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Palladium complexes amido

The reaction of (Pd(PPh3)(Ph)(p-OH) 2 with primary alkylamines to generate palladium amido complexes and water (Eq. (47)) [56,207] was an initial indication that the conversion of an alkoxide to an amide could be occurring during the catalytic cycle. These reactions are reversible, but the equilibrium favors the amido complex. [Pg.246]

Scheme 7. Reductive elimination of arylamines from DPPF-ligated palladium amido complexes. Scheme 7. Reductive elimination of arylamines from DPPF-ligated palladium amido complexes.
Alkylnickel amido complexes ligated by bipyridine have been prepared that undergo reductive elimination of V-alkyl amines (Equation (54)).207,208 Unlike the phosphine-ligated palladium arylamides, these complexes underwent reductive elimination only after oxidation to nickel(III). Thermally induced reductive elimination of alkylamines from phosphine-ligated nickel complexes appears to occur after consumption of phosphine by arylazides 209... [Pg.392]

The Pd-catalyzed amination of / -rm-butylphenyl bromide with pyrrole in the presence of Pd(OAc)2, dppf and one equivalent of NaOr-Bu led to the Af-arylation product 88. A simplified version of the mechanism commences with the oxidative addition of p-te/t-butylphenyl bromide to Pd(0), giving rise to the palladium complex 89. Ligand exchange with pyrrole followed by deprotonation by the base (NaOr-Bu) results in amido complex 90. Reductive elimination of 90 then gives the amination product 88 with concomitant regeneration of Pd(0) catalyst. If the amine had a (3-hydride in amido complex 90, a (3-hydride elimination would be a competing pathway, although reductive elimination is faster than P-hydride elimination in most cases. [Pg.22]

Density functional theory studies arene chromium tricarbonyls, 5, 255 beryllium monocyclopentadienyls, 2, 75 chromium carbonyls, 5, 228 in computational chemistry, 1, 663 Cp-amido titanium complexes, 4, 464—465 diiron carbonyl complexes, 6, 222 manganese carbonyls, 5, 763 molybdenum hexacarbonyl, 5, 392 and multiconfiguration techniques, 1, 649 neutral, cationic, anionic chromium carbonyls, 5, 203-204 nickel rj2-alkene complexes, 8, 134—135 palladium NHC complexes, 8, 234 Deoxygenative coupling, carbonyls to olefins, 11, 40 (+)-4,5-Deoxyneodolabelline, via ring-closing diene metathesis, 11, 219... [Pg.93]

In the original process using tin amides, transmetallation formed the amido intermediate. However, this synthetic method is outdated and the transfer of amides from tin to palladium will not be discussed. In the tin-free processes, reaction of palladium aryl halide complexes with amine and base generates palladium amide intermediates. One pathway for generation of the amido complex from amine and base would be reaction of the metal complex with the small concentration of amide that is present in the reaction mixtures. This pathway seems unlikely considering the two directly observed alternative pathways discussed below and the absence of benzyne and radical nucleophilic aromatic substitution products that would be generated from the reaction of alkali amide with aryl halides. [Pg.244]

An alternative pathway when soluble alkoxide or silylamido bases are used, involves reaction of a palladium amido aryl complex with the alkoxide or silylamide to form an intermediate alkoxide or amide. These complexes can react with amines to form the required amido aryl intermediate. This pathway seems to occur for aryl halide animations catalyzed by complexes with chelating ligands. The inorganic... [Pg.245]

The dimeric amido complexes underwent reductive elimination after cleavage to form two monomeric, 3-coordinate, 14-electron amido complexes. In the case of the anilido dimer 20, a half-order rate dependence in the palladium complex showed that the reductive elimination occurred after reversible cleavage of the dimer to form two monomers. In the case of the f-butylamido complex 21, rapid reductive elimination occurred after irreversible dimer cleavage. This conclusion was supported by reaction rates that were first order in palladium dimer and by the lack of crossover during the reductive elimination reactions containing two doubly-labeled dimers. [Pg.249]

The transition metal catalyzed synthesis of arylamines by the reaction of aryl halides or tri-flates with primary or secondary amines has become a valuable synthetic tool for many applications. This process forms monoalkyl or dialkyl anilines, mixed diarylamines or mixed triarylamines, as well as N-arylimines, carbamates, hydrazones, amides, and tosylamides. The mechanism of the process involves several new organometallic reactions. For example, the C-N bond is formed by reductive elimination of amine, and the metal amido complexes that undergo reductive elimination are formed in the catalytic cycle in some cases by N-H activation. Side products are formed by / -hydrogen elimination from amides, examples of which have recently been observed directly. An overview that covers the development of synthetic methods to form arylamines by this palladium-catalyzed chemistry is presented. In addition to the synthetic information, a description of the pertinent mechanistic data on the overall catalytic cycle, on each elementary reaction that comprises the catalytic cycle, and on competing side reactions is presented. The review covers manuscripts that appeared in press before June 1, 2001. This chapter is based on a review covering the literature up to September 1, 1999. However, roughly one-hundred papers on this topic have appeared since that time, requiring an updated review. [Pg.107]

The cleavage of allcylamine N-H bonds by late transition metals to form metal amido complexes is also rare [69, 70]. When the transition metal is a low valent, late metal, the resulting amido complexes are highly reactive [71, 72]. It appears that the amination of aryl halides can involve an unusual N-H activation process by a palladium alkoxide to form a highly reactive palladium amide [65, 73]. [Pg.109]

For the case of tri(o-tolyl)phosphine-ligated catalysts, the upper pathway appears to predominate. Oxidative addition occurs first via loss of a ligand from the bisphosphine precursor to form the oxidative adduct, which exists as a dimer bridged through the halogen atoms (equation 33). This dimer is broken up by amine, the coordination of which to palladium renders its proton acidic. Subsequent deprotonation by base leads to the amido complex, which can then reductively eliminate to form the product. When tert-butoxide is used as the base, the rate is limited by formation of and reductive elimination from the amido complex, while for the stronger hexamethyldisilazide, the rate-determining step appears to be oxidative addition. ... [Pg.5656]

For the case of chelating phosphines, Hartwig noted that palladium aUcoxide complexes can be formed by treatment of the corresponding halides with base, and that amido complexes can, in turn, be formed from the aUcoxide. This observation opened the possibility that aUcoxide intermediates lie on the catalytic cycle (lower pathway in Scheme 7). Van... [Pg.5656]

Phosphines that are tightly chelated to the metal center often achieve high selectivity of secondary over tertiary amine products in reactions of primary alkylamines with unhindered aryl halides. The chelation helps prevent competing /3-hydrogen elimination of the aryl palladium amido intermediate (vide infra). Additionally, the greater steric hindrance of bisphosphine palladium complexes, when compared to mono phosphine palladium complexes, prevents diarylation. Some ligands originally introduced by... [Pg.475]


See other pages where Palladium complexes amido is mentioned: [Pg.247]    [Pg.249]    [Pg.154]    [Pg.474]    [Pg.497]    [Pg.149]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.268]    [Pg.234]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.247]    [Pg.249]    [Pg.154]    [Pg.474]    [Pg.497]    [Pg.149]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.268]    [Pg.234]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.602]    [Pg.602]    [Pg.392]    [Pg.392]    [Pg.392]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.195]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.247]    [Pg.256]    [Pg.153]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.160]    [Pg.496]    [Pg.497]    [Pg.500]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.217]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.152 ]




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