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Mechanistic studies on the formation of linear polyethylene chain catalyzed by palladium phosphine-sulfonate complexes: experiment and theoretical studies.
J Am Chem Soc. 2009 Oct 07; 131(39):14088-100.JA

Abstract

Linear polyethylene propagation starting from Pd phosphine-sulfonate complexes, Pd(CH(3))(L)(Ar(2)PC(6)H(4)SO(3)) (L = 2,6-lutidine, Ar = o-MeOC(6)H(4) (2a) and L = pyridine, Ar = Ph (2b)), was studied both experimentally and theoretically. Experimentally, highly linear polyethylene was obtained with Pd(CH(3))(L)(Ar(2)PC(6)H(4)SO(3)) complexes 2a and 2b. Formation of a long alkyl-substituted palladium complex (3) was detected as a result of ethylene oligomerization on a palladium center starting from methylpalladium complex. Additionally, well-defined ethyl and propyl complexes (6(Et) and 6(Pr)) were synthesized as stable n-alkyl palladium complexes. In spite of the existence of beta-hydrogens, the beta-hydride elimination to give 1-alkenes was very slow or negligible in all cases. On the other hand, isomerization of 1-hexene in the presence of a methylpalladium/phosphine-sulfonate complex 2a indicated that this catalyst system actually undergoes beta-hydride elimination and reinsertion to release internal alkenes. On the theoretical side, the relative energies were calculated for intermediates and transition states for chain-growth, chain-walking, and chain-transfer on the basis of the starting model complex Pd(n-C(3)H(7))(pyridine)(o-Me(2)PC(6)H(4)SO(3)) (8). First, cis/trans isomerization process via the Berry's pseudorotation was proposed for the Pd/phosphine-sulfonate system. The second oxygen atom of sulfonate group is involved in the isomerization process as the associative ligand, which is one of the most unique natures of the sulfonate group. Chain propagation was suggested to take place from the less stable alkylPd(ethylene) complex 10' with the TS of 27.4/27.7 ((E+ZPC)/G) kcal/mol. Possible beta-hydride elimination was suggested to occur under low concentration of ethylene: the highest-energy transition state to override for beta-hydride elimination was either >37.4/25.3 kcal/mol (TS(9-12)) or 29.1/27.4 kcal/mol (TS(8'-9') to reach 12'). The ethylene insertion to the iso-alkylpalladium species (14') is allowed via a TS of 28.6/29.1 kcal/mol (TS(14'-15')), slightly higher in energy than that for the normal-alkylpalladium species (TS(10'-11')). Easy chain transfer was suggested to proceed from the more stable PdH(olefin) complex 12' if beta-hydride elimination to 12' does take place. Thus, the production of linear polyethylene with high molecular weight under ethylene pressure suggests that the cis and trans PdH(alkene)(phosphine-sulfonate) complexes (12 and 12') are merely accessible in the presence of excess amount of ethylene.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Chemistry and Biotechnology, Graduate School of Engineering, The University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo, Bunkyo-Ku, Tokyo 113-8656, Japan.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

