Organic Chemistry, Poster
OC-148

Heterobimetallic d8-d10 complexes as intermediates, transition states, and transition state analogs for the transmetalation step in Sonogashira and Negishi coupling reactions

R. J. Oeschger1, P. Chen1*
1ETH Zürich

Pd-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions have become one of the key processes for carbon-carbon bond formations. Even though their organometallic coupling partners vary, it is understood that they all follow a common general catalytic cycle in which a transmetalation reaction is one of the key steps. The mechanism of transmetalation reactions has been most thoroughly studied for the Stille reaction and for the Suzuki-Miyaura coupling, and it has been proposed that the reaction proceeds via either an open (SN2 like) or closed transition state.  Gas phase and computational studies on the mechanisms of the Sonogashira (Pd/Cu) and Negishi (Pd/Zn) transmetalations suggest that these reactions proceed somewhat different. [1] The main difference is the existence of direct metal-metal (d8-d10) interactions in calculated structures of transition states and intermediates.

To study the crucial Pd(II)-Cu(I) [2] and Pd(II)-Zn(II) [3] interactions experimentally we have prepared isolable heterobimetallic d8-d10 complexes.  The crystal structures resemble computed transition states for the Sonogashira and Negishi transmetalation steps and we have investigated the bonding qualitatively and quantitatively by X-ray, NMR, mass spectrometry (ESI-MS/MS) and calculations (DFT). 

Structural and thermochemical work on the isolable model complexes will be used to predict and optimize substrates, ligands, and reaction conditions for cross-coupling reactions, especially the Negishi coupling, so as to suppress undesired side reactions, e.g. homocoupling, by rational design.

[1] Raphael J. Oeschger, David H. Ringger, Peter Chen,  Organometallics, 2015, 34, 3888-3892
[2] Raphael J. Oeschger, Peter Chen, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2017, 139, 1069-1072.
[3] Raphael J. Oeschger, Peter Chen,  Organometallics2017, 36, 1465–1468