Literature DB >> 21410234

C-F and C-H bond activation of fluorobenzenes and fluoropyridines at transition metal centers: how fluorine tips the scales.

Eric Clot1, Odile Eisenstein, Naseralla Jasim, Stuart A Macgregor, John E McGrady, Robin N Perutz.   

Abstract

In this Account, we describe the transition metal-mediated cleavage of C-F and C-H bonds in fluoroaromatic and fluoroheteroaromatic molecules. The simplest reactions of perfluoroarenes result in C-F oxida tive addition, but C-H activation competes with C-F activation for partially fluorinated molecules. We first consider the reactivity of the fluoroaromatics toward nickel and platinum complexes, but extend to rhenium and rhodium where they give special insight. Sections on spectroscopy and molecular structure are followed by discussions of energetics and mechanism that incorporate experimental and computational results. We highlight special characteristics of the metal-fluorine bond and the influence of the fluorine substituents on energetics and mechanism. Fluoroaromatics reacting at an ML(2) center initially yield η(2)-arene complexes, followed usually by oxidative addition to generate MF(Ar(F))(L)(2) or MH(Ar(F))(L)(2) (M is Ni, Pd, or Pt; L is trialkylphosphine). The outcome of competition between C-F and C-H bond activation is strongly metal dependent and regioselective. When C-H bonds of fluoroaromatics are activated, there is a preference for the remaining C-F bonds to lie ortho to the metal. An unusual feature of metal-fluorine bonds is their response to replacement of nickel by platinum. The Pt-F bonds are weaker than their nickel counterparts; the opposite is true for M-H bonds. Metal-fluorine bonds are sufficiently polar to form M-F···H-X hydrogen bonds and M-F···I-C(6)F(5) halogen bonds. In the competition between C-F and C-H activation, the thermodynamic product is always the metal fluoride, but marked differences emerge between metals in the energetics of C-H activation. In metal-fluoroaryl bonds, ortho-fluorine substituents generally control regioselectivity and make C-H activation more energetically favorable. The role of fluorine substituents in directing C-H activation is traced to their effect on bond energies. Correlations between M-C and H-C bond energies demonstrate that M-C bond energies increase far more on ortho-fluorine substitution than do H-C bonds. Conventional oxidative addition reactions involve a three-center triangular transition state between the carbon, metal, and X, where X is hydrogen or fluorine, but M(d)-F(2p) repulsion raises the activation energies when X is fluorine. Platinum complexes exhibit an alternative set of reactions involving rearrangement of the phosphine and the fluoroaromatics to a metal(alkyl)(fluorophosphine), M(R)(Ar(F))(PR(3))(PR(2)F). In these phosphine-assisted C-F activation reactions, the phosphine is no spectator but rather is intimately involved as a fluorine acceptor. Addition of the C-F bond across the M-PR(3) bond leads to a metallophosphorane four-center transition state; subsequent transfer of the R group to the metal generates the fluorophosphine product. We find evidence that a phosphine-assisted pathway may even be significant in some apparently simple oxidative addition reactions. While transition metal catalysis has revolutionized hydrocarbon chemistry, its impact on fluorocarbon chemistry has been more limited. Recent developments have changed the outlook as catalytic reactions involving C-F or C-H bond activation of fluorocarbons have emerged. The principles established here have several implications for catalysis, including the regioselectivity of C-H activation and the unfavorable energetics of C-F reductive elimination. Palladium-catalyzed C-H arylation is analyzed to illustrate how ortho-fluorine substituents influence thermodynamics, kinetics, and regioselectivity.

Entities:  

Year:  2011        PMID: 21410234     DOI: 10.1021/ar100136x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  23 in total

1.  η 2 Coordination of Electron-Deficient Arenes with Group 6 Dearomatization Agents.

Authors:  Jacob A Smith; Spenser R Simpson; Karl S Westendorff; Justin Weatherford-Pratt; Jeffery T Myers; Justin H Wilde; Diane A Dickie; W Dean Harman
Journal:  Organometallics       Date:  2020-06-25       Impact factor: 3.876

2.  Cobalt-Catalyzed Borylation of Fluorinated Arenes: Thermodynamic Control of C(sp2)-H Oxidative Addition Results in ortho-to-Fluorine Selectivity.

Authors:  Tyler P Pabst; Jennifer V Obligacion; Étienne Rochette; Iraklis Pappas; Paul J Chirik
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2019-09-16       Impact factor: 15.419

3.  Prenyl Praxis: A Method for Direct Photocatalytic Defluoroprenylation.

Authors:  Sonal Priya; Jimmie D Weaver
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2018-11-15       Impact factor: 15.419

4.  Aryl Fluoride Activation Through Palladium-Magnesium Bimetallic Cooperation: A Mechanistic and Computational Study.

Authors:  Chen Wu; Samuel P McCollom; Zhipeng Zheng; Jiadi Zhang; Sheng-Chun Sha; Minyan Li; Patrick J Walsh; Neil C Tomson
Journal:  ACS Catal       Date:  2020-06-22       Impact factor: 13.084

Review 5.  Carbon-fluorine bond cleavage mediated by metalloenzymes.

Authors:  Yifan Wang; Aimin Liu
Journal:  Chem Soc Rev       Date:  2020-06-08       Impact factor: 54.564

6.  Mechanistic Origins of Regioselectivity in Cobalt-Catalyzed C(sp2)-H Borylation of Benzoate Esters and Arylboronate Esters.

Authors:  Tyler P Pabst; Linda Quach; Kaitlyn T MacMillan; Paul J Chirik
Journal:  Chem       Date:  2020-12-09       Impact factor: 22.804

7.  Photochemical Reactions of Fluorinated Pyridines at Half-Sandwich Rhodium Complexes: Competing Pathways of Reaction.

Authors:  Barbara Procacci; Robin J Blagg; Robin N Perutz; Nuria Rendón; Adrian C Whitwood
Journal:  Organometallics       Date:  2013-12-31       Impact factor: 3.876

8.  Ring-whizzing in polyene-PtL2 complexes revisited.

Authors:  Oluwakemi A Oloba-Whenu; Thomas A Albright; Chirine Soubra-Ghaoui
Journal:  Beilstein J Org Chem       Date:  2016-07-07       Impact factor: 2.883

9.  Coligand role in the NHC nickel catalyzed C-F bond activation: investigations on the insertion of bis(NHC) nickel into the C-F bond of hexafluorobenzene.

Authors:  Maximilian W Kuntze-Fechner; Hendrik Verplancke; Lukas Tendera; Martin Diefenbach; Ivo Krummenacher; Holger Braunschweig; Todd B Marder; Max C Holthausen; Udo Radius
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2020-10-06       Impact factor: 9.825

10.  Integrated catalysis opens new arylation pathways via regiodivergent enzymatic C-H activation.

Authors:  Jonathan Latham; Jean-Marc Henry; Humera H Sharif; Binuraj R K Menon; Sarah A Shepherd; Michael F Greaney; Jason Micklefield
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2016-06-10       Impact factor: 14.919

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