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Mechanistic studies of a palladium-catalyzed intramolecular hydroamination of unactivated alkenes: protonolysis of a stable palladium alkyl complex is the turnover-limiting step.
J Am Chem Soc. 2008 Mar 05; 130(9):2786-92.JA

Abstract

Mechanistic studies of the intramolecular hydroamination of unactivated aminoalkenes catalyzed by a dicationic [bis(diphenylphosphinomethyl)pyridine]palladium complex highlight the important role that protonolysis plays in this reaction. Coordination of the aminoalkene substrate to this complex activates the alkene toward intramolecular nucleophilic attack to form a dicationic palladium alkyl complex (6). A stable monocationic palladium alkyl complex (7) was isolated by in situ deprotonation of 6 with mild base, and its structure was confirmed by X-ray crystallography. Complex 7 reacted rapidly with a variety of strong acids to undergo protonolysis, resulting in formation of hydroamination product 3 and regenerating the active catalyst. Evidence that formation of the palladium alkyl complex is reversible under the catalytic conditions was obtained from observation of the protonolysis at low temperature. During the course of all catalytic reactions, the resting state of the catalyst was palladium alkyl complex 7, indicating that protonolysis of the Pd-C bond was the turnover-limiting step. Kinetic studies reveal an unusual inverse dependence of the reaction rate on the concentration of the aminoalkene substrate. This effect can be accurately explained by a model in which the carbamate protecting group of the aminoalkene acts as a Brønsted base to remove free protons from the catalytic cycle and thereby inhibits the turnover-limiting protonolysis step. Formation of a 2:1 complex (12) between the carbamate and the proton is most consistent with the kinetic data.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Chemistry, University of Washington, Box 351700, Seattle, Washington 98195-1700, USA.No affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

18254623

Citation

Cochran, Brian M., and Forrest E. Michael. "Mechanistic Studies of a Palladium-catalyzed Intramolecular Hydroamination of Unactivated Alkenes: Protonolysis of a Stable Palladium Alkyl Complex Is the Turnover-limiting Step." Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 130, no. 9, 2008, pp. 2786-92.
Cochran BM, Michael FE. Mechanistic studies of a palladium-catalyzed intramolecular hydroamination of unactivated alkenes: protonolysis of a stable palladium alkyl complex is the turnover-limiting step. J Am Chem Soc. 2008;130(9):2786-92.
Cochran, B. M., & Michael, F. E. (2008). Mechanistic studies of a palladium-catalyzed intramolecular hydroamination of unactivated alkenes: protonolysis of a stable palladium alkyl complex is the turnover-limiting step. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 130(9), 2786-92. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja0734997
Cochran BM, Michael FE. Mechanistic Studies of a Palladium-catalyzed Intramolecular Hydroamination of Unactivated Alkenes: Protonolysis of a Stable Palladium Alkyl Complex Is the Turnover-limiting Step. J Am Chem Soc. 2008 Mar 5;130(9):2786-92. PubMed PMID: 18254623.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Mechanistic studies of a palladium-catalyzed intramolecular hydroamination of unactivated alkenes: protonolysis of a stable palladium alkyl complex is the turnover-limiting step. AU - Cochran,Brian M, AU - Michael,Forrest E, Y1 - 2008/02/07/ PY - 2008/2/8/pubmed PY - 2008/4/16/medline PY - 2008/2/8/entrez SP - 2786 EP - 92 JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society JO - J Am Chem Soc VL - 130 IS - 9 N2 - Mechanistic studies of the intramolecular hydroamination of unactivated aminoalkenes catalyzed by a dicationic [bis(diphenylphosphinomethyl)pyridine]palladium complex highlight the important role that protonolysis plays in this reaction. Coordination of the aminoalkene substrate to this complex activates the alkene toward intramolecular nucleophilic attack to form a dicationic palladium alkyl complex (6). A stable monocationic palladium alkyl complex (7) was isolated by in situ deprotonation of 6 with mild base, and its structure was confirmed by X-ray crystallography. Complex 7 reacted rapidly with a variety of strong acids to undergo protonolysis, resulting in formation of hydroamination product 3 and regenerating the active catalyst. Evidence that formation of the palladium alkyl complex is reversible under the catalytic conditions was obtained from observation of the protonolysis at low temperature. During the course of all catalytic reactions, the resting state of the catalyst was palladium alkyl complex 7, indicating that protonolysis of the Pd-C bond was the turnover-limiting step. Kinetic studies reveal an unusual inverse dependence of the reaction rate on the concentration of the aminoalkene substrate. This effect can be accurately explained by a model in which the carbamate protecting group of the aminoalkene acts as a Brønsted base to remove free protons from the catalytic cycle and thereby inhibits the turnover-limiting protonolysis step. Formation of a 2:1 complex (12) between the carbamate and the proton is most consistent with the kinetic data. SN - 1520-5126 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/18254623/Mechanistic_studies_of_a_palladium_catalyzed_intramolecular_hydroamination_of_unactivated_alkenes:_protonolysis_of_a_stable_palladium_alkyl_complex_is_the_turnover_limiting_step_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -