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Insertion and elimination

Insertion and elimination. Peter H.M. Budzelaar. Insertion reactions. If at a metal centre you have a s -bound group (hydride, alkyl, aryl) a ligand containing a p -system (olefin, alkyne, CO) the s -bound group can migrate to the p -system. Insertion in MeMn(CO) 5. agostic.

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Insertion and elimination

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  1. Insertion and elimination Peter H.M. Budzelaar

  2. Insertion reactions If at a metal centre you have • a s-bound group (hydride, alkyl, aryl) • a ligand containing a p-system (olefin, alkyne, CO) the s-bound group can migrate to the p-system. Insertion and elimination

  3. Insertion in MeMn(CO)5 agostic insertionTS LUMO HOMO CO adduct h2-acyl CO Insertion and elimination

  4. Insertion reactions The s-bound group migrates to the p-system. But if you only see the result, it looks like the p-system has inserted into the M-X bond, hence the name insertion. To emphasize that it is actually (mostly) the X group that moves, we use the term migratory insertion. The reverse of insertion is called elimination. Insertion reduces the electron count, elimination increases it. Neither insertion nor elimination causesa change in oxidation state. Insertion and elimination

  5. 1,1 insertions In a 1,1-insertion, metal and X group "move" to the same atom of the inserting substrate. The metal-bound substrate atom increases its valence. CO, isonitriles (RNC) and SO2 often undergo 1,1-insertion. Insertion and elimination

  6. Insertion of CO and isonitriles • CO insertion is hardly exothermic. • An additional ligand may be needed to trap the acyland so drive the reaction to completion. • In the absence of added ligands often fast equilibrium. • CO insertion in M-H, M-CF3, M-COR endothermic. • no CO polymerization. • but isonitriles do polymerize! Insertion and elimination

  7. Double CO insertion ? Deriving a mechanism from a reaction stoichiometryis not always straightforward. The following catalytic reaction was reported a few years ago: This looks like it might involve double CO insertion. But the actual mechanism is more complicated. Insertion and elimination

  8. No double CO insertion ! Insertion and elimination

  9. Promoting CO insertion • "Bulky" ligands • Lewis acids Coordinate to O, stabilize product Drawback: usually stoichiometric Insertion and elimination

  10. Sometimes it only looks like insertion Nucleophilic attack at coordinated CO can lead to the same products as standard insertion: Main difference: nucleophilic attack does not require an empty site. Insertion and elimination

  11. 1,2-insertion of olefins Insertion of an olefin in a metal-alkyl bond produces a new alkyl. Thus, the reaction leads to oligomers or polymers of the olefin. Insertion and elimination

  12. 1,2-insertion of olefins Insertion of an olefin in a metal-alkyl bond produces a new alkyl. Thus, the reaction leads to oligomers or polymers of the olefin. Best known polyolefins: • polyethene (polythene) • polypropene In addition, there are many specialty polyolefins. Polyolefins are among the largest-scale chemical products made. They are chemically inert. Their properties can be tuned by the choiceof catalyst and comonomer. Insertion and elimination

  13. Why do olefins polymerize ? Driving force: conversion of a p-bond into a s-bond • One C=C bond: 150 kcal/mol • Two C-C bonds: 2´85 = 170 kcal/mol • Energy release: about 20 kcal per mole of monomer(independent of mechanism!) Many polymerization mechanisms • Radical (ethene, dienes, styrene, acrylates) • Cationic (styrene, isobutene) • Anionic (styrene, dienes, acrylates) • Transition-metal catalyzed (a-olefins, dienes, styrene) Transition-metal catalysis provides the best opportunitiesfor tuning of reactivity and selectivity Insertion and elimination

  14. Mechanism of olefin insertion Standard Cossee mechanism Green-Rooney variation (a-agostic assistance): Interaction with an a C-H bond could facilitate tilting of the migrating alkyl group The "fixed" orientation suggested by this picture is probably incorrect Insertion and elimination

  15. Insertion in M-H bonds Insertion in M-H bonds is nearly always fast and reversible. Þ Hydrides catalyze olefin isomerization Regiochemistry corresponds to Markovnikov rule (with Md+-Hd-) To shift the equilibrium to the insertion product: • Electron-withdrawing groups at metal alkyl more electron-donating than H • Early transition metals M-C stronger (relative to M-H) • Alkynes instead of olefins more energy gain per monomer, both for M-H and M-C insertion Insertion and elimination

