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Ruthenium RuCl

Binary Compounds. The mthenium fluorides are RuF [51621 -05-7] RuF [71500-16-8] tetrameric (RuF ) [14521 -18-7] (15), and RuF [13693-087-8]. The chlorides of mthenium are RUCI2 [13465-51-5] an insoluble RuCl [10049-08-8] which exists in an a- and p-form, mthenium trichloride ttihydrate [13815-94-6], RuCl3-3H2 0, and RuCl [13465-52-6]. Commercial RuCl3-3H2 0 has a variable composition, consisting of a mixture of chloro, 0x0, hydroxo, and often nitrosyl complexes. The overall mthenium oxidation state is closer to +4 than +3. It is a water-soluble source of mthenium, and is used widely as a starting material. Ruthenium forms bromides, RuBr2 [59201-36-4] and RuBr [14014-88-1], and an iodide, Rul [13896-65-6]. [Pg.177]

It appeared to be a logical consequence to transfer this synthetic principle to more suitable metals like ruthenium and introduce bulky, kinetically stabilizing ligands at the metal. An interesting example for this approach is the complex 78. The latter is synthesized from Cp RuCl(PR3)2 with ClMgCH2SiMe2H through 77 by a thermal Si — H activation reaction. [Pg.38]

The reaction of the coordinatively unsaturated ruthenium amidinates with [Cp RuCl]4 tetramer or [CpRufMeCNlsJPFg provides access to novel amidinate-bridged dinuclear ruthenium complexes (Scheme 146), which in turn can be transformed into cationic complexes or hydride derivatives. In these complexes, a bridging amidinate ligand perpendicular to the metal-metal axis effectively stabilizes the highly reactive cationic diruthenium species. [Pg.282]

Ruthenium complexes have also been reported as active species for enan-tioselective Diels-Alder reactions. Faller et al. prepared a catalyst by treatment of (-)-[( ] -cymene)RuCl(L)]SbF6 with AgSbFe resulting in the formation of a dication by chloride abstraction [95]. The ligand was (-l-)-IndaBOx 69 (Scheme 36) and the corresponding complex allowed the condensation of methacrolein with cyclopentadiene in 95% conversion and 91% ee. As another example, Davies [96] prepared the complex [Ru(Fl20)L ( i -mes)] [SbFe]2 (with 70 as L in Scheme 36), and tested its activity in the same reaction leading to the expected product with similar activity and lower enan-tioselectivity (70%). [Pg.122]

Madsen and co-workers have reported an important extension to the amine alkylation chemistry, in which oxidation takes place to give the amide product [13]. A ruthenium NHC complex is formed in situ by the reaction of [RuCl Ccod)] with a phosphine and an imidazolium salt in the presence of base. Rather than returning the borrowed hydrogen, the catalyst expels two equivalents of H. For example, alcohol 31 and benzylamine 27 undergo an oxidative coupling to give amide 32 in good isolated yield (Scheme 11.7). [Pg.256]

Another method for reductive dimerization has been developed in hy-drosilylation. NiCl2-SEt2 is an effective catalyst in silylative dimerization of aromatic aldehydes with a hydrosilane (Scheme 12) [40]. A catalytic thiolate-bridged diruthenium complex [Cp RuCl(/ 2-SPrI)2RuCp ][OTf] also induces the conversion to 1,2-diaryl-1,2-disiloxyethane [41]. A dinuclear (siloxyben-zyl)ruthenium complex is considered to be formed, and the homolytic Ru - C bond fission leads to the siloxybenzyl radicals, which couple to the coupling product 14. [Pg.71]

Reactions with Other Substrate Complexes. The ruthenium analog of 45, coordinatively unsaturated RuCl(NO)(PPh3)2, also yields methylene and ethylidene complexes on treatment with diazomethane and diazoethane (39,85). [Pg.157]

Alternatively, arene displacement can also be photo- rather than thermally-induced. In this respect, we studied the photoactivation of the dinuclear ruthenium-arene complex [ RuCl (rj6-indane) 2(p-2,3-dpp)]2+ (2,3-dpp, 2,3-bis(2-pyridyl)pyrazine) (21). The thermal reactivity of this compound is limited to the stepwise double aquation (which shows biexponential kinetics), but irradiation of the sample results in photoinduced loss of the arene. This photoactivation pathway produces ruthenium species that are more active than their ruthenium-arene precursors (Fig. 18). At the same time, free indane fluoresces 40 times more strongly than bound indane, opening up possibilities to use the arene as a fluorescent marker for imaging purposes. The photoactivation pathway is different from those previously discussed for photoactivated Pt(IV) diazido complexes, as it involves photosubstitution rather than photoreduction. Importantly, the photoactivation mechanism is independent of oxygen (see Section II on photoactivatable platinum drugs) (83). [Pg.37]

