William D. Jones
he/him/his
Charles Frederick Houghton Professor of Chemistry
Professor of Chemistry
PhD, California Institute of Technology, 1979
- Office Location
- B26 Hutchison Hall
- Telephone
- (585) 275-5493
- Web Address
- Website
Research Overview
Professor Jones's group is involved in the study of transition metal organometallic compounds for the cleavage of strong carbon-element bonds, with synthesis, structure, and reactivity being integral components of each project. New complexes for carrying out organometallic reactions are developed and the mechanism of the reaction is studied as a means of improving reactivity. NMR spectroscopic studies figure heavily in their work as a probe of organometallic structure.
One area that has been developed in the group over the past few years involves complexes that can activate C-H bonds of unreactive aromatic and aliphatic hydrocarbons. Through a series of kinetic studies, the relative thermodynamics of arene vs. alkane activation by the 16-electron intermediate [(trispyrazolylborate)Rh(CNR)] has been established. The studies show that alkanes first bind to the metal before undergoing cleavage of their C-H bonds, and that the metal wanders along the hydrocarbon chain before choosing which bond to break. We can also tell that methylenes bind faster than methyls.
Another area that is under active pursuit is the modeling of the hydrodesulfurization of petroleum using homogeneous complexes of rhodium. A simple, quantitative reaction has been discovered in which the C-S bond of thiophene is cleaved, giving a characterizable intermediate (see equation). Recent work has also shown that even the strong C-C bonds connecting aromatic rings can be cleaved. Studies indicate that the cleavage of 4-membered rings is facile and that cleavage of aryl-cyanide and aryl-acetylide bonds is possible using complexes of nickel, platinum, and rhodium. Catalytic hydrogenolysis of certain C-C bonds is even possible. New studies with hemi-labile P-N ligands have indicated that this approach leads to compounds with enhanced reactivities towards bond cleavage reactions. Catalytic reactions are under development. We are studying the mechanism of nickel-based allylic C-CN cleavage as it applies to the production of adiponitrile in Dupont's nylon synthesis. We have published over many papers on these topics in the last 5 years (see group website).
Research Interests
- Mechanistic Inorganic Chemistry and Catalysis
Biography
William D. Jones was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1953, and was inspired to work in inorganic chemistry as an undergraduate researcher with Mark S. Wrighton at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (BS, 1975). He obtained a Ph.D. degree in chemistry at California Institute of Technology (1979), working with Robert G. Bergman. He moved to the University of Wisconsin as an NSF postdoctoral fellow with Chuck Casey, and in 1980 accepted a position as Assistant Professor at the 91×ÔÅÄÂÛ̳. He was promoted to Associate Professor in 1984 and Professor in 1987, and is now the Charles F. Houghton Professor of Chemistry. Professor Jones has received several awards, including an Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship (1984), a Camille & Henry Dreyfus Foundation Teacher-Scholar Award (1985), a Royal Society Guest Research Fellowship (1988), a Fulbright-Hays Scholar (1988), a John Simon Guggenheim Fellow (1988), the ACS Award in Organometallic Chemistry (2003), an ACS Cope Scholar Award (2009), the Royal Society of Chemistry Organometallic Chemistry Award (2017), and an Alexander von Humboldt Senior Research Award (2018). He is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (2009), and a Fellow of the American Chemical Society (2010). He also has served as an Associate Editor for the Journal of the American Chemical Society since 2003. Professor Jones' research interests include organometallic research in strong C-X bond cleavage, catalysis, model studies, mechanisms, kinetics, thermodynamics, and synthetic applications.
Recent Publications
James P. Shanahan, David A. Vicic, William W. Brennessel, William D. Jones Organometallics, 2022
Mikhaila D. Ritz, William D. Jones European Journal of Organic Chemistry, 2022
James Kovach, Suzanne R. Golisz, William W. Brennessel, William D. Jones Organometallics, 2022
Tim Görlich, Daniel S. Frost, Nico Boback, Nathan T. Coles, Birger Dittrich, et al. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2021
Olaf Nachtigall, Andrew I. VanderWeide, William W. Brennessel, William D. Jones ACS Catalysis, 2021
Olaf Nachtigall, Andrew I. VanderWeide, William. W. Brennessel, William D. Jones Zeitschrift für anorganische und allgemeine Chemie, 2021
Tarah A. DiBenedetto, William D. Jones Organometallics, 2021
Thomas Auvray, Olaf Nachtigall, William W. Brennessel, William D. Jones, Ellen M. Matson Dalton Transactions, 2021
Tarah A. DiBenedetto, Astrid M. Parsons, William D. Jones Organometallics, 2020
Mikhaila D. Ritz, Astrid M. Parsons, Philip N. Palermo, William D. Jones Polyhedron, 2020
For more, please visit my