Literature DB >> 30155233

Room temperature catalytic carbon-hydrogen bond alumination of unactivated arenes: mechanism and selectivity.

Thomas N Hooper1, Martí Garçon1, Andrew J P White1, Mark R Crimmin1.   

Abstract

We report the first catalytic methods for the transformation of C-H bonds of unactivated arenes into C-Al bonds. The catalytic reactions occur at 25 °C (benzene, toluene and xylenes) with palladium loadings as low as 0.1 mol%. Remarkably, the C-H activation of toluene and xylenes proceeds with ortho- and meta-selectivity. This selectivity is highly unusual and complementary to both Friedel-Crafts and the majority of C-H borylation methods. Through a detailed mechanistic analysis (Eyring analysis, KIE, DFT, QTAIM) we show that unusual Pd-Al intermetallic complexes are on the catalytic cycle and that the selectivity is determined by weak attractive dispersion forces in the transition state for C-H bond breaking.

Entities:  

Year:  2018        PMID: 30155233      PMCID: PMC6011207          DOI: 10.1039/c8sc02072h

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chem Sci        ISSN: 2041-6520            Impact factor:   9.825


Introduction

Catalytic methods that selectively break C–H bonds in organic molecules are now considered indispensable in synthesis. The activation and functionalisation of inert C–H bonds in arenes from oil refineries, such as benzene, toluene and xylenes, is arguably one of the most challenging facets of this field.1,2 Nevertheless a number of homogeneous catalysts are now known that result in carboncarbon or carbon–heteroatom bond formation from inert C–H bonds of simple aromatic hydrocarbons.3 Of particular relevance to this study are methods that generate C–B bonds from C–H bonds. Originally documented in 1999,4 the catalytic C–H borylation of arenes can be traced back to careful stoichiometric studies in which transition metal boryl complexes were shown to react with aromatic solvents.5,6 The newly formed products contain reactive C–B bonds ripe for further synthetic exploitation.7,8 The importance of the work is clear from the rapid development of new catalysts for these transformations and diverse applications of the boron-containing products in synthesis.9–11 In the absence of a functional group that coordinates the catalyst, the regioselectivity of C–H borylation is, in most cases, dictated by steric factors. For mono-substituted arenes, the majority of known catalysts are selective for the formation of meta and para functionalised products (Fig. 1).12–14 Bulky iridium catalysts have been developed which can bias the system toward the para- rather than the meta-selective pathway.15 Challenges still remain in this field and catalysts that are selective for the borylation of the ortho C–H bonds of arenes, in the absence of a directing group, are rare. Chatani and co-workers have reported platinium-based catalysts bearing N-heterocyclic carbene ligands for the C–H borylation of sterically inaccessible positions of arenes.16 Substrates include toluene, xylenes and mesitylene and while significant amounts of the ortho-borylation products are observed in these reactions, the meta-isomer is the dominant product.
Fig. 1

(a) Catalytic C–H alumination of arenes with Al(iii) and Al(i) reagents. (b) Regiocontrol of C–H functionalisation.

Aluminium compounds are applied on surprising scales in chemical manufacture. For example, modern variants of the Aufbau reaction,17,18 such as the Ineos (Ethyl) Process19 and Chevron Phillips Chemical Company (Gulf) Process,20 rely on the oligomerisation of ethylene with triethylaluminium to produce long-chain alcohols or α-olefins in plants that operate on scales of ∼250 000–500 000 metric tons per annum. In addition, LiAlH4 is used on modest scales for the preparation of intermediates in the manufacture of pharmaceuticals.21 Despite aluminium being the most abundant metal in the Earth's crust,22 reactions that transform C–H bonds into CAl bonds are rare and often limited to substrates containing a suitable directing group or activated, acidic C–H bonds.23–26 During the preparation of this manuscript, Aldridge, Goicoechea and co-workers reported a nucleophilic aluminyl anion which was shown to react with benzene to effect the transformation of a C–H to CAl bond. This remarkable transformation is currently limited to a single substrate.27 While investigating the mechanism of a palladium-catalysed transformation of C–H bonds of heteroarenes and fluoroarenes into CAl bonds,28 we discovered some unusual PdAl complexes capable of breaking the C–H bond of benzene at 25 °C. Herein we document these complexes and show that they catalyse the C–H alumination of unactivated arenes. New catalytic reactions have been developed using both Al(i) and Al(iii) dihydride reagents. Remarkably the reactions of the Al(i) reagent proceed primarily with ortho- and meta-selectivity, indicative of a new mode of regiocontrol that is complementary to both C–H borylation and Friedel–Crafts methodology (Fig. 1).29

