Pd(II) and Rh(I) Catalytic Precursors for Arene Alkenylation: Comparative Evaluation of Reactivity and Mechanism Based on Experimental and Computational Studies
Abstract
We combine experimental and computational investigations to compare and understand catalytic arene alkenylation using the Pd(II) and Rh(I) precursors Pd(OAc)₂ and [(η²-C₂H₄)₂Rh(μ-OAc)]₂ with arene, olefin, and Cu(II) carboxylate at elevated temperatures (>120 °C). Under specific conditions, previous computational and experimental efforts have identified heterotrimetallic cyclic PdCu₂(η²-C₂H₄)₃(μ-OPiv)₆ and [(η²-C₂H₄)₂Rh(μ-OPiv)₂]₂(μ-Cu) (OPiv = pivalate) species as likely active catalysts for these processes. Further studies of catalyst speciation suggest a complicated equilibrium between Cu(II)-containing complexes containing one Rh or Pd atom with complexes containing two Rh or Pd atoms. At 120 °C, Rh catalysis produces styrene >20-fold more rapidly than Pd. Also, at 120 °C, Rh is ∼98% selective for styrene formation, while Pd is ∼82% selective. Our studies indicate that Pd catalysis has a higher predilection toward olefin functionalization to form undesired vinyl ester, while Rh catalysis is more selective for arene/olefin coupling. However, at elevated temperatures, Pd converts vinyl ester and arene to vinyl arene, which is proposed to occur through low-valent Pd(0) clusters that are formed in situ. Regardless of arene functionality, the regioselectivity for alkenylation of mono-substituted arenes with the Rh catalyst gives an approximate 2:1 meta/para ratio with minimal ortho C–H activation. In contrast, Pd selectivity is significantly influenced by arene electronics, with electron-rich arenes giving an approximate 1:2:2 ortho/meta/para ratio, while the electron-deficient (α,α,α)-trifluorotoluene gives a 3:1 meta/para ratio with minimal ortho functionalization. Kinetic intermolecular arene ethenylation competition experiments find that Rh reacts most rapidly with benzene, and the rate of mono-substituted arene alkenylation does not correlate with arene electronics. In contrast, with Pd catalysis, electron-rich arenes react more rapidly than benzene, while electron-deficient arenes react less rapidly than benzene. These experimental findings, in combination with computational results, are consistent with the arene C–H activation step for Pd catalysis involving significant η1-arenium character due to Pd-mediated electrophilic aromatic substitution character. In contrast, the mechanism for Rh catalysis is not sensitive to arene-substituent electronics, which we propose indicates less electrophilic aromatic substitution character for the Rh-mediated arene C–H activation.
Additional Information
© 2023 American Chemical Society. Computational studies were supported by ONR (N00014-19-1-2081) and NSF (CBET-2005250). Experimental studies were supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences Division (DE-SC0000776). We acknowledge discussions with Professor Mahdi Abu-Omar (UC Santa Barbara) related to kinetic experiments and assessment. Author Contributions: M.T.B., X.J., and C.B.M. contributed almost equally. The authors declare no competing financial interest.Attached Files
Supplemental Material - ja3c04295_si_001.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 122334
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20230717-55915200.28
- N00014-19-1-2081
- Office of Naval Research (ONR)
- CBET-2005250
- NSF
- DE-SC0000776
- Department of Energy (DOE)
- Created
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2023-08-14Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2023-08-14Created from EPrint's last_modified field