Literature DB >> 11457317

Reactivity of (eta(6)-arene)tricarbonylchromium complexes toward additions of anions, cations, and radicals.

C A Merlic1, M M Miller, B N Hietbrink, K N Houk.   

Abstract

A computational and experimental study of additions of electrophiles, nucleophiles, and radicals to tricarbonylchromium-complexed arenes is reported. Competition between addition to a complexed arene and addition to a noncomplexed arene was tested using 1,1-dideuterio-1-iodo-2-((phenyl)tricarbonylchromium)-2-phenylethane. Reactions under anionic and cationic conditions give exclusive formation of 1,1-dideuterio-1-((phenyl)tricarbonylchromium)-2-phenylethane arising from addition to the complexed arene. Radical conditions (SmI(2)) afford two isomeric products, reflecting a 2:1 preference for radical addition to the noncomplexed arene. In contrast, intermolecular radical addition competition experiments employing ketyl radical addition to benzene and (benzene)tricarbonylchromium show that addition to the complexed aromatic ring is faster than attack on the noncomplexed species by a factor of at least 100,000. Density functional theory calculations using the B3LYP method, employing a LANL2DZ basis set for geometry optimizations and a DZVP2+ basis set for energy calculations, for all three reactive intermediates showed that tricarbonylchromium stabilizes all three types of intermediates. The computational results for anionic addition agree well with established chemistry and provide structural and energetic details as reference points for comparison with the other reactive intermediates. Intermolecular radical addition leads to exclusive reaction on the complexed arene ring as predicted by the computations. The intramolecular radical reaction involves initial addition to the complexed arene ring followed by an equilibrium leading to the observed product distribution due to a high-energy barrier for homolytic cleavage of an exo bond in the intermediate cyclohexadienyl radical complex. Mechanisms are explored for electrophilic addition to complexed arenes. The calculations strongly favor a pathway in which the cation initially adds to the metal center rather than to the arene ring.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11457317     DOI: 10.1021/ja000600y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Am Chem Soc        ISSN: 0002-7863            Impact factor:   15.419


  3 in total

1.  Palladium-catalyzed allylic substitution with (η6-arene-CH2Z)Cr(CO)(3)-based nucleophiles.

Authors:  Jiadi Zhang; Corneliu Stanciu; Beibei Wang; Mahmud M Hussain; Chao-Shan Da; Patrick J Carroll; Spencer D Dreher; Patrick J Walsh
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2011-11-29       Impact factor: 15.419

2.  Mechanism of the Ni(0)-catalyzed vinylcyclopropane-cyclopentene rearrangement.

Authors:  Selina C Wang; Dawn M Troast; Martin Conda-Sheridan; Gang Zuo; Donna LaGarde; Janis Louie; Dean J Tantillo
Journal:  J Org Chem       Date:  2009-10-16       Impact factor: 4.354

3.  Cationic Niobium-Sandwich and Piano-Stool Complexes.

Authors:  Wiebke Unkrig; Fu Zhe; Razan Tamim; Friederike Oesten; Daniel Kratzert; Ingo Krossing
Journal:  Chemistry       Date:  2020-12-03       Impact factor: 5.020

  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.