Results and discussion

C–H activation of benzene with Pd–Al intermetallics

Reaction of 1 equiv. of the aluminium dihydride 1 and 1 equiv. of [Pd(PCy3)2] in benzene led to isolation of the tetrametallic complex Pd. X-ray diffraction experiments on single crystals of Pd revealed a structure with a planar Pd2Al2 motif with two hydrides bridging the PdAl edges. The Pd···Pd and PdAl distances are both short (Fig. 2). The geometry of the metallic core is similar to {Pd2Si2H2} and {Pd2Ge2H2} complexes reported by Osakada and co-workers and a {Rh2Al2H2} intermetallic recently reported by our group.30–32 While comparison to these latter species allows a tentative assignment of the formal oxidation states in Pd as Pd(i) and Al(i), regardless of the interpretation it is clear that the formation of this complex requires a partial dehydrogenation of 1 and proceeds with liberation of H2.
Fig. 2

(a) Preparation and reactivity of Pd···Al intermetallics Pd and PdAl. (b) The crystal structures of Pd and PdAl.

The on-metal dehydrogenation of 1 with [Pd(PCy3)2] led us to speculate whether the formation of low-valent Al(i) species33 might be important in our previously reported methodology.28 The reaction between two equiv. of 2 and one equiv. of [Pd(PCy3)2] in cyclohexane solution at 25 °C gave a dark green solution from which black crystals of PdAl could be isolated. In the solid state, the trigonal planar Pd(0) centre of PdAl is coordinated by one phosphine and two aluminylene ligands. The PdAl distances are similar to previously reported PdAl(i) compounds (Fig. 2).34–38 Although performing the same reaction in benzene led to the initial formation of PdAl this species was unstable, ultimately effecting C–H activation of the solvent and the clean formation of 3a. The formation of 3a occurred with regeneration of [Pd(PCy3)2] and was unambiguously confirmed by X-ray diffraction of a single crystal grown from the reaction mixture.

Catalytic C–H alumination of benzene

[Pd(PCy3)2] could be used catalytically and the formation of 3a still occurred at 25 °C with 5 mol% (18 h, 90%), 0.5 mol% (18 h, 97%), and 0.1 mol% (3 d, 99%) loading (Fig. 3). While the C–H activation of benzene by addition across a metalmetal bond of a Ni–Al intermetallic has been previously reported, this reaction is not catalytic in nickel as the aluminium containing product remains coordinated to the transition metal.39 The presence of a catalytic quantity of [Pd(PCy3)2] is crucial for C–H alumination. No reaction occurs between 2 and benzene in the absence of a catalyst.40–42
Fig. 3

(a) Catalytic C–H alumination of C6H6. (b) The crystal structure of 3a.

The utility of the C–H alumination protocol was further expanded by demonstrating that the preparation of low-valent Al(i) complexes is not a requirement for catalysis. Hence, the reaction of the aluminium dihydride 1 with benzene can be catalysed by 1 mol% [Pd(PCy3)2], and after 48 h at 100 °C under static vacuum 3b can be isolated as a crystalline solid in 33% yield (Fig. 3). This reaction is endergonic based on DFT calculations and removal of the liberated H2 is a requirement for catalytic turnover.

Preliminary scope and regioselectivity

The reaction scope was expanded. Reaction of 2 with toluene at 25 °C catalysed by 10 mol% [Pd(PCy3)2] produced a mixture of aluminium compounds arising from C–H activation at regioisomeric positions ortho-, meta- and para- to the methyl group (Fig. 4, 4-). The selectivity of this reaction is notable and C–H alumination of toluene proceeds to form only negligible amounts (12%) of the para-isomer, and approximately equal amounts of ortho- (42%) and meta-isomers (46%). The vast majority of ortho-selective C–H borylation protocols rely on a suitable heteroatom containing functional group to direct the catalyst to the adjacent C–H bond.
Fig. 4

Scope of the Pd-catalysed C–H alumination of arenes.

