Department of Chemistry , Yale University , New Haven , Connecticut 06511 , United States.
LCC-CNRS , Université de Toulouse, INPT , 205 Route de Narbonne , BP 44099, Toulouse CEDEX 4 F-31077 , France.
J Am Chem Soc. 2019 May 8;141(18):7473-7485. doi: 10.1021/jacs.9b02117. Epub 2019 Apr 26.
A growing and useful class of alkene coupling reactions involve hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) from a metal-hydride species to an alkene to form a free radical, which is responsible for subsequent bond formation. Here, we use a combination of experimental and computational investigations to map out the mechanistic details of iron-catalyzed reductive alkene cross-coupling, an important representative of the HAT alkene reactions. We are able to explain several observations that were previously mysterious. First, the rate-limiting step in the catalytic cycle is the formation of the reactive Fe-H intermediate, elucidating the importance of the choice of reductant. Second, the success of the catalytic system is attributable to the exceptionally weak (17 kcal/mol) Fe-H bond, which performs irreversible HAT to alkenes in contrast to previous studies on isolable hydride complexes where this addition was reversible. Third, the organic radical intermediates can reversibly form organometallic species, which helps to protect the free radicals from side reactions. Fourth, the previously accepted quenching of the postcoupling radical through stepwise electron transfer/proton transfer is not as favorable as alternative mechanisms. We find that there are two feasible pathways. One uses concerted proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) from an iron(II) ethanol complex, which is facilitated because the O-H bond dissociation free energy is lowered by 30 kcal/mol upon metal binding. In an alternative pathway, an O-bound enolate-iron(III) complex undergoes proton shuttling from an iron-bound alcohol. These kinetic, spectroscopic, and computational studies identify key organometallic species and PCET steps that control selectivity and reactivity in metal-catalyzed HAT alkene coupling, and create a firm basis for elucidation of mechanisms in the growing class of HAT alkene cross-coupling reactions.
一种越来越有用的烯烃偶联反应涉及氢原子转移(HAT),即金属氢化物物种向烯烃转移氢原子,形成自由基,自由基负责随后的键形成。在这里,我们使用实验和计算研究的组合来描绘铁催化的还原烯烃交叉偶联的机制细节,这是 HAT 烯烃反应的一个重要代表。我们能够解释以前神秘的几个观察结果。首先,催化循环中的速率限制步骤是形成反应性 Fe-H 中间体,这阐明了还原剂选择的重要性。其次,催化体系的成功归因于异常弱的(17 kcal/mol)Fe-H 键,与以前关于可分离氢化物配合物的研究相反,该键不可逆地进行 HAT 到烯烃,而在这些研究中,该加成是可逆的。第三,有机自由基中间体可以可逆地形成有机金属物种,这有助于防止自由基发生副反应。第四,以前通过逐步电子转移/质子转移来淬灭偶联后自由基的方法并不像替代机制那样有利。我们发现有两种可行的途径。一种途径是从铁(II)乙醇配合物协同质子耦合电子转移(PCET),这是因为 O-H 键离解自由能在金属结合时降低了 30 kcal/mol。在替代途径中,O 键合的烯醇盐-铁(III)配合物经历质子从铁结合的醇转移。这些动力学、光谱和计算研究确定了控制金属催化 HAT 烯烃偶联选择性和反应性的关键有机金属物种和 PCET 步骤,并为阐明 HAT 烯烃交叉偶联反应中不断增长的反应类别的机制奠定了坚实的基础。