Pd-Mediated Activation of Molecular Oxygen in a Nonpolar Medium
Jason M. Keith, Robert J. Nielsen, Jonas Oxgaard, William A. Goddard III
Abstract
The mechanism for direct insertion of O_2 in a toluene-solvated palladium−hydride bond (avoiding palladium zero) has been elucidated using quantum mechanics (B3LYP/LACVP^(**) with the PBF polarizable continuum solvent model) for Pd^(II)((−)-sparteine)(Cl)(H) and the model compound PdII(bipyridine)(Cl)(H). We find that the process involves (1) the abstraction of the hydrogen atom by triplet oxygen, (2) the formation of a stable L_2XPd^IOOH triplet species, (3) a spin transition resulting in a stable L_2XPd^(II)OOH singlet species, and (4) the loss of H_2O_2 and completion of the catalytic cycle upon the addition of HX. The limitations involved in the spin transition, the formation of the triplet Pd^I−OOH species and the stability of that triplet species are all dependent on the presence of an H-bond acceptor cis to the hydride and the electronic characteristics of the other ligands which may or may not stabilize the Pd^I species. Without this cis H-bond acceptor and/or electron-withdrawing ligands that can stabilize Pd^I, the reaction will not proceed via the palladium hydride insertion mechanism in a nonpolar environment.
Group Members
Keith, J. M., Nielsen, R. J., Oxgaard, J., & III, W. A. G. (2005). Pd-Mediated Activation of Molecular Oxygen in a Nonpolar Medium. *J. Am. Chem. Soc.*, *127*(38), 13172-13179. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja043094b
