1577258-75-3Relevant academic research and scientific papers
Intermolecular N-H oxidative addition of ammonia, alkylamines, and arylamines to a planar σ3-phosphorus compound via an entropy-controlled electrophilic mechanism
McCarthy, Sean M.,Lin, Yi-Chun,Devarajan, Deepa,Chang, Ji Woong,Yennawar, Hemant P.,Rioux, Robert M.,Ess, Daniel H.,Radosevich, Alexander T.
, p. 4640 - 4650 (2014/04/17)
Ammonia, alkyl amines, and aryl amines are found to undergo rapid intermolecular N-H oxidative addition to a planar mononuclear ? 3-phosphorus compound (1). The pentacoordinate phosphorane products (1·[H][NHR]) are structurally robust, permitting full characterization by multinuclear NMR spectroscopy and single-crystal X-ray diffraction. Isothermal titration calorimetry was employed to quantify the enthalpy of the N-H oxidative addition of n-propylamine to 1 (nPrNH2 + 1 a? 1·[H][NHnPr], ?"H rxn298 = -10.6 kcal/mol). The kinetics of n-propylamine N-H oxidative addition were monitored by in situ UV absorption spectroscopy and determination of the rate law showed an unusually large molecularity (?= k[1][nPrNH2]3). Kinetic experiments conducted over the temperature range of 10-70 °C revealed that the reaction rate decreased with increasing temperature. Activation parameters extracted from an Eyring analysis (?"Ha§§ = -0.8 ± 0.4 kcal/mol, ?"Sa§§ = -72 ± 2 cal/(mol·K)) indicate that the cleavage of strong N-H bonds by 1 is entropy controlled due to a highly ordered, high molecularity transition state. Density functional calculations indicate that a concerted oxidative addition via a classical three-center transition structure is energetically inaccessible. Rather, a stepwise heterolytic pathway is preferred, proceeding by initial amine-assisted N-H heterolysis upon complexation to the electrophilic phosphorus center followed by rate-controlling N a? P proton transfer.
