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faculty
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Marc
J. A. Johnson
Assistant
Professor of Chemistry
Ph.D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Organometallic
and Inorganic Chemistry, New Synthetic Methods, and Catalysis Phone:
(734) 647-4393
E-mail: mjaj@umich.edu
Johnson
Research Group
Organometallic
Chemistry |
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Professor
Johnson is interested broadly in synthetic and
mechanistic organotransition metal and inorganic
chemistry. These research interests include discovery
of new synthetic methods for both inorganic and
organic synthesis. This entails the preparation,
isolation, and characterization of transition metal
and actinide complexes that exhibit novel reactivity
by virtue of their unusual coordination environments.
This in turn is facilitated by careful ligand design
and construction. This research is directed toward
the development of catalysts for the activation
and functionalization of small molecules such as
dinitrogen and carbon dioxide, as well as new reagents
and catalysts for organic synthesis. These compounds
are prepared and manipulated using standard inert-atmosphere
techniques. A variety of spectroscopic techniques
are employed to optimize synthetic conditions,
to measure reaction kinetics, and to characterize
new compounds. Multinuclear NMR experiments, EPR
spectroscopy, and single crystal X-ray diffraction
studies are employed routinely for structural elucidation.
Two representative projects are briefly outlined
below.
Direct
nitrogen incorporation into organic molecules.
Transition-metal catalyzed alkyne metathesis
is a facile process. The triple bond strengths of
alkynes, nitriles, and dinitrogen are such that it
is reasonable to propose equilibration of these compounds
by a similar process. Synthesis of organonitriles
from nitrogen gas and alkynes would constitute a
completely new method of nitrogen fixation. Alternatively,
the reverse reaction would result in the formation
of a carbon-carbon triple bond, starting from nitriles,
with nitrogen gas as the only byproduct. Use of dinitrile
starting materials would permit the synthesis of
poly(aryleneethynylene)s and other polymers with
exciting nonlinear optical and other desired properties.
Carbon
dioxide as a carbon source in synthesis.
The use of carbon dioxide as a carbon source, with the eventual
purpose of recycling some of the carbon lost to the atmosphere
through combustion, is one major goal in transition metal catalysis.
Isocyanates are important industrial chemicals produced on
the megaton scale annually. At present, these compounds are
synthesized from amines and toxic phosgene gas. Replacement
of phosgene by carbon dioxide would be both safer and less
expensive, in addition to being a productive use of a greenhouse
gas. Additionally, water is the only byproduct of the new process.
This can be achieved via well precedented metal-mediated pairwise
oxo-imido exchange reactions. |
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AWARDS
- 2004
National Science Foundation Career Award
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REPRESENTATIVE PUBLICATIONS
- "Two
Generalizable Routes to Terminal Carbido Complexes." Caskey,
S. R.; Stewart, M. H.; Kivela, J. E.; Sootsman,
J. R.; Johnson, M. J. A.; Kampf, J. W. J.
Am. Chem. Soc. 2005, 127,
16750.
- "Dehydrohalogenation by a Germylene:
Conversion of Carbene Ligands into Carbynes
at Ruthenium." Caskey, S. R.; Stewart,
M. H.; Ahn, Y. J.; Johnson, M. J. A.; Kampf,
J. W. Organometallics 2005, 24,
6074.
- "Nitrogen Atom Exchange Mediated
by Nitrido Complexes of Molybdenum." Gdula,
R. L.; Johnson, M. J. A.; Ockwig, N. W. Inorg.
Chem. 2005, 44,
9140.
- "Mechanism
of White Phosphorus Activation by Three-Coordinate
Molybdenum Complexes:A Thermochemical, Kinetic,
and Quantum Chemical Investigation." Stephens,
F. H.; Johnson, M. J. A.; Cummins, C. C.; Kryatova,
O. P.; Kryatov, S. V.; Rybak-Akimova, E. V.;
McDonough, J. E.; Hoff, C. D. J. Am. Chem.
Soc. 2005, 127,
15191.
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