TY - JOUR
T1 - Mechanism of Pd/Senphos-Catalyzed trans-Hydroboration of 1,3-Enynes
T2 - Experimental and Computational Evidence in Support of the Unusual Outer-Sphere Oxidative Addition Pathway
AU - Zhang, Yuanzhe
AU - Wang, Ziyong
AU - Lamine, Walid
AU - Xu, Senmiao
AU - Li, Bo
AU - Chrostowska, Anna
AU - Miqueu, Karinne
AU - Liu, Shih Yuan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2023/2/17
Y1 - 2023/2/17
N2 - The reaction mechanism of the Pd/Senphos-catalyzed trans-hydroboration reaction of 1,3-enynes was investigated using various experimental techniques, including deuterium and double crossover labeling experiments, X-ray crystallographic characterization of model reaction intermediates, and reaction progress kinetic analysis. Our experimental data are in support of an unusual outer-sphere oxidative addition mechanism where the catecholborane serves as a suitable electrophile to activate the Pd0-bound 1,3-enyne substrate to form a Pd-η3-π-allyl species, which has been determined to be the likely resting state of the catalytic cycle. Double crossover labeling of the catecholborane points toward a second role played by the borane as a hydride delivery shuttle. Density functional theory calculations reveal that the rate-limiting transition state of the reaction is the hydride abstraction by the catecholborane shuttle, which is consistent with the experimentally determined rate law: rate = k[enyne]0[borane]1[catalyst]1. The computed activation free energy ΔG‡ = 17.7 kcal/mol and KIE (kH/kD = 1.3) are also in line with experimental observations. Overall, this work experimentally establishes Lewis acids such as catecholborane as viable electrophilic activators to engage in an outer-sphere oxidative addition reaction and points toward this underutilized mechanism as a general approach to activate unsaturated substrates.
AB - The reaction mechanism of the Pd/Senphos-catalyzed trans-hydroboration reaction of 1,3-enynes was investigated using various experimental techniques, including deuterium and double crossover labeling experiments, X-ray crystallographic characterization of model reaction intermediates, and reaction progress kinetic analysis. Our experimental data are in support of an unusual outer-sphere oxidative addition mechanism where the catecholborane serves as a suitable electrophile to activate the Pd0-bound 1,3-enyne substrate to form a Pd-η3-π-allyl species, which has been determined to be the likely resting state of the catalytic cycle. Double crossover labeling of the catecholborane points toward a second role played by the borane as a hydride delivery shuttle. Density functional theory calculations reveal that the rate-limiting transition state of the reaction is the hydride abstraction by the catecholborane shuttle, which is consistent with the experimentally determined rate law: rate = k[enyne]0[borane]1[catalyst]1. The computed activation free energy ΔG‡ = 17.7 kcal/mol and KIE (kH/kD = 1.3) are also in line with experimental observations. Overall, this work experimentally establishes Lewis acids such as catecholborane as viable electrophilic activators to engage in an outer-sphere oxidative addition reaction and points toward this underutilized mechanism as a general approach to activate unsaturated substrates.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85147966158
U2 - 10.1021/acs.joc.2c02841
DO - 10.1021/acs.joc.2c02841
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85147966158
SN - 0022-3263
VL - 88
SP - 2415
EP - 2424
JO - Journal of Organic Chemistry
JF - Journal of Organic Chemistry
IS - 4
ER -