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Published May 26, 2020 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Use of Ligand Steric Properties to Control the Thermodynamics and Kinetics of Oxidative Addition and Reductive Elimination with Pincer-Ligated Rh Complexes

Abstract

Oxidative addition and reductive elimination reactions are central steps in many catalytic processes, and controlling the energetics of reaction intermediates is key to enabling efficient catalysis. A series of oxidative addition and reductive elimination reactions using (RPNP)RhX complexes (R = tert-butyl, isopropyl, mesityl, phenyl; X = Cl, I) was studied to deduce the effect of the size of the phosphine substituents. Using (^RPNP)RhCl as the starting material, oxidative addition of MeI was observed to produce (^RPNP)Rh(Me)(I)Cl, which was followed by reductive elimination of MeCl to form (^RPNP)RhI. The thermodynamics and kinetics vary with the identity of the substituent R on phosphorus of the PNP ligand. The presence of large steric bulk (e.g., R = tert-butyl, mesityl) on the phosphine favors Rh(I) in comparison to the presence of two smaller substituents (e.g., R = isopropyl, phenyl). An Eyring plot for the oxidative addition of MeI to (^(tBu)PNP)RhCl in THF-d₈ is consistent with a polar two-step reaction pathway, and the formation of [(^(tBu)PNP)Rh(Me)I]I is also consistent with this mechanism. DFT calculations show that the steric bulk affects the reaction energies of addition reactions which generate six-coordinate complexes by tens of kcal mol⁻¹. The ligand steric bulk is calculated to have a reduced effect (a few kcal mol⁻¹) on S_N2 addition barriers, which only require access to one side of the square plane.

Additional Information

© 2020 American Chemical Society. Received: February 19, 2020; Published: May 4, 2020. The Gunnoe group acknowledges support from the U.S. National Science Foundation (1800173). The Goddard group acknowledges support from the NSF (CBET-1805022). The authors declare no competing financial interest. Accession Codes: CCDC 1948889−1948897 contain the supplementary crystallographic data for this paper. These data can be obtained free of charge via www.ccdc.cam.ac.uk/data_request/cif, or by emailing data_request@ccdc.cam.ac.uk, or by contacting The Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre, 12 Union Road, Cambridge CB2 1EZ, UK; fax: +44 1223 336033.

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Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023