  16. Catalyzed olefin isomerization Metals have a preference for primary alkyls. But substituted olefins are more stable! In isomerization catalysis, the dominant products and the dominant catalytic species often do not correspond to each other. For each separately, concentrations at equilibrium reflect thermodynamic stabilities via the Boltzmann distribution. dominantalkyl dominantolefin Insertion and elimination

  17. Catalyzed olefin isomerization Insertion and elimination

  18. M-H vs M-C insertion Insertion in M-C bonds is slower than in M-H. Barrier usually 5-10 kcal/mol higher Factor 105-1010 in rate ! Reason: shape of orbitals (s vs. sp3) Insertion and elimination

  19. Repeated insertion Multiple insertion leads to dimerization,oligomerization or polymerization. • Key factor: kCT / kprop = k • k» 1: mainly dimerization • k» 0.1-1.0: oligomerization (always mixtures) • k « 0.1: polymerization • k» 0: "living" polymerization For non-living polymerization: Insertion and elimination

  20. Schulz-Flory statistics k = 0.7 • Key factor: kCT / kprop = k • k» 1: mainly dimerization • k» 0.1-1.0: oligomerization (always mixtures) • k « 0.1: polymerization • k» 0: "living" polymerization k = 0.1 For non-living polymerization: k = 0.02 Insertion and elimination

  21. Applications of oligomers and polymers • Ethene and propene come directly from crude oil "crackers" • Primary petrochemical products, basic chemical feedstocks • Dimerization rarely desired • Making butene costs $$$ ! • Oligomers: surfactants, comonomers • High added value, but limited market • Polymers: plastics, construction materials, foils and films • Very large market, bulk products Insertion and elimination

  22. Selective synthesis of trimers etc ? • 1-Hexene and 1-octene are valuable co-monomers. • Selective synthesis of 1-hexene from ethene is not possible using the standard insertion/elimination mechanism. • There are a few catalysts that selectively trimerize ethenevia a different mechanism ("metallacycle" mechanism). • Redox-active metals (Ti, V, Cr, Ta) required • Cr systems are used commercially • There are also one or two catalysts that preferentially produce 1-octene. The mechanism has not been firmly established. Insertion and elimination

  23. Trimerization via metallacycles • Key issues: • Geometrical constraintsprevent b-eliminationin metallacyclopentane. • Formation of 9-memberedrings unfavourable. • Ligand helps balance (n)and (n+2) oxidation states. (and others) Insertion and elimination

  24. CO/olefin copolymerization • CO cheaper than ethene • Copolymer more polarthan polyethene • much higher melting point • Chemically less inert • No double CO insertion uphill • No double olefin insertion CO binds more strongly, inserts more quickly • Slow b-elimination from alkyl 5-membered ring hinders elimination M = L2Pd, L2Ni Insertion and elimination

  25. Hydroformylation • Used to make long-chain alcohols and acids from 1-alkenes • Often in situ reduction of aldehydes to alcohols • Unwanted side reaction: hydrogenation of olefin to alkane • Main issue: linear vs branched aldehyde formation • It is possible to make linear aldehydes from internal olefins ! Insertion and elimination

  26. Insertion of longer conjugated systems Attack on an h-polyene is alwaysat a terminal carbon. Þ LUMO coefficients largest Þ Usually a,w-insertion Insertion and elimination

  27. Insertion of longer conjugated systems A diene can be h2 bound. Þ 1,2-insertion Metallocenes often do not have enough space for h4 coordination: Insertion and elimination

  28. Diene rubbers • Butadiene could form three different "ideal" polymers: • In practice one obtains an imperfect polymercontaining all possible insertion modes. • Product composition can be tuned by catalyst variation. • Polymer either used as such or (often)after cross-linking and hydrogenation. Insertion and elimination

  29. Addition to enones • RLi, Grignards: usually 1,2 • "charge-controlled" • OrganoCu compounds often 1,4 • or even 1,6 etc • "orbital-controlled" • stereoregular addition possibleusing chiral phosphine ligands • frequently used in organic synthesis Insertion and elimination

  30. Less common elimination reactions a-elimination: Other ligand metallation reactions: Probably via s-bond metathesis: Via s-bond metathesis or oxidative addition/reductive elimination Insertion and elimination

  31. Less common elimination reactions b-elimination from alkoxides of late transition metals is easy: The hydride often decomposes to H+ and reduced metal:alcohols easily reduce late transition metals. Also, the aldehyde could be decarbonylated to yield metal carbonyls. For early transition metals, the insertion is highly exothermicand irreversible. Insertion and elimination

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