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The selective reduction of α,β-unsaturated ketones, either at the olefinic or the carbonyl site, offers attractive synthetic opportunities. While carbonyl reduction is well established, selective olefin reduction is less common, particularly when using environmentally friendly ethanol as a hydrogen source. Recently, we reported a coordinatively unsaturated ruthenium complex containing an ,'-bidentate coordinating pyridinium amidate (PYA) ligand as an efficient catalyst for ethanol-based transfer hydrogenation of α,β-unsaturated ketones; however, there was over-reduction and thus loss of selectivity in reactions over an extended period of time. Capitalizing on the facile synthetic modulation of PYA ligands, we herein report on a series of operationally unsaturated two-legged piano-stool ruthenium cymene complexes [Ru(N^N')(cym)](PF) 3a-e with modifications on the PYA-appended aroyl unit. Spectroscopic analysis of these complexes suggests a higher contribution of the π-basic zwitterionic resonance structure of the PYA unit in CDCl and a larger contribution of the π-acidic quinoidal structure in polar and more coordinating CDOD. The latter also allows for stabilization of the catalytically relevant alkoxide intermediate [Ru(OEt)(N^N')(cym)] 4. Application of complexes 3a-3e in transfer hydrogenation of -chalcone indicates generally good transfer hydrogenation activity and good selectivity towards olefin hydrogenation for all complexes. The variant with a -CF-CH substituted PYA ligand, complex 3c, combined high activity and very high selectivity, affording almost exclusively the desired saturated ketone product with only traces of the saturated alcohol even after prolonged reaction times, underpinning the effectiveness of PYA ligand modulation in tailoring activity and selectivity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d5dt01348h | DOI Listing |
Nat Chem
September 2025
Department of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA.
Proton transfer plays an important role in both hydrogen and oxygen evolution reactions during electrocatalytic water splitting to produce green hydrogen. However, directly adapting the conventional proton/deuterium kinetic isotope effect to study proton transfer in heterogeneous electrocatalytic processes is challenging. Here we propose using the shift in the Tafel slope between protic and deuteric electrolytes, or the Tafel slope isotope effect, as an effective probe of proton transfer characteristics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrg Lett
September 2025
Key Lab of Functional Molecular Engineering of Guangdong Province, School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, South China University of Technology, Wushan Rd-381, Guangzhou 510641, P.R. China.
Herein, we report the first regio- and enantioselective synthesis of tetrahydropyrido[2,3-]pyrazines using a chiral iridacycle catalyst. Pyridyl diamines and diketones undergo sequential annulation and asymmetric transfer hydrogenation of the generated pyrido[2,3-]pyrazine intermediates. This method provides diverse fused N-heterocycles in high yields (up to 95%) and enantioselectivity (98.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
September 2025
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, The University of Texas at Dallas, Richardson, Texas 75080-3021, United States.
The direct transformation of C-H bonds into C-C bonds via cross-dehydrogenative coupling (CDC) represents a powerful strategy in synthetic chemistry, enabling streamlined bond construction without the need for prefunctionalized substrates. While traditional CDC approaches rely on polar mechanisms and preactivation of one of the C-H partners, recent advances have introduced radical-based strategies that employ a hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) approach to access carbon-centered radicals from unactivated substrates. Herein, we report a nickel-catalyzed CDC reaction between aldehydes and alkenes for the synthesis of skipped enones, leveraging aryl radicals as intermolecular HAT agents.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Colloid Interface Sci
September 2025
College of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Qingdao University of Science and Technology, Qingdao 266042, PR China. Electronic address:
Transition metal fluorides because of the high electronegativity of fluorine may enhance the local electron density of the metal sites and promote water molecule dissociation and charge transfer. However, enhancing the intrinsic activity of fluorides to improve material stability remains a challenge. Herein, we develop an innovative four-step synthetic strategy (electrochemical deposition → co-precipitation → ligand exchange → in situ fluorination) to engineer three-dimensional porous Fe-doped CoF nanocubes vertically anchored on MXene (Fe-CoF/MXene/NF).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpectrochim Acta A Mol Biomol Spectrosc
September 2025
College of Chemistry, Zhengzhou University, Zhengzhou, Henan 450001, PR China.
The interactions of three berberine mid-chain fatty acid salts ([BBR][C], n = 6, 7, 8) with lysozyme (Lyz) are investigated in detail using multi-spectroscopic and molecular docking techniques. Steady-state fluorescence and UV-visible absorption experiments suggest that the binding mechanism of [BBR][C] on Lyz is a static quenching with a binding ratio of 1:1. The compound [BBR][C] exhibits a moderate binding affinity toward Lyz.
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