3d-d Excited States of Ni(II) Complexes Relevant to Photoredox Catalysis: Spectroscopic Identification and Mechanistic Implications
Author(s) -
Stephen I. Ting,
Sofia Garakyaraghi,
Chelsea M. Taliaferro,
Benjamin J. Shields,
Gregory D. Scholes,
Felix N. Castellano,
Abigail G. Doyle
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.0c00781
Subject(s) - chemistry , homolysis , excited state , photochemistry , aryl , ultrafast laser spectroscopy , isomerization , photoredox catalysis , ligand (biochemistry) , nickel , radical , catalysis , spectroscopy , atomic physics , organic chemistry , photocatalysis , biochemistry , physics , alkyl , receptor , quantum mechanics
Synthetic organic chemistry has seen major advances due to the merger of nickel and photoredox catalysis. A growing number of Ni-photoredox reactions are proposed to involve generation of excited nickel species, sometimes even in the absence of a photoredox catalyst. To gain insights about these excited states, two of our groups previously studied the photophysics of Ni( -Bu bpy)( o -Tol)Cl, which is representative of proposed intermediates in many Ni-photoredox reactions. This complex was found to have a long-lived excited state (τ = 4 ns), which was computationally assigned as a metal-to-ligand charge transfer (MLCT) state with an energy of 1.6 eV (38 kcal/mol). This work evaluates the computational assignment experimentally using a series of related complexes. Ultrafast UV-Vis and mid-IR transient absorption data suggest that a MLCT state is generated initially upon excitation but decays to a long-lived state that is 3 d-d rather than 3 MLCT in character. Dynamic cis , rans -isomerization of the square planar complexes was observed in the dark using 1 H NMR techniques, supporting that this 3 d-d state is tetrahedral and accessible at ambient temperature. Through a combination of transient absorption and NMR studies, the 3 d-d state was determined to lie ∼0.5 eV (12 kcal/mol) above the ground state. Because the 3 d-d state features a weak Ni-aryl bond, the excited Ni(II) complexes can undergo Ni homolysis to generate aryl radicals and Ni(I), both of which are supported experimentally. Thus, photoinduced Ni-aryl homolysis offers a novel mechanism of initiating catalysis by Ni(I).
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