Lecture 4
Lecture 4
Kenneth D. Karlin
Department of Chemistry, Johns Hopkins University
karlin@jhu.edu http://www.jhu.edu/~chem/karlin/
Organometallic Chemistry
030.442 Spring 2010 Prof. Kenneth D. Karlin karlin@jhu.edu Class Meetings: TTh, 12:00 1:15 pm ++ Remsen Hall 347
p. 1
Textbook Organometallic Chemistry (2nd Edition) Gary O. Spessard, Gary L. Miessler Oxford University Press Course Construction: Homeworks, Midterm Exam(s), Oral Presentations (Grads) TA: Craig Bettenhausen (bettenhausen@jhu.edu) Course Information: http://www.jhu.edu/~chem/karlin/
p. 2
Reaction Examples
Oxidative Addition
Reductive Elimination
p. 3
Vaskas complex
CH3Mn(CO)5
CO
CH3CMn(CO)5
O
(Iron pentacarbonyl)
O H
>
p. 4
Monsanto Acetic Acid Synthesis CH3OH (methanol) + CO > CH3C(O)OH (acetic acid) (Rh catalyst) Ziegler-Natta catalysts Stereoregular polymerization of 1-alkenes (-olens)
1963 Nobel Prize n CH2=CHR > [CH2-CHR]n Catalyst: Ti compounds and organometalllic Al compound (e.g., (C2H5)3Al )
p. 5
p. 6
Solid-state structure
Ferrocene was rst prepared unintentionally. Pauson and Kealy, cyclopentadieny-MgBr and
FeCl3 (goal was to prepare fulvalene) But, they obtained a light orange powder of "remarkable stability., later accorded to the aromatic character of Cp groups. The sandwich compound structure was described later; this led to new metallocenes chemistry (1973 Nobel prize, Wilkinson & Fischer). The Fe atom is assigned to the +2 oxidation state (Mssbauer spectroscopy). The bonding nature in (Cp)2Fe allows the Cp rings to freely rotate, as observed by NMR spectroscopy and Scanning Tunneling Microscopy. ----> Fluxional behavior. (Note: Fe-C bond distances are 2.04 ).
p. 7
p. 8
Xray- 2 COs equiv, one diff., If retained in solution, expect, 2:1 for 13-C NMR. But, see only 1 peak at RT. Cooling causes a change to the 2:1 ratio expected.
Two possible explanations:
(1)Dissociation and re-association or (2) rotation of
the Fe(CO)3 moiety so that COs become equiv.
Former seems not right, because for example addition
of PPh3 does NOT result in substitution to give (diene)M(CO)2PPh3.
Note: You can substitute PPh3 for CO, but that requires
either high T or hv. So, the equivalency of the CO groups
is due to rotation without bond rupture, pseudorotation.
13C-NMR
p. 9
Berry Pseudorotation
Pseudorotation: Ligands 2 and 3 move from axial to equatorial positions in the trigonal bipyramid whilst ligands 4 and 5 move from equatorial to axial positions. Ligand 1 does not move and acts as a pivot. At the midway point (transition state) ligands 2,3,4,5 are equivalent, forming the base of a square pyramid. The motion is equivalent to a 90 rotation about the M-L1 axis. Molecular examples could be PF5 or Fe(CO)5.
p. 10
The Berry mechanism, or Berry pseudorotation mechanism, is a type of vibration causing molecules of certain geometries to isomerize by exchanging the two axial ligands for two of the equatorial ones. It is the most widely accepted mechanism for pseudorotation. It most commonly occurs in trigonal bipyramidal molecules, such as PF5, though it can also occur in molecules with a square pyramidal geometry. The process of pseudorotation occurs when the two axial ligands close like a pair of scissors pushing their way in between two of the equatorial groups which scissor out to accommodate them. This forms a square based pyramid where the base is the four interchanging ligands and the tip is the pivot ligand, which has not moved. The two originally equatorial ligands then open out until they are 180 degrees apart, becoming axial groups perpendicular to where the axial groups were before the pseudorotation.
p. 11
1961 D. Hodgkin, X-ray structure Coenzyme Vitamin B12 (see other page) Oldest organometallic complex (because biological) (see other
1963 - Ziegler/Natta Nobel Prize, polymerization catalysts 1964 - Fischer, 1st Metal-carbene complex
1965 Cyclobutadieneiron tricarbonyl, (C4H4)Fe(CO)3
theory before experiment
(C4H4) is anti-aromatic (4 -electrons)
With
-Fe(CO)3,
1965 Wilkinson hydrogenation catalyst, Rh(PPh3)3Cl 1971 Monsanto Co. Rh catalyzed acetic acid synthesis
p.12
5-deoxyadenosyl group
p. 13
p. 14
AGOSTIC INTERACTIONS:
Agostic derived from Greek word for "to hold on to oneself C-H bond on a ligand that undergoes an interaction with the metal complex resembles the transition state of an oxidative addition or reductive elimination reaction. Detected by NMR spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction Compound above: MoH = 2.1 angstroms, IR bands were observed at 2704 and 2664 cm1 and the agostic proton was observed at 3.8 ppm. The two hydrogens on the agostic methylene are rapidly switching between terminal and agostic on the NMR time scale.
