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C–Cl Oxidative Addition and C–C Reductive Elimination Reactions in the Context of the Rhodium-Promoted Direct Arylation

[Image: see text] A cycle of stoichiometric elemental reactions defining the direct arylation promoted by a redox-pair Rh(I)–Rh(III) is reported. Starting from the rhodium(I)-aryl complex RhPh{κ(3)-P,O,P-[xant(P(i)Pr(2))(2)]} (xant(P(i)Pr(2))(2) = 9,9-dimethyl-4,5-bis(diisopropylphosphino)xanthene),...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: de las Heras, Laura A., Esteruelas, Miguel A., Oliván, Montserrat, Oñate, Enrique
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8966374/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35368715
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.organomet.1c00643
Descripción
Sumario:[Image: see text] A cycle of stoichiometric elemental reactions defining the direct arylation promoted by a redox-pair Rh(I)–Rh(III) is reported. Starting from the rhodium(I)-aryl complex RhPh{κ(3)-P,O,P-[xant(P(i)Pr(2))(2)]} (xant(P(i)Pr(2))(2) = 9,9-dimethyl-4,5-bis(diisopropylphosphino)xanthene), the reactions include C–Cl oxidative addition of organic chlorides, halide abstraction from the resulting six-coordinate rhodium(III) derivatives, C–C reductive coupling between the initial aryl ligand and the added organic group, oxidative addition of a C–H bond of a new arene, and deprotonation of the generated hydride-rhodium(III)-aryl species to form a new rhodium(I)-aryl derivative. In this context, the kinetics of the oxidative additions of 2-chloropyridine, chlorobenzene, benzyl chloride, and dichloromethane to RhPh{κ(3)-P,O,P-[xant(P(i)Pr(2))(2)]} and the C–C reductive eliminations of biphenyl and benzylbenzene from [RhPh(2){κ(3)-P,O,P-[xant(P(i)Pr(2))(2)]}]BF(4) and [RhPh(CH(2)Ph){κ(3)-P,O,P-[xant(P(i)Pr(2))(2)]}]BF(4), respectively, have been studied. The oxidative additions generally involve the cis addition of the C–Cl bond of the organic chloride to the rhodium(I) complex, being kinetically controlled by the C–Cl bond dissociation energy; the weakest C–Cl bond is faster added. The C–C reductive elimination is kinetically governed by the dissociation energy of the formed bond. The C(sp(3))–C(sp(2)) coupling to give benzylbenzene is faster than the C(sp(2))–C(sp(2)) bond formation to afford biphenyl. In spite of that a most demanding orientation requirement is needed for the C(sp(3))–C(sp(2)) coupling than for the C(sp(2))–C(sp(2)) bond formation, the energetic effort for the pregeneration of the C(sp(3))–C(sp(2)) bond is lower. As a result, the weakest C–C bond is formed faster.