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Ga(+)-catalyzed hydrosilylation? About the surprising system Ga(+)/HSiR(3)/olefin, proof of oxidation with subvalent Ga(+) and silylium catalysis with perfluoroalkoxyaluminate anions
Already 1 mol% of subvalent [Ga(PhF)(2)](+)[pf](−) ([pf](−) = [Al(OR(F))(4)](−), R(F) = C(CF(3))(3)) initiates the hydrosilylation of olefinic double bonds under mild conditions. Reactions with HSiMe(3) and HSiEt(3) as substrates efficiently yield anti-Markovnikov and anti-addition products, while b...
Autores principales: | , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
The Royal Society of Chemistry
2021
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8729802/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35126976 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1sc05331k |
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author | Barthélemy, Antoine Glootz, Kim Scherer, Harald Hanske, Annaleah Krossing, Ingo |
author_facet | Barthélemy, Antoine Glootz, Kim Scherer, Harald Hanske, Annaleah Krossing, Ingo |
author_sort | Barthélemy, Antoine |
collection | PubMed |
description | Already 1 mol% of subvalent [Ga(PhF)(2)](+)[pf](−) ([pf](−) = [Al(OR(F))(4)](−), R(F) = C(CF(3))(3)) initiates the hydrosilylation of olefinic double bonds under mild conditions. Reactions with HSiMe(3) and HSiEt(3) as substrates efficiently yield anti-Markovnikov and anti-addition products, while bulkier substrates such as HSi(i)Pr(3) are less reactive. Investigating the underlying mechanism by gas chromatography and STEM analysis, we unexpectedly found that H(2) and metallic Ga(0) formed. Without the addition of olefins, the formation of R(3)Si–F–Al(OR(F))(3) (R = alkyl), a typical degradation product of the [pf](−) anion in the presence of a small silylium ion, was observed. Electrochemical analysis revealed a surprisingly high oxidation potential of univalent [Ga(PhF)(2)](+)[pf](−) in weakly coordinating, but polar ortho-difluorobenzene of E(1/2)(Ga(+)/Ga(0); oDFB) = +0.26–0.37 V vs. Fc(+)/Fc (depending on the scan rate). Apparently, subvalent Ga(+), mainly known as a reductant, initially oxidizes the silane and generates a highly electrophilic, silane-supported, silylium ion representing the actual catalyst. Consequently, the [Ga(PhF)(2)](+)[pf](−)/HSiEt(3) system also hydrodefluorinates C(sp(3))–F bonds in 1-fluoroadamantane, 1-fluorobutane and PhCF(3) at room temperature. In addition, both catalytic reactions may be initiated using only 0.2 mol% of [Ph(3)C](+)[pf](−) as a silylium ion-generating initiator. These results indicate that silylium ion catalysis is possible with the straightforward accessible weakly coordinating [pf](−) anion. Apparently, the kinetics of hydrosilylation and hydrodefluorination are faster than that of anion degradation under ambient conditions. These findings open up new windows for main group catalysis. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-8729802 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2021 |
publisher | The Royal Society of Chemistry |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-87298022022-02-04 Ga(+)-catalyzed hydrosilylation? About the surprising system Ga(+)/HSiR(3)/olefin, proof of oxidation with subvalent Ga(+) and silylium catalysis with perfluoroalkoxyaluminate anions Barthélemy, Antoine Glootz, Kim Scherer, Harald Hanske, Annaleah Krossing, Ingo Chem Sci Chemistry Already 1 mol% of subvalent [Ga(PhF)(2)](+)[pf](−) ([pf](−) = [Al(OR(F))(4)](−), R(F) = C(CF(3))(3)) initiates the hydrosilylation of olefinic double bonds under mild conditions. Reactions with HSiMe(3) and HSiEt(3) as substrates efficiently yield anti-Markovnikov and anti-addition products, while bulkier substrates such as HSi(i)Pr(3) are less reactive. Investigating the underlying mechanism by gas chromatography and STEM analysis, we unexpectedly found that H(2) and metallic Ga(0) formed. Without the addition of olefins, the formation of R(3)Si–F–Al(OR(F))(3) (R = alkyl), a typical degradation product of the [pf](−) anion in the presence of a small silylium ion, was observed. Electrochemical analysis revealed a surprisingly high oxidation potential of univalent [Ga(PhF)(2)](+)[pf](−) in weakly coordinating, but polar ortho-difluorobenzene of E(1/2)(Ga(+)/Ga(0); oDFB) = +0.26–0.37 V vs. Fc(+)/Fc (depending on the scan rate). Apparently, subvalent Ga(+), mainly known as a reductant, initially oxidizes the silane and generates a highly electrophilic, silane-supported, silylium ion representing the actual catalyst. Consequently, the [Ga(PhF)(2)](+)[pf](−)/HSiEt(3) system also hydrodefluorinates C(sp(3))–F bonds in 1-fluoroadamantane, 1-fluorobutane and PhCF(3) at room temperature. In addition, both catalytic reactions may be initiated using only 0.2 mol% of [Ph(3)C](+)[pf](−) as a silylium ion-generating initiator. These results indicate that silylium ion catalysis is possible with the straightforward accessible weakly coordinating [pf](−) anion. Apparently, the kinetics of hydrosilylation and hydrodefluorination are faster than that of anion degradation under ambient conditions. These findings open up new windows for main group catalysis. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021-11-23 /pmc/articles/PMC8729802/ /pubmed/35126976 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1sc05331k Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ |
spellingShingle | Chemistry Barthélemy, Antoine Glootz, Kim Scherer, Harald Hanske, Annaleah Krossing, Ingo Ga(+)-catalyzed hydrosilylation? About the surprising system Ga(+)/HSiR(3)/olefin, proof of oxidation with subvalent Ga(+) and silylium catalysis with perfluoroalkoxyaluminate anions |
title | Ga(+)-catalyzed hydrosilylation? About the surprising system Ga(+)/HSiR(3)/olefin, proof of oxidation with subvalent Ga(+) and silylium catalysis with perfluoroalkoxyaluminate anions |
title_full | Ga(+)-catalyzed hydrosilylation? About the surprising system Ga(+)/HSiR(3)/olefin, proof of oxidation with subvalent Ga(+) and silylium catalysis with perfluoroalkoxyaluminate anions |
title_fullStr | Ga(+)-catalyzed hydrosilylation? About the surprising system Ga(+)/HSiR(3)/olefin, proof of oxidation with subvalent Ga(+) and silylium catalysis with perfluoroalkoxyaluminate anions |
title_full_unstemmed | Ga(+)-catalyzed hydrosilylation? About the surprising system Ga(+)/HSiR(3)/olefin, proof of oxidation with subvalent Ga(+) and silylium catalysis with perfluoroalkoxyaluminate anions |
title_short | Ga(+)-catalyzed hydrosilylation? About the surprising system Ga(+)/HSiR(3)/olefin, proof of oxidation with subvalent Ga(+) and silylium catalysis with perfluoroalkoxyaluminate anions |
title_sort | ga(+)-catalyzed hydrosilylation? about the surprising system ga(+)/hsir(3)/olefin, proof of oxidation with subvalent ga(+) and silylium catalysis with perfluoroalkoxyaluminate anions |
topic | Chemistry |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8729802/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35126976 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1sc05331k |
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