p. 15
NOT:
Complex which binds ligands via, N, O, S, other
M-carboxylates, ethylenediamine, water
MX where complex has organometallic behavior, reactivity patterns
e.g., low-valent
Oxidation State
R'
R'' Charge left on central metal as the ligands are removed in their usual closed shell conguration (examples to follow).
dn
for compounds of transition elements N d < (N+1) s or (N+1) p in compounds e.g., 3 d < 4 s or 4 p
d d
n computation very important in transition metal chemistry n zero oxidation state of M in M-complex has a conguration d n where n is the group #.
p. 16
Examples: Mo(CO)6
Mo(0) d
= d 6 (CO, neutral)
HCo(CO)4 H is hydride, H, --> --> Co(I), d n = d 8
Group 5 Group 6 Group 7
V(CO)6
Cr(CO)6
Mn(CO)6+
V(1)
Cr(0)
Mn(+1)
d6
d 6
d 6
Isoelectronic and isostructural compounds (importance of d n)
Effective Atomic # Rule; 18-Electron Rule (Noble gas formalism)
# of electrons in next inert gas =
# Metal valence electrons + (sigma) electrons from ligands
Rule: For diamagnetic (spin-paired) mononuclear complexes in organotransition metal compounds, one never exceeds the E.A.N.
Cr(CO)6 (CO)6
Cr ---> 6 electrons e - pairs from 6 ligands 12 electrons > to [Ar] conguration 18 electrons (will see more in M.O. diagram)
d6
p. 17
Consequence of EAN Rule:
leads to prediction of maximum in coordination #
Max coordination # = (18 n) / 2 n is from d n .
d n
10
8
6
4
2
0
Max Coord # 4
5
6
7
8
9
Change in 2-electrons results in change of only one in Coord. #
Any Coord. # less than Max # ---> coordinatively unsaturated
Fe(CO)42
2e +CO 2e CO
Fe(CO)5
p. 18
[ReH9]2
d 0, 9 hydride ligands; CN = 9
Geometry: Face capped trigonal prism
Fe5(CO)15C
p. 19
Carbonyl Compounds in Metal-Metal Bonded Complexes
less straightforward
Fe2(CO)9 [-Cp)Cr(CO)3]2 Co2(CO)8
(2 isomers)
p. 20
d6 Octahedral
M+ M+
maximum of 6 coordinate
eg o
sixpointcharges sphericallydistributed
Freeion spherical
t2g
octahedral ligand9ield
M+ M+
Freeion spherical fourpointcharges sphericallydistributed
t2 t e
tetrahedral ligand9ield
p. 21
lowercaselettersfor orbital dz2,dx2-y2(e2g) (destabilized) spherical 9ieldof6 charges 10Dqoro dxy,dxz,dyz(t2g) (stabilized)
Oh
p. 22
The ve d-orbitals form a set of two bonding molecular orbitals (eg set with the dz2 and the dx2-y2), and a set of three non-bonding orbitals (t2g set with the dxy, dxz, and the dyz orbitals).
eg orbitals point at ligands (antibonding)
appropriate symmetry for -bonds to ligands
-bonds will be six d2sp3 hybrids
ndz2, ndx2-y2, (n+1)s, (n+1)px,py,pz
t2g orbital set left as non-bonding
p. 23
p. 24
Standard MO diagram for Octahedral ML6 complexes with -donor ligands e.g., [Co(NH3)6]3+ (18 e) e.g., W(Me)6 (12 e)
Case I
Electron-conguration unrelated to 18-Rule
1st Row-Complexes with weak ligands
p. 25
p. 26
never exceed the 18-e rule
Metal in high oxidation state
o is large(r) (for a given ligand)
radius is small -> ligands approach closely > stronger bonding
2nd or 3rd Row Metal - 4d, 5d
o is large(er) (for a given ligand); d-orbitals larger, more diffuse.
Complex
ZrF62
ZrF73
Zr(C2O4)44 WCl6
WCl6
WCl62
TcF62
d n
0
0
0
0
1
2
3
Total e
Complex
12
14
16
12
13
14
15
d n
Total e
4
1
2
4
5
6
8
16
17
18
16
17
18
16
p. 27
Similar Result if ligands are high in Spectrochemical Series
e.g., CN o is larger
V(CN)63 Cr(CN)63 Mn(CN)63 Fe(CN)63 Fe(CN)63 Co(CN)63
d2
d3
d4
d5
d6
d6
Can have less than maximum # of non-bonding (t2g) electrons, because they are nonbonding. Addition or removal of e has little effect on complex stability
p. 28
p. 29
Ligand Orbitals bothsetsofd orbitalsare drivenin energydueto lowerlying ligandorbitals T1g,T2g T1u,T2u orbitals px,py
A1g
4s
Eg T2g
eg (*) t2g(*)
3d t2g ()
A1g
eg()
T1u orbital E pz
g
p. 30
eg(*) o o o
eg(*)
t2g()
MLbonding
t2g(n.b.)
