The ruthenium(II)-catalyzed α-alkylation reaction of arylmethyl nitriles (phenylacetonitrile) using alcohols (ethanol) in toluene has been extensively investigated by means of SMD-M06-2X/6-311G(d,p)-LANL2dz (LAnL2dz for Ru, 6-311G(d,p) for other atoms) calculations. Detailed mechanistic schemes have been proposed and discussed. The catalytically active Ru(II) complex was generated by the base-induced KCl elimination from the catalyst precursor [(PNP)RuHCl(CO)]. The overall Ru(II) catalytic cycle consists of three basic processes: (1) ethanol-to-aldehyde transformation catalyzed by the 16-electron unsaturated ruthenium pincer catalyst; (2) a 16-electron unsaturated ruthenium pincer catalyst catalyzed condensation reaction of arylmethyl nitrile with aldehyde, which leads to PhC(CN)=CHCH; (3) hydrogenation of PhC(CN)=CHCH, which leads to the formation of the α-alkylated arylmethyl nitrile product (PhCH(CHCH)CN). The DFT results revealed that the rate-determining barrier of the overall reaction was 23.9 kcal/mol of the H-transfer step in the third process. The reaction of PhC(CN)=CHCH with the dihydride Ru complex, which is generated in the ethanol-to-aldehyde transformation process, is the more preferable hydrogenation mechanism than hydrogenation of vinyl nitrile-Ru complex by H. Using alcohol as the reactant not only fulfills the requirement of the borrowing-H strategy but also lowers the barriers of the H-migration steps.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.9b07043 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!