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Palladium-Catalysed Coupling Reactions En Route to Molecular Machines: Sterically Hindered Indenyl and Ferrocenyl Anthracenes and Triptycenes, and Biindenyls

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 25, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules25081950

Keywords

restricted rotations; M(CO)(3) tripods; molecular brakes and gears; X-ray; V-T NMR

Funding

  1. Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) [RFP/CHE0066]

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Pd-catalysed Stille and Suzuki cross-couplings were used to prepare 9-(3-indenyl)-, 6, and 9-(2-indenyl)-anthracene, 7; addition of benzyne led to the 9-Indenyl-triptycenes, 8 and 9. In 6, [4 + 2] addition also occurred to the indenyl substituent. Reaction of 6 through 9 with Cr(CO)(6) or Re-2(CO)(10) gave their M(CO)(3) derivatives, where the Cr or Re was complexed to a six- or five-membered ring, respectively. In the 9-(2-indenyl)triptycene complexes, slowed rotation of the paddlewheel on the NMRtime-scale was apparent in the eta(5)-Re(CO)(3) case and, when the eta(6)-Cr(CO)(3) was deprotonated, the resulting haptotropic shift of the metal tripod onto the five-membered ring also blocked paddle wheel rotation, thus functioning as an organometallic molecular brake. Suzuki coupling of ferrocenylboronic acid to mono- or dibromoanthracene yielded the ferrocenyl anthracenes en route to the corresponding triptycenes in which stepwise hindered rotations of the ferrocenyl groups behaved like molecular dials. CuCl2-mediated coupling of methyl- and phenyl-indenes yielded their rac and meso 2,20-biindenyls; surprisingly, however, the apparently sterically crowded rac 2,20-Bis(9-triptycyl)biindenyl functioned as a freely rotating set of molecular gears. The predicted high rotation barrier in 9-phenylanthracene was experimentally validated via the Pd-catalysed syntheses of di(3-fluorophenyl)anthracene and 9-(1-naphthyl)-10-phenylanthracene.

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