nonbonding
t2g(*)
bothare antibonding
-donor acceptor
largestseparation betweensetsofdorbitals intermediate separation
-donor
smallestseparation
Metal Orbitals
(only consider the d orbitals 4s and 4p orbitals not included in the analysis)
Mo(CO)6
p. 31
CASE III
eg (* M-L) Eg T2g
*orbitals on CO L high in spectrochemical series: (6 x 2 each orthogonal) CO, NO, CN, PR3, CNR
o
4d
t2g ()
orbitals on CO (6 x 1 each) A1g Orbitals on M used in such -bonding T1u are just those which are non-bonding Eg
Result: Increase in o
Imperative to not
Have electrons in eg* orbitals
eg (M-L)
p. 32
p. 33
Implications of 18e Rule for Complexes with -accepting ligands In octahedral geometry almost always have 6 d-electrons 12 electrons from ligands Other cases: # d-electrons and coordination # complementary
When M has odd electron > metal-metal bond (often bridging COs) Mn2(CO)10 Co2(CO)8 Some 17 electron species known: V(CO)6 d 5 Mo(CO)2(diphos)2]+ d 5
p. 34
o t2g
ML6
ML4
dxy
dz2
dxz
dyz
(degenerate )
Common for:
Rh(I), Ir(I)
Pd(II), Pt(II)
p. 35
p. 36
dn
d10 d10 d10 d8 d8 d4 d2 d0
C.N. 4 3 2 5 4 7 8 9
Coord. Geom. Td
D3h symmetry
p. 37
charge,
H (hydride)
(-allyl)
-C5H5 (-Cp)
O (O-atom; oxide)
p. 38
Metal-Carbonyl Synthesis:
p. 39
Reduction of available (in our O2-environment) metal salts, e.g., MX2, MX3, other (e.g., carbonates)
M-carbonyls generally in low-valent oxidation states
> Reductive Carbonylation
Reductants: CO itself ( > CO2), H2, Na-dithionite
Some Reactions: WMe6 + xs CO > W(CO)6 + NiO + H2 (400 C) + CO > Ni(CO)4
3 Me2CO
p. 40
13C
NMR spectroscopy of M-CO fragments: 180 250 ppm Useful to use 13C enriched carbon monoxide
Can be useful to observed coupling to other spin active nuclei, e.g., 103Rh or 13P
p. 41
p. 42
p. 43
p. 44
p. 45
The backbonding between the metal and the CO ligand, where the metal donates electron density to the CO ligand forms a dynamic synergism between the metal and ligand, which gives unusual stability to these compounds.
:
:
O:
M=C=O
p. 46
p. 47
Fe(CO)5 + 2 HC=CH
Mn2(CO)10 + Br2 2 PtCl2 + 2 CO
Fe CO CO
CO
p. 48
OC
Fe
CO
+ CO
OC
Fe
CO
C O
OC
Fe
CO
Fe2(CO)9 + 4 OH > Fe2(CO)82 Cr(CO)6 Cr(CO)6 + 3 KOH + BH4 > KHCr(CO)5 + K2CO3 + H2O > [(CO)5CrHCr(CO)5]
p. 49
Reactions of Metal-Carbonyl Complexes (cont.) Alkyl Metal Carbonyls NaMn(CO)5 + CH3X NaMn(CO)5 + RC(O)Cl > Mn(CO)5CH3 > Mn(CO)5C(O)R
Metal-Olen Complexes
Zeises Salt, Pt-olen complex
Ag-(triate) + C2H4 > [PtCl4]2 + C2H4 > [(C2H4)Ag-OSO2CF3]
[PtCl3(C2H4)] + Cl
> [Fp-CH2-CH=CH2]+
> [Fp-CH2-CH=CH2]+
[ (Cp)FeI(CO)2 or (Cp)FeII(CO)2+ ]
Fp = (Cp)Fe(CO)2
p. 50
p. 51
(2-C70)Ir(X)(CO)(PPh3)2 C60 - Buckminsterfullerene Buckyballs (Soccer-ball 6- and 5-membered rings) Fullerenes Buckyferrocene
p. 52
Also, for longer CC distances, olen is no longer planar. can regard metal-olen as a metallacyclopropane (sp3 carbons)
Keq > M-olen + L
ML + olen <
Studied with Pd(II), Ni(0), Rh(I)
Keq (M-olen bond-strength) smaller for sterically hindered olens
Keq increased by e -withdrawing substituents (-CN, -carboxyl)
Keq decreased by e -donating substituents
p. 53
Also follow by IR spectroscopy: Ethylene, 1623 cm1; Zeises salt, 1516 cm1
p. 54
In the plane, for trigonal or TBP compounds (Not relevant for octahedral complexes) In solution, olens are not in xed orientations olens rotate (Cp)Rh(C2H4)2 20 C Cp : inner : outer inner and outer Hs = 5 : 4 : 4 i o RT two C2H4 peaks strongly broadened non-equiv Hs exchange at rate intermediate on NMR time scale + 57 C two C2H4 peaks coalesce to one
(Cp)Rh
p. 55
M
C
ON OC PPh3
H'' H'
M
C
Os
PPh3
H''
H s are equiv to each other; same with H s but H s are different from H s
H'
Rotation about CC axis would not change situation Propeller movement would exchange non-equiv hydrogens NMR spectroscopy shows two separate peaks at 90 C they coalesce at 65 C > Propeller like movement is operative
Measured barrier to rotation ~ 50-60 kJ/mole for C2H4 No rotation for CF2=CF2 and (NC)2C=C(CN)2 Stronger -bonding restricts rotation
p. 56
Olen metal complexes have a considerable use in organic synthesis
Metal alters chemical behavior of olens
Metal can activate, deactivate or protect double bond for electrophilic or nucleophilic attack
Resolve optical or geometric isomers
direct stereospecic attack
aromatic or de-aromatize appropriate systems
(CO)2CpFeCl + or (CO)2CpFe
THF 0C to 25 C 30 min
Cp(CO)2Fe
[Cp(CO)2Fe
90 %
]+ BF4
NaI acetone
olefin liberated
p. 57
1st Homogeneous Catalytic Process with organometallic (R-Pd) compound used on an industrial scale (related to hydroformylation)