1,4-, 1,3- and 1,2-dimethylbenzene also undergo C–H alumination at 25 °C and in the cases where regioisomeric products are possible, there is a preference to functionalise the C–H bonds in the ortho- and meta-positions with respect to the methyl groups (Fig. 3, 5, 6-, 7-). For 1,3-dimethylbenzene there is no evidence for C–H bond activation at the sterically inaccessible position between the two methyl groups and, consistent with this result 1,3,5-trimethylbenzene (mesitylene) does not yield products of C–H alumination even at longer reaction times and elevated temperatures. For comparison C–H borylation of 1,3-disubstituted arenes occurs with high meta-selectivities and ortho-functionalised products are not observed in significant amounts.14 The reaction between 2 and biphenyl had to be carried out in cyclohexane as a solvent as this substrate is a solid under ambient conditions. As a result, this reaction proved to be slower than the C–H functionalisation of arenes carried out under neat conditions and required a slightly elevated temperature and longer reaction time (40 °C, 48 h). The formation of meta- and para-aluminated complexes (8-) was observed consistent with a switch in regiochemistry relative to toluene and xylenes. Attempts to expand the reaction scope to the C–H alumination of alkanes, such as n-hexane or methylcyclopentane, did not lead to clean formation of organoaluminium compounds under the reaction conditions reported herein. The catalytic competency of PdAl, along with its observation during catalytic turnover, strongly suggest that this species is an important resting state. Inspection of the solid-state structure of PdAl reveals that this 16-electron complex is coordinatively saturated and unlikely to be directly responsible for C–H bond activation. Dissolution of single crystals of PdAl in C6D6 at 25 °C forms a complex equilibrium mixture containing PdAl, [Pd(PCy3)2], PCy3 and further unidentified species as measured by 31P NMR spectroscopy. The position of the equilibrium could be biased entirely toward PdAl by addition of a further equiv. of 2 and lowering the temperature to –40 °C. Either phosphine or aluminylene dissociation from PdAl are plausible components of this equilibrium and would lead to the formation of two-coordinate palladium(0) intermediates Int-1 and Int-1′ respectively (Fig. 5a and b). These electron-rich 14-electron two-coordinate intermediates are reminiscent of [PdL2] species that are widely invoked in oxidative addition reactions.43 While both are potential catalytic intermediates, a further experiment demonstrates that the phosphine is not required to generate the active species. Hence, the C–H alumination of toluene with 2 can be catalysed by 10 mol% [Pd(η5-C5H5)(η3-C3H4Ph)] and after 18 h at 25 °C yields an identical mixture of products to that obtained with [Pd(PCy3)2].
Fig. 5

(a) Calculated PES for C–H alumination of benzene, M06L-D3, hybrid basis set. (b) Geometries of oxidative addition transition state (TS-1) and double migration transition state (TS-2), i-propyl groups omitted for clarity. (c) Experimentally determined Kinetic Isotope Effect (KIE).

