Published July 19, 2023 | Version Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Pd(II) and Rh(I) Catalytic Precursors for Arene Alkenylation: Comparative Evaluation of Reactivity and Mechanism Based on Experimental and Computational Studies

  • 1. ROR icon University of Virginia
  • 2. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

We combine experimental and computational investigations to compare and understand catalytic arene alkenylation using the Pd(II) and Rh(I) precursors Pd(OAc)₂ and [(η²-C₂H₄)₂Rh(μ-OAc)]₂ with arene, olefin, and Cu(II) carboxylate at elevated temperatures (>120 °C). Under specific conditions, previous computational and experimental efforts have identified heterotrimetallic cyclic PdCu₂(η²-C₂H₄)₃(μ-OPiv)₆ and [(η²-C₂H₄)₂Rh(μ-OPiv)₂]₂(μ-Cu) (OPiv = pivalate) species as likely active catalysts for these processes. Further studies of catalyst speciation suggest a complicated equilibrium between Cu(II)-containing complexes containing one Rh or Pd atom with complexes containing two Rh or Pd atoms. At 120 °C, Rh catalysis produces styrene >20-fold more rapidly than Pd. Also, at 120 °C, Rh is ∼98% selective for styrene formation, while Pd is ∼82% selective. Our studies indicate that Pd catalysis has a higher predilection toward olefin functionalization to form undesired vinyl ester, while Rh catalysis is more selective for arene/olefin coupling. However, at elevated temperatures, Pd converts vinyl ester and arene to vinyl arene, which is proposed to occur through low-valent Pd(0) clusters that are formed in situ. Regardless of arene functionality, the regioselectivity for alkenylation of mono-substituted arenes with the Rh catalyst gives an approximate 2:1 meta/para ratio with minimal ortho C–H activation. In contrast, Pd selectivity is significantly influenced by arene electronics, with electron-rich arenes giving an approximate 1:2:2 ortho/meta/para ratio, while the electron-deficient (α,α,α)-trifluorotoluene gives a 3:1 meta/para ratio with minimal ortho functionalization. Kinetic intermolecular arene ethenylation competition experiments find that Rh reacts most rapidly with benzene, and the rate of mono-substituted arene alkenylation does not correlate with arene electronics. In contrast, with Pd catalysis, electron-rich arenes react more rapidly than benzene, while electron-deficient arenes react less rapidly than benzene. These experimental findings, in combination with computational results, are consistent with the arene C–H activation step for Pd catalysis involving significant η1-arenium character due to Pd-mediated electrophilic aromatic substitution character. In contrast, the mechanism for Rh catalysis is not sensitive to arene-substituent electronics, which we propose indicates less electrophilic aromatic substitution character for the Rh-mediated arene C–H activation.

Additional Information

© 2023 American Chemical Society. Computational studies were supported by ONR (N00014-19-1-2081) and NSF (CBET-2005250). Experimental studies were supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Chemical Sciences, Geosciences, and Biosciences Division (DE-SC0000776). We acknowledge discussions with Professor Mahdi Abu-Omar (UC Santa Barbara) related to kinetic experiments and assessment. Author Contributions: M.T.B., X.J., and C.B.M. contributed almost equally. The authors declare no competing financial interest.

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Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
122334
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20230717-55915200.28

Funding

Office of Naval Research (ONR)
N00014-19-1-2081
NSF
CBET-2005250
Department of Energy (DOE)
DE-SC0000776

Dates

Created
2023-08-14
Created from EPrint's datestamp field
Updated
2023-08-14
Created from EPrint's last_modified field