Net Reactions:
[PdCl4]2 + C2H4 + H2O > CH3CHO + Pd + 2HCl + 2Cl
Pd + 2CuCl2 + 2Cl > [PdCl4]2 + 2CuCl
C2H4 + O2
> CH3CHO
p. 58
p. 59
p. 60
Mechanism summary
Several interesting key points:
(1)there is no H/D exchange seen in this reaction. Reaction runs with C2D4 in water generate CD3CDO, and runs with C2H4 in D2O generate CH3CHO. Thus, keto-enol tautomerization is not a possible mechanistic step.
(2) There is a negligible kinetic isotope effect with fully deuterated reactants (k H/k D=1.07). Hence, it is inferred that hydride transfer is not a rate-determining step.
(3) a signicant competitive isotope effect with C2H2D2, (k H/k D= ~1.9), suggests that the rate determining step should be prior to oxidized product formation.
The bulk of mechanistic studies on the Wacker Process debated whether nucleophilic attack occurred via an external (anti-addition) pathway or via an internal (syn-addition) pathway.
In summary, it was determined that syn-addition occurs under lowchloride reaction concentrations (< 1 mol/L, industrial process conditions), while anti-addition occurs under high-chloride (> 3 mol/L) reaction concentrations. However, the exact pathway and the reason for this switching of pathways is still unknown.
p. 61
Another key step in the Wacker process is the migration of the hydrogen from oxygen to chlorine and formation of the C-O double bond. This step is generally regarded to proceed through a so-called -hydride elimination with a fourmembered cyclic transition state:
One in silico study[JACS,2006] argues that the transition state for this reaction step is unfavorable (activation energy 36.6 kcal/mol) and proposes an alternative reductive elimination reaction mechanism in which the proton directly attaches itself to chlorine with an activation energy of 18.8 kcal/mol. The proposed reaction step gets assistance from a water molecule acting as a catalyst. Pd(0) Reoxidation Must be complicated
p. 62
This and the
next 5 slides
are due to
Darren Achey
and
Byron Farnum
Feb09
p. 63
p. 64 Beyramabadi, S. A.; Eshtiagh-Hosseini, H.; Housaindokht, M. R.; Morsali, A.; Organometallics, 2008, 27, 72-79.
- Water-Chain mechanism - Compared Syn vs. Anti mechanisms for rate determining step - All DFT calculations - Accounted for kinetic isotope effect data for O-D vs O-H bond breaking
Syn additi on
Anti additi on
Syn
p. 65
Transition State
Syn-Product
Anti
Lower Activation Barrier
Concluded to be the mechanism of ratedetermining step
p. 66
Transition State
Anti-Product
p. 67
Kieth, J. A.; Nielsen, R. J.; Oxgaard, J.; Goddard, W. A.; Henry, P. M.; Organometallics, Feb. 2009
- Emphasized the well established nature of the syn mechanism at low [Cl-] (Standard Conditions) Mech depends highly on [Cl-] and [CuCl2] LL syn mechanism HL Isomerization HH anti mechanism w/ chlorohydrin products
p. 68
unidentate 2-e anionic ligand rarely observed form [CH2=CHCH2Co(CN)5]3 [CH2=CHCH2Mn(CO)5] CC stretch ~ 1620 cm1
alkyl + neutral alkene (2-e )> bidentate most common structure behaves as delocalized -system 3 (4) electrons now valence electrons
[(3-C3H5)PdCl]2 [(-C3H5)PdCl]2
p. 69
[(h3-C3H5)PdCl]2 approximately square-planar (allyl as bidentate)
16-electron system
Pd(II), d8, 2 Cls (4 e), allyl is 2 e) (can think about allyl as 3e)
Metal interaction with allyl 3:
Always M-to-allyl ligand
Can be M-to-L (L-anion) or L-to-M (allyl-cation)
Maximize bonding for allyl 2:
want terminal Cs in the PdCl2Pd plane. So
Allyl plane tilts wrt PdCl2Pd plane from 90 to ~ 110
(central C bent away); moves terminal Cs closer to M
Always Ligand to M. To maximize bonding: PdCl2Pd plane cuts -allyl skeleton~ 2/3 of the distance (center of gravity) from the central C-atom towards the terminal Cs
p. 70
p. 71
p. 72
Allyl-M (-to-; 3-to-1) interconversions important to catalysis/synthesis, as a way to create a vacent coordination site and a way to exert uxional behavior
With excess of PPh3, can observe 1-intermediate by IR spectroscopy 1600-1650 cm1 [Mn(CO)5] + C3H5Cl > (1-C3H5)Mn(CO)5 or h > (3-C3H5)Mn(CO)4 + CO
18-electron species
p. 73
Insertion reaction
Reductive elimination
p. 74
p. 75
H2Fe(CO)4,
HCo(CO)4
not understood
trans H-Pt(Cl)(PEt3)2
>
cis-PtCl2(PEt3)2 + N2H4
trans H-Pt(Cl)(PEt3)2 + N2
could be sublimed
p. 76
p. 77
p. 78
Problem: Given a complex formulated as Ru(H)(CO)(Cl)(PPh3)3
IR bands are observed at 2020 cm1 and 1933 cm1. How can you assign the bands either to the RuH or C-O stretching frequencies?
