Raphael M. Jay,Ambar Banerjee,Torsten Leitner,Ru‐Pan Wang,Jessica Harich,Robert Stefanuik,Hampus Wikmark,Michael R. Coates,Emma V. Beale,Victoria Kabanova,Abdullah Kahraman,Anna Wach,D. Ozerov,Christopher Arrell,Philip J. M. Johnson,Camelia N. Borca,Claudio Cirelli,Camila Bacellar,Christopher J. Milne,Nils Huse
出处
期刊:Science [American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)] 日期:2023-06-01卷期号:380 (6648): 955-960被引量:22
Transition metal reactivity toward carbon-hydrogen (C-H) bonds hinges on the interplay of electron donation and withdrawal at the metal center. Manipulating this reactivity in a controlled way is difficult because the hypothesized metal-alkane charge-transfer interactions are challenging to access experimentally. Using time-resolved x-ray spectroscopy, we track the charge-transfer interactions during C-H activation of octane by a cyclopentadienyl rhodium carbonyl complex. Changes in oxidation state as well as valence-orbital energies and character emerge in the data on a femtosecond to nanosecond timescale. The x-ray spectroscopic signatures reflect how alkane-to-metal donation determines metal-alkane complex stability and how metal-to-alkane back-donation facilitates C-H bond cleavage by oxidative addition. The ability to dissect charge-transfer interactions on an orbital level provides opportunities for manipulating C-H reactivity at transition metals.