69720-86-1Relevant articles and documents
Parent-amido (NH2) palladium(II) complexes: Synthesis, reactions, and catalytic hydroamination
Kim, Youngwon,Park, Soonheum
, p. 614 - 629 (2016/06/01)
The treatment of [PdL3(NH3)](OTf)n (n = 1; L3 = (PEt3)2(Ph), (2,6-(Cy2PCH2)2C6H3), n = 2; L3 = (dppe)(NH3)) with NaNH2 in tetrahydrofuran at ambient temperature or -78 °C afforded the dimeric and monomeric parent-amido palladium(II) complexes anti-[Pd(PEt3)(Ph)(μ-NH2)]2 (1), [Pd(dppe)(μ-NH2)]2(OTf)2 (2), and Pd(2,6-(Cy2PCH2)2C6H3)(NH2) (3), respectively. The molecular structures of the amido-bridged (μ-NH2) dimeric complexes 1 and 2 were determined by single-crystal X-ray crystallography. The monomeric amido complex 3 reacted with trace amounts of water to give a hydroxo complex, Pd(2,6-(Cy2PCH2)2C6H3)(OH) (4). Exposing complex 3 to an excess of water resulted in the complete conversion of the complex into two species [Pd(2,6-(Cy2PCH2)2C6H3)(OH2)]+ and [Pd(2,6-(Cy2PCH2)2C6H3)(NH3)]+. Complex 3 reacted with diphenyliodonium triflate ([Ph2I]OTf) to give the aniline complex [Pd(2,6-(Cy2PCH2)2C6H3)(NH2Ph)]OTf. The reaction of 3 with phenylacetylene (HCCPh) yielded a palladium(II) acetylenide Pd(2,6-(Cy2PCH2)2C6H3)(CCPh) (5), quantitatively, along with the liberation of ammonia. The reaction of 3 with dialkyl acetylenedicarboxylate yielded diastereospecific palladium(II) vinyl derivatives (Z)-Pd(2,6-(Cy2PCH2)2C6H3)(CRCR(NH2)) (R = CO2Me (6a), CO2Et (6b)). The reaction of complexes 6a and 6b with p-nitrophenol produced Pd(2,6-(Cy2PCH2)2C6H3)(OC6H4-p-NO2) (7) and cis-CHRCR(NH2), exclusively. Reactions of 3 with either dialkyl maleate (cis-(CO2R)CHCH(CO2R)) (R = CH3, CH2CH3) or cis-stilbene (cis-CHPhCHPh) did not result in any addition product. Instead, isomerization of the cis-isomers to the trans-isomers occurred in the presence of catalytic amounts of 3. Complex 3 reacted with a stoichiometric amount of acrylonitrile (CH2CHCN) to generate a metastable insertion product, Pd(2,6-(Cy2PCH2)2C6H3)(CH(CN)CH2NH2). On the other hand, the reaction of 3 with an excess of acrylonitrile slowly produced polymeric species of acrylonitrile. The catalytic hydroamination of olefins with NH3 was examined in the presence of Pd(2,6-(Cy2PCH2)2C6H3)(OTf), producing a range of hydroaminated products of primary, secondary, and tertiary amines with different molar ratios of more than 99% overall yield. A mechanistic feature for the observed catalytic hydroamination is described with regard to the aminated derivatives of palladium(II).
Carbon-sulfur bond-forming reductive elimination involving sp-, sp2-, and sp3-hybridized carbon. Mechanism, steric effects, and electronic effects on sulfide formation
Mann, Grace,Baranano, David,Hartwig, John F.,Rheingold, Arnold L.,Guzei, Ilia A.
, p. 9205 - 9219 (2007/10/03)
Palladium thiolato complexes [(L)Pd(R)(SR')], within which L is a chelating ligand such as DPPE, DPPP, DPPBz, DPPF, or TRANSPHOS, R is a methyl, alkenyl, aryl, or alkynyl ligand, and R' is an aryl or alkyl group, were synthesized by substitution or proton-transfer reactions. All of these thiolato complexes were found to undergo carbon-sulfur bond-forming inductive elimination in high yields to form dialkyl sulfides, diaryl sulfides, alkyl aryl sulfides, alkyl alkenyl sulfides, and alkyl alkynyl sulfides. Reductive eliminations forming alkenyl alkyl sulfides and aryl alkyl sulfides were the fastest. Eliminations of alkynyl alkyl sulfides were slower, and elimination of dialkyl sulfide was the slowest. Thus the relative rates for sulfide elimination as a function of the hybridization of the palladium-bound carbon follow the trend sp2 > sp >> sp3. Rates of reductive elimination were faster for cis-chelating phosphine ligands with larger bite angles. Kinetic studies, along with results from radical trapping reactions, analysis of solvent effects; and analysis of complexes with chelating phosphines of varying rigidity, were conducted with [Pd(L)(S-tert-butyl)(Ar)] and [Pd(L)(S- tert-butyl)(Me)]. Carbon-sulfur bond-forming reductive eliminations involving both saturated and unsaturated hydrocarbyl groups proceed by an intramolecular, concerted mechanism. Systematic changes in the electronic properties of the thiolate and aryl groups showed that reductive elimination is the fastest for electron deficient aryl groups and electron rich arenethiolates, suggesting that the reaction follows a mechanism in which the thiolate acts as a nucleophile and the aryl group an electrophile. Studies with thiolate ligands and hydrocarbyl ligands of varying steric demands favor a migration mechanism involving coordination of the hydrocarbyl ligand in the transition state.