular-weight ruthenium(III) complex we named AziRu holds significant potential for further developments as an anticancer candidate drug. When appropriately converted into stable nanomaterials and delivered into tumor cells, AziRu exhibits superior antiproliferative activity, benefiting from a multimodal mechanism of action. The activation of regulated cell death (RCD) pathways (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPharmaceuticals (Basel)
July 2025
Department of Engineering and Natural Sciences, University of Applied Sciences Merseburg, Eberhard-Leibnitz-Straße 2, DE-06217 Merseburg, Germany.
Developments of nanostructured materials have a significant impact in various areas, such as energy technology and biomedical use. Examples include solar cells, energy management, environmental control, bioprobes, tissue engineering, biological marking, cancer diagnosis, therapy, and drug delivery. Currently, researchers are designing multifunctional nanodrugs that combine in vivo imaging (using fluorescent nanomaterials) with targeted drug delivery, aiming to maximize therapeutic efficacy while minimizing toxicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
December 2025
College of Biological, Chemical Sciences and Engineering, Jiaxing University, Jiaxing, Zhejiang 314001, People's Republic of China. Electronic address:
Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are emerging as versatile platforms for supporting isolated single-site catalysts due to their privileged structural designability and uniformity, have received special attention in electrocatalytic applications. Herein, a novel pyrazole-type nickel (Ni)-Salen based MOF has been constructed via an incompletely linked self-assembled form, as determined by the single-crystal X-ray diffraction. The ring-opening tetradentate metal nitrogen‑oxygen (MNO) structure in above MOF features strong chelating coordination and accessible open metal sites, strongly implying its enormous potential as single-metal site electrocatalysts.
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