MHterminal and MCO terminal IR stretches are in similar regions of spectrum. Thus, cannot assign directly. A solution would be to prepare Ru(D)(CO)(Cl)(PPh3)3 or Ru(H)(13CO)(Cl)(PPh3)3, because IR bands would undergo an isotope shift.
Heavy isotope substitution reduces frequency of corresponding vibration; reduced mass, , in Hookes Law, increases
{Force constant k doesnt change; bond strengths change little with isotope
substitution.}
Hookes Law:
p. 79
1 / 2
For vibration at 2000 cm1:
2 / 1
1/2
1/2
~ 0.71
p. 80
p. 81
Trans effect (inuence) - trans effect is the labilization of ligands trans to certain other ligands, which can thus be regarded as trans directing ligand. It is attributed to electronic effects and it is most notable in square planar complexes, In addition to this kinetic trans effect, trans ligands also have an inuence on the ground state of the molecule, notably on bond lengths and stability
Some authors prefer the term trans inuence to distinguish it from the kinetic effect, while others use more specic terms such as structural trans effect (i.e., elongated trans M-L distances) or thermodynamic trans effect.
The intensity of the trans effect (as measured by the increase in rate of substitution of the trans ligand) follows this sequence:
F, H2O, OH < NH3 < py < Cl < Br < I, SCN, NO2, SC(NH2)2, Ph < SO32 < PR3, AsR3, SR2, CH3 < H, NO, CO, CN, C2H4
Established by substitution kinetic measurements, MH stretch (as mentioned above), or other observations
p. 82
Classic example of the trans effect: the synthesis of cis-platin. Starting from PtCl42, the rst NH3 ligand is added to any of the four equivalent positions at random, but the second NH3 is added cis to the rst one, because Cl has a larger trans effect than NH3. If, on the other hand, one starts from Pt(NH3)42+, the trans product is obtained instead.
Cl
Cl
2 + NH3 Cl
Cl
NH3
1 + NH3 Cl
Cl
NH3
PtII
Cl H3N Cl NH3 2+
PtII
Cl H3N PtII H3N NH3 Cl Cl 1+
PtII
Cl
Cis
NH3 Cl
PtII
H3N NH3
Cl
+ Cl NH3
H3N
NH3
PtII
Cl NH3 Trans
p. 83
In hydrido carbonyls, get mixing of (M-CO) and (M-H) modes, especially when CO and H are trans. So deuterate to shift M-D to lower energy and separate out (and less mode mixing).
