Issue 40, 2019

Mechanism and origins of ligand-controlled Pd(ii)-catalyzed regiodivergent carbonylation of alkynes

Abstract

Transition-metal-catalyzed carbonylation provides a useful approach to synthesize carbonyl-containing compounds and their derivatives. Controlling the regio-, chemo-, and stereoselectivity remains a significant challenge and is the key to the success of transformation. In the present study, we explored the mechanism and origins of the ligand-controlled regiodivergent carbonylation of alkynes with competitive nucleophilic amino and hydroxy groups by density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The proposed mechanism involves O(N)-cyclization, CO insertion, N–H(O–H) cleavage, C–N(C–O) reductive elimination and regeneration of the catalyst. The chemoselectivity is determined by cyclization. Instead of the originally proposed switch of competitive coordination sites, a new type of concerted deprotonation/cyclization model was proposed to rationalize the ligand-tuned chemoselectivity. The electron-deficient nitrogen-containing ligand promotes the flow of electrons during cyclization, and so it favors the O-cyclization/N-carbonylation pathway. However, sterically bulky and electron-rich phosphine controls the selectivity by a combination of electronic and steric effects. The improved mechanistic understanding will enable further design of selective transition-metal-catalyzed carbonylation.

Graphical abstract: Mechanism and origins of ligand-controlled Pd(ii)-catalyzed regiodivergent carbonylation of alkynes

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
13 Aug 2019
Accepted
03 Sep 2019
First published
04 Sep 2019

Dalton Trans., 2019,48, 15059-15067

Mechanism and origins of ligand-controlled Pd(II)-catalyzed regiodivergent carbonylation of alkynes

J. Liu, X. Zhang, Y. Tian, X. Wang, X. Zhu and D. Chen, Dalton Trans., 2019, 48, 15059 DOI: 10.1039/C9DT03294K

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