Abstract
We report the synthesis and characterization of several chiral salen- and salan-type ligands and their vanadium complexes, which are derived from salicylaldehyde or salicylaldehyde derivatives and chiral diamines (1R,2R-diaminocyclohexane, 1S,2S-diaminocyclohexane, and 1S,2S-diphenylethylenediamine). The structures of H(2)sal(R,R-chan)(2+) x 2 Cl(-) x (CH(3))(2)CHOH x H(2)O (1c; H(2)sal(R,R-chan) = N,N'-salicyl-R,R-cyclohexanediaminium), Etvan(S,S-chen) (3c; Etvan(S,S-chen) = N,N'-3-ethoxy-salicylidene-S,S-cyclohexanediiminato), and naph(R,R-chen) (6c; naph(R,R-chen) = N,N'-naphthylidene-R,R-cyclohexanediiminato) were determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. The corresponding vanadium(IV) complexes and several other new complexes involving different salicylaldehyde-type precursors were prepared and characterized in the solid state and in solution by spectroscopic techniques: UV-vis, circular dichroism, electron paramagnetic resonance, and (51)V NMR, which provide information on the coordination geometry. The salan complexes oxidize in organic solvents to V(V) species, and this process was also studied using spectroscopic techniques. Single crystals suitable for X-ray diffraction were obtained for [{V(V)O[sal(S,S-dpan)]}(2)(mu-O)] x H(2)O x 2(CH(3))(2)CHOH (14c; sal(S,S-dpan) = N,N'-salicyl-S,S-diphenylethylenediaminato) and [{V(V)O[t-Busal(R,R-chan)]}(2)(mu-O)] x 2 (CH(3))(2)CHOH (15c), both containing an OV(V)(mu-O)V(V)O moiety (V(2)O(3)(4+) core) with tetradentate ligands and one mu-oxo bridge. Both structures are the first examples of dinuclear vanadium complexes involving the V(V)(2)O(3)(4+) core with tetradentate ligands, the configuration of the V(2)O(3) unit being twist-angular. The V-salen and V-salan complexes are tested as catalysts in the oxidation of styrene, cyclohexene, cumene, and methyl phenyl sulfide with H(2)O(2) and t-BuOOH as oxidants. Overall, the V-salan complexes show higher activity and normally better selectivity in alkene oxidation and higher activity and enantioselectivity for sulfoxidation than their parent V-salen complexes, therefore being an advantageous alternative ligand system for oxidation catalysis. The better performance of V-salan complexes probably results from their significantly higher hydrolytic stability. Mechanisms for the alkene oxidation with these newly obtained V-salan compounds are discussed, including the use of DFT for the comparison of several alternative mechanisms for epoxidation.
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