Issue 23, 2010

Steric vs. electronic anomaly observed from iodomethane oxidative addition to tertiary phosphine modified rhodium(i) acetylacetonato complexes following progressive phenyl replacement by cyclohexyl [PR3 = PPh3, PPh2Cy, PPhCy2 and PCy3]

Abstract

Rhodium(I) acetylacetonato complexes of the formula [Rh(acac)(CO)(PR3)] [acac = acetylacetonate, PR3 = PPh31, PCyPh22, PCy2Ph 3, PCy34] were synthesized and the iodomethane oxidative addition to these complexes were studied. Spectroscopic and low temperature (100 K) single crystal X-ray crystallographic data of the rhodium complexes (1–4) indicate a systematic increase in both steric and electronic parameters of the phosphine ligands as phenyl groups on the tertiary phosphine are progressively replaced by cyclohexyl groups in the series. Second order rate constants for the alkyl formation in the oxidative addition of iodomethane in dichloromethane at 25 °C vary with approximately one order-of-magnitude from 6.98(6) × 10−3 M−1s−1 (PCyPh22) to 55(1) × 10−3 M−1 s−1 (PCy2Ph 3) and do not follow the expected electronic pattern from 1 to 4, which indicates a flexibility of the cyclohexyl group, significantly influencing the reactivity. Activation parameters for the reactions range from 35(3) to 44(1) kJ mol−1 for ΔH and −140(5) to −154(9) J K−1 mol−1 for ΔS, and are supporting evidence for an associative activation for the oxidative addition step.

Graphical abstract: Steric vs. electronic anomaly observed from iodomethane oxidative addition to tertiary phosphine modified rhodium(i) acetylacetonato complexes following progressive phenyl replacement by cyclohexyl [PR3 = PPh3, PPh2Cy, PPhCy2 and PCy3]

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Oct 2009
Accepted
23 Apr 2010
First published
17 May 2010

Dalton Trans., 2010,39, 5572-5578

Steric vs. electronic anomaly observed from iodomethane oxidative addition to tertiary phosphine modified rhodium(I) acetylacetonato complexes following progressive phenyl replacement by cyclohexyl [PR3 = PPh3, PPh2Cy, PPhCy2 and PCy3]

A. Brink, A. Roodt, G. Steyl and H. G. Visser, Dalton Trans., 2010, 39, 5572 DOI: 10.1039/B922083F

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