Cyanate Formation via Photolytic Splitting of Dinitrogen
Author(s) -
Bastian Schluschaß,
Jan-Hendrik Borter,
Severine Rupp,
Serhiy Demeshko,
Christian Herwig,
Christian Limberg,
Nicholas A. Maciulis,
J. Schneider,
Christian Würtele,
Vera Krewald,
Dirk Schwarzer,
Sven Schneider
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
jacs au
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2691-3704
DOI - 10.1021/jacsau.1c00117
Subject(s) - cyanate , cyanate ester , chemistry , photochemistry , materials science , polymer chemistry , organic chemistry , epoxy
Light-driven N 2 cleavage into molecular nitrides is an attractive strategy for synthetic nitrogen fixation. However, suitable platforms are rare. Furthermore, the development of catalytic protocols via this elementary step suffers from poor understanding of N–N photosplitting within dinitrogen complexes, as well as of the thermochemical and kinetic framework for coupled follow-up chemistry. We here present a tungsten pincer platform, which undergoes fully reversible, thermal N 2 splitting and reverse nitride coupling, allowing for experimental derivation of thermodynamic and kinetic parameters of the N–N cleavage step. Selective N–N splitting was also obtained photolytically. DFT computations allocate the productive excitations within the {WNNW} core. Transient absorption spectroscopy shows ultrafast repopulation of the electronic ground state. Comparison with ground-state kinetics and resonance Raman data support a pathway for N–N photosplitting via a nonstatistically vibrationally excited ground state that benefits from vibronically coupled structural distortion of the core. Nitride carbonylation and release are demonstrated within a full synthetic cycle for trimethylsilylcyanate formation directly from N 2 and CO.
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