skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: Solvent coordination to palladium can invert the selectivity of oxidative addition
Reaction solvent was previously shown to influence the selectivity of Pd/PtBu3-catalyzed Suzuki-Miyaura cross-couplings of chloroaryl triflates. The role of solvents has been hypothesized to relate to their polarity, whereby polar solvents stabilize anionic transition states involving [Pd(PtBu3)(X)]– (X = anionic ligand) and nonpolar solvents do not. However, here we report detailed studies that reveal a more complicated mechanistic picture. In particular, these results suggest that the selectivity change observed in certain solvents is primarily due to solvent coordination to palladium. Polar coordinating and polar noncoordinating solvents lead to dramatically different selectivity. In coordinating solvents, preferential reaction at triflate is likely catalyzed by Pd(PtBu3)(solv), whereas noncoordinating solvents lead to reaction at chloride through monoligated Pd(PtBu3). The role of solvent coordination is supported by stoichiometric oxidative addition experiments, density functional theory (DFT) calculations, and catalytic cross-coupling studies. Additional results suggest that anionic [Pd(PtBu3)(X)]– is also relevant to triflate selectivity in certain scenarios, particularly when halide anions are available in high concentrations.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1848090 2018388
PAR ID:
10314742
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ;
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Chemical Science
ISSN:
2041-6520
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Abstract The use of polar solvents MeCN or dimethylformamide (DMF) was previously shown to induce a selectivity switch in the Pd/PtBu3‐catalyzed Suzuki‐Miyaura coupling of chloroaryl triflates. This phenomenon was attributed to the ability of polar solvents to stabilize anionic transition states for oxidative addition. However, we demonstrate that selectivity in this reaction does not trend with solvent dielectic constant. Unlike MeCN and DMF, water, alcohols, and several polar aprotic solvents such as MeNO2, acetone, and propylene carbonate provide the same selectivity as nonpolar solvents. These results indicate that the role of solvent on the selectivity of Suzuki‐Miyaura couplings may be more complex than previously envisioned. Furthermore, this observation has the potential for synthetic value as it greatly broadens the scope of solvents that can be used for chloride‐selective cross coupling of chloroaryl triflates. 
    more » « less
  2. null (Ed.)
    Understanding how to control the nucleation and growth rates is crucial for designing nanoparticles with specific sizes and shapes. In this study, we show that the nucleation and growth rates are correlated with the thermodynamics of metal–ligand/solvent binding for the pre-reduction complex and the surface of the nanoparticle, respectively. To obtain these correlations, we measured the nucleation and growth rates by in situ small angle X-ray scattering during the synthesis of colloidal Pd nanoparticles in the presence of trioctylphosphine in solvents of varying coordinating ability. The results show that the nucleation rate decreased, while the growth rate increased in the following order, toluene, piperidine, 3,4-lutidine and pyridine, leading to a large increase in the final nanoparticle size (from 1.4 nm in toluene to 5.0 nm in pyridine). Using density functional theory (DFT), complemented by 31 P nuclear magnetic resonance and X-ray absorption spectroscopy, we calculated the reduction Gibbs free energies of the solvent-dependent dominant pre-reduction complex and the solvent-nanoparticle binding energy. The results indicate that lower nucleation rates originate from solvent coordination which stabilizes the pre-reduction complex and increases its reduction free energy. At the same time, DFT calculations suggest that the solvent coordination affects the effective capping of the surface where stronger binding solvents slow the nanoparticle growth by lowering the number of active sites (not already bound by trioctylphosphine). The findings represent a promising advancement towards understanding the microscopic connection between the metal–ligand thermodynamic interactions and the kinetics of nucleation and growth to control the size of colloidal metal nanoparticles. 
    more » « less
  3. Two limiting mechanisms are possible for oxidative addition of (hetero)aryl (pseudo)halides at Pd(0): a 3-centered concerted and a nucleophilic displacement mechanism. Until now, there has been little understanding about when each mechanism is relevant. Prior investigations to distinguish between these pathways were limited to a few specific combinations of substrate and ligand. Here, we computationally evaluated over 180 transition structures for oxidative addition in order to determine mechanistic trends based on substrate, ligand(s), and coordination number. Natural abundance 13C kinetic isotope effects pro-vide experimental results consistent with computational predictions. Key findings include that (1) differences in HOMO symmetries dictate that, although 12e– PdL is strongly biased toward a 3-centered concerted mechanism, 14e– PdL2 often prefers a nucleophilic displacement mechanism; (2) ligand electronics and sterics, including ligand bite angle, influence the preferred mechanism of reaction at PdL2; (3) phenyl triflate always reacts through a displacement mechanism regardless of catalyst structure due to the stability of a triflate anion and the inability of oxygen to effectively donate electron density to Pd; and (4) the high reactivity of C—X bonds adjacent to nitrogen in pyridine substrates relates to stereoelectronic stabilization of a nucleophilic displacement transition state. This work has implications for controlling rate and selectivity in catalytic couplings, and we demonstrate application of the mechanistic insight toward chemodivergent cross-couplings of bromochloroheteroarenes. 
    more » « less
  4. Although the palladium-catalyzed Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling of aryl esters has received significant attention, there is a lack of methods that utilize cheap and readily accessible Pd-phosphane catalysts, and can be routinely carried out with high cross-coupling selectivity. Herein, we report the first general method for the cross-coupling of pentafluorophenyl esters (pentafluorophenyl = pfp) by selective C–O acyl cleavage. The reaction proceeds efficiently using Pd(0)/phosphane catalyst systems. The unique characteristics of pentafluorophenyl esters are reflected in the fully selective cross-coupling vs. phenolic esters. Of broad synthetic interest, this report establishes pentafluorophenyl esters as new, highly reactive, bench-stable, economical, ester-based, electrophilic acylative reagents via acyl-metal intermediates. Mechanistic studies strongly support a unified reactivity scale of acyl electrophiles by C(O)–X (X = N, O) activation. The reactivity of pfp esters can be correlated with barriers to isomerization around the C(acyl)–O bond. 
    more » « less
  5. Abstract DMSO, an interesting solvent for copper‐catalyzed living radical polymerization (LRP) mediated by disproportionation, does not exhibit the greatest disproportionation of Cu(I)X into Cu(0) and Cu(II)X2. Under suitable conditions, DMSO provides 100% conversion and absence of termination, facilitating the development of complex‐architecture methodologies by living and immortal polymerizations. The mechanism yielding this level of precision is being investigated. Here we compare Cu(0)‐wire‐catalyzed LRP of methyl acrylate mediated by disproportionating ligands tris(2‐dimethylaminoethyl)amine, Me6‐TREN, tris(2‐aminoethyl)amine, TREN, and Me6‐TREN/TREN = 1/1 in presence of eight disproportionating solvents, some more efficient than DMSO in disproportionation. Unexpectedly, we observed that all solvents increased the rate of polymerization when monomer concentration decreased. This reversed trend from that of conventional LRPs demonstrates catalytic effect for disproportionating solvents. Above a certain concentration, the classic concentration‐rate dependence was observed. The external order of reaction of the apparent rate constant of propagation,kpappon solvent concentration demonstrated the highest order of reaction for the least disproportionating DMSO. Of all solvents investigated, DMSO has the highest ability to stabilize Cu(0) nanoparticles and therefore, yields the highest activity of Cu(0) nanoparticles rather than their greatest concentration. The implications of the catalytic effect of solvent in this and other reactions were discussed. 
    more » « less