AI Article Synopsis

  • Experimental and computational research has highlighted the principles of redox-neutral C-H activation using iron(II) complexes, specifically through the dimethyl complex (depe)Fe(CH).
  • The C(sp)-H methylation reaction of pivalophenone was discovered to be influenced by factors such as the type of phosphine ligands, the iron center's spin state, and the nature of halide or hydrocarbyl ligands in the corresponding complexes.
  • Additional studies indicated that ketones and aldehydes are the most effective substrates for this reaction, and the research also established the significant role of orbital hybridization in enhancing selectivity in C-H activation.

Article Abstract

Experimental and computational studies have been conducted and established the general principles for enabling redox-neutral C-H activation by iron(II) complexes. The idealized octahedral iron(II) dimethyl complex, (depe)Fe(CH) (depe = 1,2-bis(diethylphosphino)ethane) promoted the directed, regioselective C(sp)-H methylation of pivalophenone. The rate of the iron(II)-mediated C(sp)-H functionalization depended on the lability of L-type phosphine ligands, the spin state of the iron center, and the size of the X-type ligands (halide, hydrocarbyl) in PFeX complexes. The C(sp)-H alkylation reaction proved general among multiple substrates with directing groups including carbonyl, imines and pyridines. Among these, ketones and aldehydes were identified as optimal and were compatible with various steric environments and presence of acidic α-hydrogens. With stronger nitrogen donors, higher barriers for product-forming reductive elimination were observed. The effect of orbital hybridization on the chemoselectivity of C-H activation through a σ-CAM pathway by transition metals was also established by studying the stoichiometric reactivity of the differentially substituted (depe)Fe(Me)R complexes (R = alkyl, aryl), where the Fe-R bond with greater -character preferentially promoted selective C-H activation. Deuterium labeling and kinetic studies, coupled with computational analysis, supported a pathway involving phosphine dissociation and rate-determining C-H bond activation, leading to the observed products.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11583065PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.4c12329DOI Listing

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