p. 84
+
H L Cl
HIr(CO)L3 +
HCl
> L
OC
Mn L
+
Fe
+ H+ >
Fe H
Mn(CO)5 Ni{P(OEt)3}4
+ H+ H+
HMn(CO)5 Ni(H){P(OEt)3}4
p. 85
p. 86
Elongated HH bond: H2 is not physisorbed but chemisorbed H2 bond activated toward breaking
This initially enigmatic Interaction lies at the heart of all Interactions of sigma bonds XY with metals (G.Kubas)
p. 87
p. 88
p. 89
p. 90
p. 91
p. 92
Solution 1H NMR spectra of 2-H2 ligands normally give broad uncoupled signals throughout a large range of chemical shifts (2.5 to 31 ppm) that can overlap with those for classical hydrides. NMR can be used to determine dHH in solution by two different techniques involving measurement of either JHD or relaxation time, T1. JHD for the HD isotopomer of an H2 complex is the premier diagnostic for H2 versus hydride coordination. The 1H-NMR signal for an HD complex becomes a 1:1:1 triplet (D has I = 1 : (2I + 1) with a much narrower line width and is direct proof of the existence of an H2 ligand, since classical hydrides do not show signicant JHD because no residual HD bond is present. JHD for HD gas is 43 Hz, the maximum value (dHD ) 0.74 ), and lower values (20 34 Hz) represent proportionately longer (shorter) dHD. JHD determined in solution correlates well with dHH in the solid state, and both Morris and Heinekey developed empirical relationships: dHH = 1.42 0.0167(JHD) dHH = 1.44 0.0168(JHD) (Morris) (Heinekey)
p. 93
p. 94
Hydrogenase Metalloenzymes
p. 95
Redox enzymes: billions of years old found in microorganisms Catalyze complete reversible interconversion of H2 & H+ / e H2 as energy source or dispose of excess electrons via H2 release High turnover rates: 104 turnovers/s H2 2 H+ + 2e
True equilibrium; position (e)affected by H2 pressure H2 + D2O HD + HDO (rx observed) pH dependent > infer that H2 is split heterolytically at metal(s)
Hydrogenase (continued)
Understanding the mechanism of hydrogenase might help scientists design clean biological energy sources, such as algae, that produce hydrogen
p. 96
p. 97
Fe Fe Hydrogenase
Molecular wire
Hydrogenase (continued)
Active-site attached
only at one point
p. 98
2H+ +
p. 99 2e
p. 100
p. 101
p. 102
Hydride transfers to M, resulting olen may or may not stay coordinated Requirements (i) Vacant site. (ii) complex usually has less than 18e, Otherwise a 20 electron complex results immediately
Beta-hydride Elimination
Mechanism > Four-center transition state inferred
H M
CH2 CH2
H M C H H C
H H
H M C H2 CH2
M
neopentyl
M
neophyl CMe3
M
"silyl-neopentyl"
M
norbornyl
M
benzyl
M
alkynyl
Rh(III) d 6 low-spin
Ex: Stabilize M-alkyl-to -hydride elimination: have a stable complex where ligands do not come off to create vacant site, that which is needed
-hydride elimination
Alpha-hydride elimination is the transfer of a hydride (hydrogen atom) from the alpha-position on a ligand to the metal center. The process can be thought of as a type of oxidative addition reaction as the metal center is oxidized by two electrons (Eq 1). As the reaction involves a formal oxidation of the metal, alpha-elimination can not occur in a d0 or d1 metal complex. In these cases, a variant called alphaabstraction can occur. Alpha-abstraction does not result in a change of oxidation state and the alpha-hydrogen is transferred directly to an adjacent ligand instead of the metal center (Eq 2):
INSERTION REACTIONS
U = an unsaturated ligand
Insertion Reaction Net Result:
Decrease in coordination, formation of new UX bond
Reverse reaction referred to as deinsertion
When deinsertion group is an olen > -hydride elimination
Migratory Insertions
{makes the neutral ligand (e.g., CO) more electrophilic and Susceptible to nucleophilic attack by the anionic ligand.}
Label on one CO (13CO) cis to an acyl group, can differentiate the two possible mechanisms. If the CO moves during the deinsertion, then it can only move to a cis position, displacing another CO in the process. As there are four cis CO's and only one of them is labeled with 13CO, then we would expect to remove the labeled carbonyl 25% of the time. If the methyl group moves, it can also displace the 13CO 25% of the time. However, if it moves into one of the other three cis positions, it can do so in a cis and trans fashion with respect to the 13CO, something that can be detected spectroscopically:
This subtle but important difference was studied by Calderazzo (see Ang. Chem. Int. Ed. Eng. 1977, 16, 299 for his classic IR spectroscopy study) who examined the reverse reaction, deinsertion of CO from a metal acyl complex. By the Principle of Microscopic Reversibility, the insertion and deinsertion must follow the same mechanistic route, only in different directions.
CO 25% OC OC CO CH3
Mn
CO CO
CO OC OC
CO CH3
CO
Mn
CO
CO
CO
OC OC
Mn
CO
O CH3
CO 50%
CO CH3
OC OC
Mn
CO
CO 25% OC OC
CO CH3
Mn
CO
Optically active compound.
CH3NO2, MeCN, Me-migration
DMSO, DMF, proplyene carbonate, HMPA CO migration
Possible intervention of 2-acyl-intermediate could make the
interpretation of which is the migrating group
less than denitive RBJordanp. 170
P
Retention on Fe CO migrated
Fe
C
O
CH3
1 atm CO
0 C, CH2Cl2
Ferrocinium cation
Mechanism:
CpFe(CO)(PPh3)Me
[CpFe(CO)(PPh3)Me]+ CO
O (Ph3P)(CO)CpFe C Me 18 e 17 e (Ph3P)(CO)CpFe
O C Me
This is the basis for almost all transition metal-based polymerization catalysts. A polymerization rxn is just many, many migratory insertions of an alkene and alkyl (the growing polymer chain) interspaced with alkene ligand addition reactions.
Oxidative addition is formally the microscopic reverse of reductive elimination, and it is not surprising that a series of reactions
involving an oxidative addition, a rearrangement and then a reductive elimination form the basis for a variety of industrially important catalytic cycles
Oxidative addition reactions are most facile when there is a good twoelectron redox couple. In other words, both the starting and nal oxidation states are relatively stable. For example, oxidative addition from Ir(I) to Ir(III) is common but an oxidative addition from Fe(III) to Fe(V), while possible, is generally unlikely
The more reduced a metal center is (also electron-rich because of ligands), the greater the reactivity towards oxidative addition.
