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Hydrogenation palladium carbene complexes

Theoretical density functional calculations on the possibility of addition of imidazolium salts to electron-rich palladium centers predicted an exothermic enthalpy for such a process [36]. These results suggested that, under appropriate reaction conditions and with the use of a proper carbene precursor, this reaction should present a feasible synthetic path to carbene/palladium complexes. Only recently, the addition of the C(2)-H bond of an imidazolium salt, in the form of an ionic liquid, to a Pd(0)/NHC complex with the formation of a stable Pd-H bond has been reported [41]. These complexes bear three carbenes per metal center, the fourth coordination position being occupied by hydrogen. The isolation of these complexes has proven that the beneficial role of ionic liquids as solvent can lead to the formation of catalytically active palladium-carbene complexes (see Scheme 7). [Pg.250]

The first rhodium-catalyzed reductive cyclization of enynes was reported in I992.61,61a As demonstrated by the cyclization of 1,6-enyne 37a to vinylsilane 37b, the rhodium-catalyzed reaction is a hydrosilylative transformation and, hence, complements its palladium-catalyzed counterpart, which is a formal hydrogenative process mediated by silane. Following this seminal report, improved catalyst systems were developed enabling cyclization at progressively lower temperatures and shorter reaction times. For example, it was found that A-heterocyclic carbene complexes of rhodium catalyze the reaction at 40°C,62 and through the use of immobilized cobalt-rhodium bimetallic nanoparticle catalysts, the hydrosilylative cyclization proceeds at ambient temperature.6... [Pg.506]

Fig. 3 Chemical structure and X-ray crystal structure of the divinyldisiloxane palladium(O) carbene complexes as synthesized by Jackstell et al. Ellipsoids are drawn at 30% probability, and hydrogen atoms are omitted for clarity [38]... Fig. 3 Chemical structure and X-ray crystal structure of the divinyldisiloxane palladium(O) carbene complexes as synthesized by Jackstell et al. Ellipsoids are drawn at 30% probability, and hydrogen atoms are omitted for clarity [38]...
If ILs are to be used in metal-catalyzed reactions, imidazoHum-based salts may be critical due to the possible formation and involvement of heterocyclic imidazo-lylidene carbenes [Eqs. (2)-(4)]. The direct formation of carbene-metal complexes from imidazolium ILs has already been demonstrated for palladium-catalyzed C-C reactions [40, 41]. Different pathways for the formation of metal carbenes from imidazolium salts are possible either by direct oxidative addition of imidazolium to the metal center in a low oxidative state [Eq. (2)] or by deprotonation of the imidazolium cation in presence of a base [Eq. (3)]. It is worth mentioning here that deprotonation can also occur on the 4-position of the imidazolium [Eq. (4)]. The in-situ formation of a metal carbene can have a beneficial effect on catalytic performances in stabilizing the metal-catalyst complex (it can avoid formation of palladium black, for example). However, given the remarkable stability of this imidazolylidene-metal bond with respect to dissociation, the formation of such a complex may also lead to deactivation of the catalyst This is probably what happens in the telomerization of butadiene with methanol catalyzed by palladium-phosphine complexes in [BMIMj-based ILs [42]. The substitution of the acidic hydrogen in the 2-position of the imidazolium by a methyl group or the use of pyridinium-based salts makes it possible to overcome this problem. Phosphonium-based ILs can also bring advantages in this case. [Pg.417]

There has been a summary of computational and experimental studies of the use of palladium complexes with A -heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) in the asymmetric coupling of -hybridized carbon-hydrogen bonds with aryl halides. It has been shown that the electronic and catalytic properties of NHCs fused to porphyrins may be modified by varying the inner metal in the porphyrin. A DPT study of the use of palladium-NHC complexes in the asymmetric intramolecular a-arylation of 2-bromoaryl amides to give 3,3-disubstituted oxindoles (101) has been reported. The likely pathway involves insertion of the palladium into the arene-bromine bond to form a palladacycle which deprotonates to give an (9-enolate. Conversion into the C-enolate followed by reductive elimination gives the product. The intramolecular reaction of 0 a cyclopropane carbon-hydrogen bond in a 2-bromoanilide derivative has been used to form cyclopropyloxindoles, (102), in a palladium-catalysed, silver-mediated reaction. [Pg.242]

Picket fence porphyrins, hydrogen bonding interactions, 1, 80 3-Picolin-2-yl group, for C-C bond formation, 10, 141 Picolyl-functionalized carbenes, with palladium, 8, 227—228 Tt-complexes... [Pg.171]

In spite of the successful use of NHCs in a number of palladium-catalyzed reactions, no system for hydrogenation was reported until 2005. This can be easily explained as it had been observed that hydridopalladium-carbene species decompose due to attack of the hydride on the carbene, which results in its reductive elimination to yield the corresponding imidazolium salt [ 190]. However, Cavell and co-workers recently showed that the oxidative addition of imidazolium salts to bis-carbenic palladium complexes leads to isolable NHC-hydridopalladium complexes [191]. This elegant work evidenced the remarkable stabilizing effect of NHC ligands in otherwise reactive species and led to the development of the first NHC-palladium catalyst for hydrogenation. [Pg.70]

Heckenroth M, Khlebnikov V, Neels A, Schurtenberger P, Albrecht M. Catalytic hydrogenation using abnormal N-heterocyclic carbene palladium complexes catalytic scope and mechanistic insights. ChemCatChem. 2011 3 167-173. [Pg.283]


See other pages where Hydrogenation palladium carbene complexes is mentioned: [Pg.75]    [Pg.318]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.1062]    [Pg.493]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.272]    [Pg.242]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.244]    [Pg.313]    [Pg.242]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.176]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.43]    [Pg.538]    [Pg.538]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.165]    [Pg.635]    [Pg.23]   
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