19746977

Citation

Noda, Shusuke, et al. "Mechanistic Studies On the Formation of Linear Polyethylene Chain Catalyzed By Palladium Phosphine-sulfonate Complexes: Experiment and Theoretical Studies." Journal of the American Chemical Society, vol. 131, no. 39, 2009, pp. 14088-100.
Noda S, Nakamura A, Kochi T, et al. Mechanistic studies on the formation of linear polyethylene chain catalyzed by palladium phosphine-sulfonate complexes: experiment and theoretical studies. J Am Chem Soc. 2009;131(39):14088-100.
Noda, S., Nakamura, A., Kochi, T., Chung, L. W., Morokuma, K., & Nozaki, K. (2009). Mechanistic studies on the formation of linear polyethylene chain catalyzed by palladium phosphine-sulfonate complexes: experiment and theoretical studies. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 131(39), 14088-100. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja9047398
Noda S, et al. Mechanistic Studies On the Formation of Linear Polyethylene Chain Catalyzed By Palladium Phosphine-sulfonate Complexes: Experiment and Theoretical Studies. J Am Chem Soc. 2009 Oct 7;131(39):14088-100. PubMed PMID: 19746977.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Mechanistic studies on the formation of linear polyethylene chain catalyzed by palladium phosphine-sulfonate complexes: experiment and theoretical studies. AU - Noda,Shusuke, AU - Nakamura,Akifumi, AU - Kochi,Takuya, AU - Chung,Lung Wa, AU - Morokuma,Keiji, AU - Nozaki,Kyoko, PY - 2009/9/15/entrez PY - 2009/9/15/pubmed PY - 2009/9/15/medline SP - 14088 EP - 100 JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society JO - J Am Chem Soc VL - 131 IS - 39 N2 - Linear polyethylene propagation starting from Pd phosphine-sulfonate complexes, Pd(CH(3))(L)(Ar(2)PC(6)H(4)SO(3)) (L = 2,6-lutidine, Ar = o-MeOC(6)H(4) (2a) and L = pyridine, Ar = Ph (2b)), was studied both experimentally and theoretically. Experimentally, highly linear polyethylene was obtained with Pd(CH(3))(L)(Ar(2)PC(6)H(4)SO(3)) complexes 2a and 2b. Formation of a long alkyl-substituted palladium complex (3) was detected as a result of ethylene oligomerization on a palladium center starting from methylpalladium complex. Additionally, well-defined ethyl and propyl complexes (6(Et) and 6(Pr)) were synthesized as stable n-alkyl palladium complexes. In spite of the existence of beta-hydrogens, the beta-hydride elimination to give 1-alkenes was very slow or negligible in all cases. On the other hand, isomerization of 1-hexene in the presence of a methylpalladium/phosphine-sulfonate complex 2a indicated that this catalyst system actually undergoes beta-hydride elimination and reinsertion to release internal alkenes. On the theoretical side, the relative energies were calculated for intermediates and transition states for chain-growth, chain-walking, and chain-transfer on the basis of the starting model complex Pd(n-C(3)H(7))(pyridine)(o-Me(2)PC(6)H(4)SO(3)) (8). First, cis/trans isomerization process via the Berry's pseudorotation was proposed for the Pd/phosphine-sulfonate system. The second oxygen atom of sulfonate group is involved in the isomerization process as the associative ligand, which is one of the most unique natures of the sulfonate group. Chain propagation was suggested to take place from the less stable alkylPd(ethylene) complex 10' with the TS of 27.4/27.7 ((E+ZPC)/G) kcal/mol. Possible beta-hydride elimination was suggested to occur under low concentration of ethylene: the highest-energy transition state to override for beta-hydride elimination was either >37.4/25.3 kcal/mol (TS(9-12)) or 29.1/27.4 kcal/mol (TS(8'-9') to reach 12'). The ethylene insertion to the iso-alkylpalladium species (14') is allowed via a TS of 28.6/29.1 kcal/mol (TS(14'-15')), slightly higher in energy than that for the normal-alkylpalladium species (TS(10'-11')). Easy chain transfer was suggested to proceed from the more stable PdH(olefin) complex 12' if beta-hydride elimination to 12' does take place. Thus, the production of linear polyethylene with high molecular weight under ethylene pressure suggests that the cis and trans PdH(alkene)(phosphine-sulfonate) complexes (12 and 12') are merely accessible in the presence of excess amount of ethylene. SN - 1520-5126 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/19746977/Mechanistic_studies_on_the_formation_of_linear_polyethylene_chain_catalyzed_by_palladium_phosphine_sulfonate_complexes:_experiment_and_theoretical_studies_ L2 - https://doi.org/10.1021/ja9047398 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -