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Hydroformylation platinum hydride complexes

Kegl et al. used HP-NMR to investigate the behavior under syngas and CO pressure of three square-planar platinum diphosphine complexes with potential as hydroformylation catalysts. A platinum hydride and cationic platinum complexes were observed. [Pg.501]

Discovered more than 70 years ago, hydroformylation is nowadays one of the most important reactions in the chemical industry because aldehydes can be transformed to many other products. In the enantioselective version, rhodium/ diphosphorus ligand complexes are the most important catalytic precursors, although cobalt and platinum complexes have also been widely used. For these systems, the active species are pentacoordinated trigonal-bipyramidal rhodium hydride complexes, [HRh(P-P)(CO)2]. In those complexes, the coordination mode of the bidentate ligand (equatorial-equatorial or equatorial-apical) is an important parameter to explain the outcome of the process. The most common substrates of enantioselective hydroformylation are styrenes followed by vinyl acetate and allyl cyanide. With these substrates, mixtures of the branched (b, chiral) and linear (1, not chiral) aldehydes are usually obtained. In addition, some hydrogenation of the double bond is often observed. Therefore, chemo- and regioselectivity are prerequisites to enan-tioselectivity and all of them must be controlled. An additional eomplieation is that chiral aldehydes are prone to racemise in the presenee of rhodium spe-... [Pg.444]

The metal hydride mechanism was first described for the cobalt-carbonyl-catalyzed ester formation by analogy with hydroformylation.152 It was later adapted to carboxylation processes catalyzed by palladium136 153 154 and platinum complexes.137 As in the hydroformylation mechanism, the olefin inserts itself into the... [Pg.382]

A patent (230) to Atlantic Richfield Co. claims that hydride platinum group metal carbonyl complexes such as ClRh(PPh3)3 supported on zeolites, for example, NaY, are suitable catalysts for the hydroformylation of low molecular weight olefins. However, since the bulky metal complex cannot diffuse into the inner pores of the zeolite it must simply be adsorbed on the external surface of the support. This is consistent with the rather poor catalyst stability which was attributed to leaching of the active species from the support. [Pg.50]

The intramolecular insertion of a hydride into a coordinated olefin is a crucial step in olefin hydrogenation catalyzed by late transition metal complexes, such as those of iridium, rhodium, and ruthenium (Chapter 15), in hydroformylation reactions catalyzed by cobalt, rhodium, and platinum complexes (Chapter 16), and in many other reactions, including the initiation of some olefin polymerizations. The microscopic reverse, 3-hydride elimination, is the most common pathway for the decomposition of metal-alkyl complexes and is a mechanism for olefin isomerizations. [Pg.366]


See other pages where Hydroformylation platinum hydride complexes is mentioned: [Pg.97]    [Pg.258]    [Pg.259]    [Pg.67]    [Pg.165]    [Pg.392]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.262]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.121]    [Pg.174]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.304]    [Pg.174]    [Pg.249]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.371 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.5 , Pg.371 ]




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