Theoretical Study on the CoII /CoIII and CoII /CoIV Catalytic Cycles in CoII(salen)-Catalyzed Radical Fluorination with Various Different NF-Type Fluorinating Reagents
Abstract
CoII(salen)-catalyzed radical fluorination provides a mild and efficient approach for the construction of carbon-fluorine bonds. However, the mechanistic role of different NF-type fluorinating reagents and the corresponding catalytic cycle pathways (CoII/CoIII vs. CoII/CoIV) in the CoII(salen)-catalyzed fluorination system remain controversial. Therefore, this work employs density functional theory (DFT) to computationally analyze the reaction mechanisms of radical fluorination involving three classes of NF-type fluorinating reagents: N-tert-butylfluoramide, N-ethyl-N-fluorobenzenesulfonamide, and Me3NFPy•BF4. The results indicate that the nature of the NF-type fluorinating reagent exerts a decisive influence on the reaction pathway. N-tert-butylfluoramide and N-ethyl-N-fluorobenzenesulfonamide tend to undergo single-electron oxidation with CoII(salen), generating CoIII(salen)-F and the corresponding amidyl radical, with the reaction proceeding via a CoII/CoIII cycle. In contrast, Me3NFPy • BF4 favors a two-electron oxidation process, directly forming the [CoIV(salen)-F]+ intermediate, and the reaction proceeds through a CoII/CoII cycle. Furthermore, for the hydrofluorination of unactivated alkenes involving Me3NFPy•BF4, the calculations not only clearly elucidate the formation pathway of CoIII(salen)-H but also confirm that the occurrence of Wagner-Meerwein rearrangement in the product is related to the presence of a substituent at the benzylic position of the substrate. Through theoretical calculations, this study provides a unified theoretical analysis of the roles of different NF-type fluorinating reagents in the CoII(salen)-catalyzed fluorination system, offering an important theoretical basis for the rational design and condition optimization of future cobalt-catalyzed fluorination reactions.
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