The likelihood of oxidative addition of AB to a metal, M, depends on the relative strengths of the AB, MA and MB bonds. For example, oxidative addition of an alkane is much less common than oxidative addition of an alkyl halide. For the alkane case, the C-H bond is fairly strong compared to the M-H and M-R (R = alkyl) bonds
cis
If we consider that the DH-H = 104 kcal/mol and that the DM-H is 50-60 kcal/mol we see that these are essentially balanced and there should be no thermodynamic preference for a dihydride versus a reduced metal center. But DR-H is typically 100 kcal/mol versus a metal alkyl bond strength of 30 to 40 kcal/mol. We see that the thermodynamic situation is again approximately balanced with a slight preference for the forward reaction. DR-R is typically around 90 kcal/mol, so for two alkyl substituents, there is a strong thermodynamic driving force for the reaction to go to the right. C-C bond activation is unusually rare, but more examples continue to be found.
Fischer carbene complexes (right)
low oxidation state M; heteroatoms at carbene carbon atom
E.O. Fischer (1st Carbene complex (1964, then Nobel Prize with Wilkinson, for metallocenes)
Schrock carbene complexes:
higher oxidation state; C or H substituents at carbene C-atom
alkylidene complex Richard Schrock MIT, 2005 Nobel Prize for olen metathesis
(shared with Robert Grubbs (Cal Tech) and Y. Chauvin (France).
MO/AO perspective: one lone pair is donated from the singlet carbene to an empty d-orbital on the metal (red), and a lone pair is back-donated from a lled metal orbital into a vacant pz orbital on carbon (blue). There is competition for this vacant orbital by the lone pair(s) on the heteroatom, consistent with our second resonance structure. Overall, bonding resembles that of carbon monoxide. Therefore, carbene ligands are usually thought of as neutral species, unlike dianionic Schrock alkylidenes (which usually lack electrons for back-donation). However, electron counting is just a formalism!
Transition Metal Carbene Complexes 4 Nucleophilic attack on coordinated carbonyl, then alkylation
Synthesis of a N-heterocyclic Carbene Complex. NHCs are useful coligands (ancillary ligands) in reactive transition-metal carbene complexes.
Made serendipitously
Methyl group CH acidity is enhanced because the carbanion formed is stabilized by the carbene group:
Reaction stereospecic
Schrock carbenes are more reactive than Fischer carbenes The alkylidene carbon is nucleophilic
If we electron-count the carbene as a dianionic ligand we are reacting a monoanionic ligand (X) with a dianionic ligand (carbene) to make a new monoanionic ligand. Now formally a reductive coupling reaction (since the metal is being reduced and we are coupling together two ligands). One Can/Should consider the carbene (or alkylidene) as a neutral ligand. For X = H, the reverse reaction is called an -hydride abstraction or elimination.
Note: This is Schrock type M-carbene complex, where carbene carbon is not electrophilic (like CO is traditional migration reactions). The reaction is probably aided by the overall metal complex positive charge.
D2C=CD2 is the product from the deuterated substrate, only. From 1:1 substrate mixture, of you get 1:2:1 mixture of ehtylenes
ROMP Examples
Schrock asymmetric catalyst (based on BINOL)
ROMP incredibly useful/practical in materials/polymer syntheses
Ring closing metathesis (RCM) incredibly useful in
natural product and pharmaceutical syntheses.
Hepatitis B
protease inhibitor
Cp*2TaV
H2O
H2O
Cp*2
TaV
Migratory Insertion may be disfavored (equilibrium lies to to the left) due to higher energy of the insertion product (right side). BUT - this higher energy may favor reactivity with the insertion product
Pairwise Mechanism:
R R' R R'
'
M R M R' R M R'
R'
Distinguished by an experiment with 1:1 mixture of: Metathesis products: from 100% protio + substrate These olefins do not back-react with catylst (i.e. are not metathezised) due to A: low concentration of ethylene in reaction mixture B: stabilization of phenanthene
D2 D2
D D
or
M D D
+ H2C
CH2
+ D2C
CD2
CH2
H2C M
+
CH2
M
+
CH2
Stepwise
CH2 CD2
H2C M
+
CD2
D2C M M
+
CD2
CD2
+
This leads to the observed product distribution: 1:2:1 H2C=CH2 : H2C=CD2 : D2C=CD2
EXAMPLES:
Homogeneous Catalysis
Wacker Process oxidation C2H4 (ethylene) + O2 > CH3C(O)H (acetaldehyde) (Pd, Cu) Monsanto acetic acid synthesis CH3OH (methanol) + CO > CH3C(O)OH (acetic acid) (Rh catalyst) Alkene Hydrogenation CH3CH2=CH2 + H2 > CH3CH2CH3 (all gases) Gf = 20.6 kcal/mol Hydroformylation Polymerization Ziegler-Natta (1963 Nobel Prize) Olen metathesis n CH2=CHR > [CH2-CHR]n
Water gas-shift reaction H2O + CO > H2 + CO2 (all gases) Gf = 6.9 kcal/mol Fischer-Tropsch reaction Coupling reactions
Catalyst: Increases overall rate of a reaction Does not change equilibrium position Signicantly lowers activation energy Is not used up in the reaction Normally interacts with substrate > alternative reaction pathway
Homogeneous Catalysis
Rate of all of the steps of the reaction are the same for catalytic cycle But, of course, the slowest individual step (weakest link) dictates the Rx rate i.e., turnover limiting step TON, turnover #; # of reactant molecules the catalyst converts to product TOF, turnover frequency; TON per unit time To achieve high TON, reactants and products cannot bind too tightly to M A catalyst may inuence initial product distribution, giving preferential formation of a less thermodynamically stable product, i.e., selectivity
Kinetic Competence
Catalysis is a kinetic phenomenon:
Activity may rely on minor (even minuscule) component (of catalyst or intermediate)
Danger in relying too much on spectroscopic studies of catalytic systems
where you see only major components
Must demonstrate a given step is kinetically competent to carry out the reaction.