Fig. 18. The dinuclear complex [ RuCl(ri6-indane)>2(p-2,3-dpp)]2+ (21) can be photoactivated to yield highly reactive and potentially cytotoxic ruthenium species and the arene indane, which could be used as a fluorescent probe. Fig. 18. The dinuclear complex [ RuCl(ri6-indane)>2(p-2,3-dpp)]2+ (21) can be photoactivated to yield highly reactive and potentially cytotoxic ruthenium species and the arene indane, which could be used as a fluorescent probe.
Further experiments focused therefore on [RuCl(en)(r 6-tha)]+ (12) and [RuCl(rj6-p-cym)(en)]+ (22), which represent the two different classes, and their conformational distortion of short oligonucleotide duplexes. Chemical probes demonstrated that the induced distortion extended over at least seven base pairs for [RuCl(rj6-p-cym)(en)]+ (22), whereas the distortion was less extensive for [RuCl(en)(rj6-tha)]+ (12). Isothermal titration calorimetry also showed that the thermodynamic destabilization of the duplex was more pronounced for [RuCl(r 6-p-cym)(en)]+ (22) (89). DNA polymerization was markedly more strongly inhibited by the monofunctional Ru(II) adducts than by monofunctional Pt(II) compounds. The lack of recognition of the DNA monofunctional adducts by HMGB1, an interaction that shields cisplatin-DNA adducts from repair, points to a different mechanism of antitumor activity for the ruthenium-arenes. DNA repair activity by a repair-proficient HeLa cell-free extract (CFE) showed a considerably lower level of damage-induced DNA repair synthesis (about six times) for [RuCl(en)(rj6-tha)] + compared to cisplatin. This enhanced persistence of the adduct is consistent with the higher cytotoxicity of this compound (89). [Pg.43]

Histidine residues are, however, generally regarded as major possible binding sites for ruthenium-arene complexes in proteins. To model this interaction, we also studied the reaction of [RuCl(en)(rj6-bip)]+ (10) with L-histidine at 310 K in aqueous solution (91). The reaction was quite sluggish and did not reach equilibrium until 24 h at 310 K, by which time only about 22% of the complex had reacted. Two isomeric imidazole-bound histidine adducts could be discerned, with more or less equal binding of Ne... [Pg.45]

Materials. The commercially available aldehydes were distilled prior to use and stored at 0°C under argon. The cyclohexene- and cyclopentene- aldehydes, and the indane aldehyde (see Table) were gifts from Professor E. Piers of this department. The Ru(TPP)(PPh3)2 complex (1) was prepared from Ru(TPP)(CO)(EtOH) and PPh3 (1,7), while Ru(TPP)(CO)(tBu2POH), was prepared from the carbonyl (ethanol) adduct by treatment with tBu2PCl (1). The phosphines were from Strem Chemicals, and the ruthenium was obtained as RuCl Ol O from Johnson, Matthey Limited. [Pg.241]

As they report in reference 36, Nishibayashi and co-workers succeeded in producing ammonia through the use of ruthenium and tungsten complexes. [RuCl(ri2-H2)(Ph2PCH2CH2CH2PPh2)2]+ (2) is reversibly generated from... [Pg.258]

Addition of disulfides to carbon-carbon double bonds is catalyzed by ruthenium complexes (Equation (71)).204 Even relatively less reactive dialkyl disulfides add to norbornene with high stereoselectivity in the presence of a catalytic amount of Cp RuCl(cod). Diphenyl disulfide adds to ethylene and terminal alkenes under identical conditions (Equation (72)). [Pg.755]

Hydrated RuCl, (1.5 g, ca. 6.2 mmol) is stirred with sodium periodate (5.5 g, 26 mmol) in H20 (50 ml) for 12 h. The precipitated ruthenium oxide is added at 0-5°C under an atmosphere of oxygen to aqueous TPA-OH (1M, 5 ml) and aqueous NaOH (0.8 M, 50 ml). Precipitated TPA-Ru04 (87%) is collected and washed well with H20 and dried under vacuum. [Pg.452]

H, Cl, Br, NO2, Me, MeO) by bromamine-B, catalysed in the presence of HCl in 30% aqueous methanol by RuCls have been smdied and a biphasic Hammett a-relationship derived. A kinetic study of the ruthenium(in)-catalysed oxidation of aliphatic primary amines by sodium A-bromo-j -toluenesulfonamide (bromamine-T, BAT) in hydrochloric acid medium has been undertaken and the mechanism of the reaction discussed. A concerted hydrogen-atom transfer one-electron transfer mechanism is proposed for the ruthenium(in)-catalysed oxidation of 2-methylpentane-2,4-diol by alkaline hexacyanoferrate(III). The kinetics of the oxidation of propane-... [Pg.226]


See other pages where Ruthenium RuCl is mentioned: [Pg.1084]    [Pg.446]    [Pg.1084]    [Pg.446]    [Pg.177]    [Pg.177]    [Pg.177]    [Pg.1091]    [Pg.21]    [Pg.174]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.37]    [Pg.203]    [Pg.562]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.160]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.272]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.283]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.124]    [Pg.183]    [Pg.44]    [Pg.49]    [Pg.305]    [Pg.331]    [Pg.461]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.117]    [Pg.243]    [Pg.89]    [Pg.358]    [Pg.161]    [Pg.161]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.686 , Pg.699 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2 , Pg.265 ]




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