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  1. Catalytic hydrogenation of aromatic compounds is an important industrial process, particularly for the production of many petrochemical and pharmaceutical derivatives. This reaction is mainly catalyzed by noble metals, but rarely by metal oxides. Here, we report the development of monoclinic hydrogen-bearing ruthenium dioxide with a nominal composition of H x RuO 2 that can serve as a standalone catalyst for various hydrogenation reactions. The hydrogen-bearing oxide was synthesized through the water gas shift reaction of CO and H 2 O in the presence of rutile RuO 2 . The structure of H x RuO 2 was determined by synchrotron X-ray diffraction and density functional theory (DFT) studies. Solid-state 1 H NMR and Raman studies suggest that this compound possesses two types of isolated interstitial protons. H x RuO 2 is very active in hydrogenation of various arenes, including liquid organic hydrogen carriers, which are completely converted to the corresponding fully hydrogenated products under relatively mild conditions. In addition, high selectivities (>99%) were observed for the catalytic hydrogenation of functionalized nitroarenes to corresponding anilines. DFT simulations yield a small barrier for concerted proton transfer. The facile proton dynamics may be key in enabling selective hydrogenation reactions at relatively low temperature. Our findings inspire the search for hydrogen-containing metal oxides that could be employed as high-performance materials for catalysts, electrocatalysts, and fuel cells. 
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  2. Abstract

    Cooperativity plays a critical role in self‐assembly and molecular recognition. A rigid aromatic oligoamide macrocycle with a cyclodirectional backbone binds with DABCO‐based cationic guests in a 2 : 1 ratio in high affinities (Ktotal≈1013 M−2) in the highly polar DMF. The host–guest binding also exhibits exceptionally strong positive cooperativity quantified by interaction factors α that are among the largest for synthetic host–guest systems. The unusually strong positive cooperativity, revealed by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and fully corroborated by mass spectrometry, NMR and computational studies, is driven by guest‐induced stacking of the macrocycles and stabilization from the alkyl end chains of the guests, interactions that appear upon binding the second macrocycle. With its tight binding driven by extraordinary positive cooperativity, this host–guest system provides a tunable platform for studying molecular interactions and for constructing stable supramolecular assemblies.

     
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  3. Abstract

    Cooperativity plays a critical role in self‐assembly and molecular recognition. A rigid aromatic oligoamide macrocycle with a cyclodirectional backbone binds with DABCO‐based cationic guests in a 2 : 1 ratio in high affinities (Ktotal≈1013 M−2) in the highly polar DMF. The host–guest binding also exhibits exceptionally strong positive cooperativity quantified by interaction factors α that are among the largest for synthetic host–guest systems. The unusually strong positive cooperativity, revealed by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and fully corroborated by mass spectrometry, NMR and computational studies, is driven by guest‐induced stacking of the macrocycles and stabilization from the alkyl end chains of the guests, interactions that appear upon binding the second macrocycle. With its tight binding driven by extraordinary positive cooperativity, this host–guest system provides a tunable platform for studying molecular interactions and for constructing stable supramolecular assemblies.

     
    more » « less