proposed intermediates reacts sufciently fast to account for product formation
One issue is (has been) catalyst decomposition to metal, M(0)
--- > heterogeneous catalysis
homogeneous catalyst is heterogeneous catalyst in disguise (Crabtree)
Examples; hydrogenation catalysts are Pt group metal (Ru, Os, Rh, Ir, Pd, Pt) halides.
MX2 in polar solvent with H2 (g) --- > colloidal metal particles (heterog.)
Test: Add Hg(l), which selectively poisons any heterog. Pt group M Absorption to
active sites
The Monsanto acetic acid process is the major commercial production method for acetic acid. Methanol, which can be generated from synthesis gas ("syn gas", a CO/H2 mixture), is reacted with carbon monoxide/catalyst > acetic acid. In essence, you have the insertion of carbon monoxide into the C-O bond of methanol, i.e. the carbonylation of methanol. This process operates at a pressure of 3060 atm and a temperature of 150200 C and gives a selectivity greater than 99%. Limitations/Drawbacks 1. Rhodium is an expensive starting material. 1 mole of RhCl33H2O costs ~ $30,000! 2. I2 is cheap (about $20 per mole), but is extremely corrosive. Other halogens or halogen substitutes do not work nearly as well. The Monsanto process has largely been supplanted by the Cativa process, a similar iridium-based process developed by BP Chemicals Ltd which is more economical and environmentally friendly
The Cativa process: A method for the production of acetic acid by carbonylation of MeOH. The technology, similar to the Monsanto process, was developed by BP Chemicals and is under license by BP Plc.[1] [2]The process is based on an iridium-containing catalyst, such as the complex [Ir(CO)2I2]. The Cativa and Monsanto processes are similar; they can use the same chemical plant. Initial studies by Monsanto had shown that iridium to be less active than the rhodium for the carbonylation of methanol. Subsequent research, however, showed that the iridium catalyst could be promoted by ruthenium, and this combination leads to a catalyst that is superior to the rhodium-based systems. The switch from rhodium to iridium also allows the use of less water in the reaction mixture. This change reduces the number of drying columns necessary, decreases byproducts formation, and suppresses the water gas shift reaction. Furthermore, the process allows a higher catalyst loading. Compared with the Monsanto process, the Cativa process generates less propionic acid by-product.
Insects use chiral chemical messengers (pheromones) as sex attractants; one of the enantiomers of the insect pheromone, olean, attracts male fruit ies, while its mirror image operates on the female of the species. Most drugs consist of chiral molecules. Since a drug must match the receptor in the cell, it is often only one of the enantiomers that is of interest (active). In the 1960s, the drug thalidomide was prescribed to alleviate morning sickness in pregnant woman. Tragically, the drug also caused deformities in the limbs of children born by these woman. May have been the wrong enantiomer (?). In drug development, pharmaceutical companies are required to carefully purify and test both enantiomers.
Knowless catalytic asymmetric hydrogenation of -phenylacrylic acid using a rhodium catalyst containing (-)-methylpropylphenylphosphine (69% ee) gave (+)-hydratropic acid in 15% ee.
enamide
protected AA
Monsanto Process - rst commercialized catalytic asymmetric synthesis employing a chiral transition metal complex. In operation since 1974.
rate limiting
Stepwise addition of H
Rh(III)-alkyl complex
Noyoris catalyst
Noyoris (R. Noyori, Nagoya U.) General Hydrogenation Catalysts
3. Application Expand synthetic organic utility:
With Ru, hydrogenation of carbonyl group (rather than olen)
The (R)-BINAP-Ru-(II)-catalyzed hydrogenation of acetol to (R)-1,2 Propanediol: Used for the industrial synthesis of antibacterial levooxacin.
Key: enantiopure dialkyltartrate ligands for Ti Also, developed Osmium catalyzed asymmetric dihyroxylation of olens. Chemistry Nobel Prizes: Four (4) in Organometallic Chemistry: Ziegler-Natta, Wilkinson, 2001/Enantioselective organic rxs., 2005/ Olen Metathesis
Proposed mechanism for the thermal (or hv) WGS reaction catalyzed by homoleptic Group 6 carbonyls. Chem. Rev. 2007, 107, 4022. A. J. Esswein & D. G. Nocera
hv
1 photon
bipy; 2,2-bipyridine