Mechanism and DFT studies

To gain further insight into the mechanism of C–H bond activation, and the unusual regioselectivity, DFT calculations were conducted.44 Calculations were initiated from Int-1 (Fig. 5a). The C–H bond functionalisation mechanism begins with coordination of benzene to Int-1 to form Int-2. The long Pd···C6H6 distance in Int-2 (∼3 Å) as well as minimal distortion of the aromatic ring suggest a very weak electrostatic interaction. This assignment is confirmed by NBO analysis, Int-2 is a loose encounter complex. Breaking of the C–H bond occurs by a classical three-centred oxidative addition transition state, TS-1, to generate the cis-palladium complex Int-3. This is the highest activation barrier on the potential energy surface, ΔH‡ = 24.9 kcal mol–1 and ΔG‡298 K = 26.8 kcal mol–1. Subsequent cis/trans isomerisation leads to Int-4.45–47 AlC and Al–H bond formation occurs in an exergonic step by the concerted migration of both the phenyl and hydride ligands on palladium to aluminium through a low energy transition state, TS-2. Aldridge and co-workers have recently provided the first experimental data for double hydride migration from a main group centre to a late-transition metal.48 In this study, a series of rhodiumgallium heterobimetallic complexes were interrogated by neutron diffraction. Modification of the phosphine ligand on rhodium led to the isolation and characterisation of a series of complexes that model the trajectory of the double hydride migration pathway. Our calculations suggest that the microscopic reverse of this striking pathway may be operating under catalytic conditions. Double migration is accompanied by a formal change in the not only the palladium oxidation state from +2 → 0 but also the aluminium oxidation state from +1 → +3. Analysis of the NPA charges is consistent with this argument and the Al centre involved in the double migration pathway becomes more electropositive as it is oxidised (Int-4, +1.35; Int-5, +1.78) while the innocent Al centre becomes marginally less electropositive as the palladium centre is reduced (Int-4, +1.19; Int-5, +1.12). In Int-5, the reaction product is still coordinated to Pd as a σ-alane complex, and dissociation is required to liberate the product 3a and allow catalytic turnover (Fig. 5a and b). The calculations suggest that C–H bond breaking is the turnover limiting step. A series of kinetics experiments were run to complement the computational data. Under pseudo-first order conditions (excess benzene) the catalytic reaction is zero-order in 2, rate-constants were measured across a 15–35 °C temperature range. The activation parameters were determined as ΔH‡298 K = 23.4 ± 1.3 kcal mol–1, ΔS‡298 K = –5.7 ± 4.5 cal K–1 mol–1, ΔG‡298 K = 25.1 ± 2.6 kcal mol–1. These data match closely with the computational activation parameters listed above. Comparing the rates of the reaction of 2 with excess C6D6 and C6H6 in two independent experiments gave a large primary KIE of 5.8 ± 0.1 at 30 °C, consistent with almost complete cleavage of the C–H bond of benzene in the turnover-limiting step (Fig. 5c).

Origin of regioselectivity

The computational model can be used to rationalise the unusual ortho- and meta-selectivity found during the C–H alumination of toluene. Due to the weak and reversible binding of the arene in the encounter complex Int-2, the Curtin–Hammett principle applies and the regioselectivity is determined by the difference in energy of the transition states for C–H bond activation. The five possible regioisomeric transition states for the oxidative addition of the sp2 C–H bonds of toluene to Int-1 were calculated. While the Gibbs activation energies were within a small energy span they follow the trend TS ≈ TS < TS consistent with the experiment (Fig. 6a). Due to the small energy differences involved, a series of functionals were tested (M06L, B3PW91, ωB97x) to probe the reproducibility of the trend across different computational methods. As part of these calculations dispersion forces were modelled as single-point energy corrections allowing a direct assessment of their effect (see ESI† for details). The data consistently show that the inclusion of the dispersion correction is necessary to reproduce the experimental trend. This correction results in a small but significant stabilisation to both TS and, to a lesser extent, TS but has no effect on TS. Hence, the origin the unusual regioselectivity in catalytic C–H alumination of toluene and xylenes can be traced back to non-covalent interactions in the coordination sphere and more specifically weakly stabilising dispersion interactions between the flanking aromatic substituents on the aluminylene ligands and the substituent on the arene.49–51 The nature of these interactions can be further appreciated by Quantum Theory of Atoms-In-Molecules (QTAIM) calculations which show bond-critical points between the C–H bonds of methyl group of toluene and the ligand periphery in TS (C–H···H–C and C–H···π interactions) but not TS (Fig. 6b) along with a Non-Covalent Interaction (NCI) plot which shows attractive forces between the ligand periphery and methyl group in TS (Fig. 6c).
Fig. 6

(a) Comparison of the Gibbs energies of the regioisomeric transition states for oxidative addition of C–H bonds of toluene to Int-1. (b) QTAIM plot of TS (selected atoms only) showing the presence of weak non-covalent interactions. (c) NCI plot of TS.

Conclusions

In summary, we report the discovery and mechanistic analysis of a new catalytic method for the C–H activation of unactivated arenes (benzene, toluene, xylenes). These reactions proceed with unusual regiocontrol and a preference for the functionalisation of both the ortho- and meta-position of toluene and xylenes. Our analysis shows that the methyl group of the substrate is in fact acting as a directing group, forming weak attractive interactions with the catalyst that determine the regioselectivity of CAl bond formation. This is a rare example of catalyst control in which solely dispersion interactions determine selectivity. These findings could lead to the development of new strategies for catalyst design and selectivity control.

Conflicts of interest

There are no conflicts to declare. Click here for additional data file. Click here for additional data file. Click here for additional data file. Click here for additional data file.
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