IONIC HYDROGENATIONS OF HINDERED OLEFINS AT LOW-TEMPERATURE - HYDRIDE TRANSFER-REACTIONS OF TRANSITION-METAL HYDRIDES

被引:75
作者
BULLOCK, RM
SONG, JS
机构
[1] Department of Chemistry, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton
关键词
D O I
10.1021/ja00098a021
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
Sterically hindered olefins can be hydrogenated at -50 degrees C in dichloromethane using triflic acid (CF3SO3H) and a hydride donor. Mechanistic studies indicate that these reactions proceed by hydride transfer to the carbenium ion that is formed by protonation of the olefin. Olefins that form tertiary carbenium ions upon protonation are hydrogenated in high yields (90-100%). Styrenes generally produce lower yields of hydrogenated products (50-60%). Suitable hydride donors include HSiEt(3) and several transition metal carbonyl hydrides (HW(CO)(3)Cp, HW(CO)(3)Cp*, HMo(CO)(3)Cp, HMn(CO)(5), HRe(CO)(5), and HOs(CO)(2)Cp*; Cp = eta(5)-C5H5, Cp* = eta(5)-C(5)Me(5)). A characteristic that is required for transition metal hydrides to be effective is that the cationic dihydrides (or dihydrogen complexes) that result from their protonation must have sufficient acidity to transfer a proton to the olefin, as well as sufficient thermal stability to avoid significant decomposition on the time scale of the hydrogenation reaction. Metal hydrides that fail due to insufficient stability of their protonated forms include HMo(CO)(2)(PPh(3))Cp, HMo(CO)(3)Cp*, and HFe(CO)(2)Cp*. Other hydrides that fail are those that are protonated to give dihydrides or dihydrogen complexes that are not sufficiently acidic to protonate olefins, as found for HW(CO)(2)(PMe(3))Cp and HRu(CO)(PMe(3))Cp.
引用
收藏
页码:8602 / 8612
页数:11
相关论文
共 67 条
[21]   ANIONIC TRANSITION-METAL HYDRIDES [J].
DARENSBOURG, MY ;
ASH, CE .
ADVANCES IN ORGANOMETALLIC CHEMISTRY, 1987, 27 :1-50
[22]   ADDITION OF ACRYLONITRILE TO ANIONIC TRANSITION-METAL HYDRIDES - AN IONIC MODEL FOR HOMOGENEOUS OLEFIN PROCESSES [J].
DARENSBOURG, MY ;
FLORIS, B ;
YOUNGDAHL, KA .
TETRAHEDRON LETTERS, 1989, 30 (14) :1781-1784
[23]  
DEPUY CH, 1973, FORTSCHR CHEM FORSCH, V40, P73
[24]   KINETICS AND MECHANISM OF THE INSERTION OF OLEFINS INTO TRANSITION-METAL HYDRIDE BONDS [J].
DOHERTY, NM ;
BERCAW, JE .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1985, 107 (09) :2670-2682
[25]   KINETIC AND THERMODYNAMIC ACIDITY OF HYDRIDO TRANSITION-METAL COMPLEXES .4. KINETIC ACIDITIES TOWARD ANILINE AND THEIR USE IN IDENTIFYING PROTON-TRANSFER MECHANISMS [J].
EDIDIN, RT ;
SULLIVAN, JM ;
NORTON, JR .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1987, 109 (13) :3945-3953
[26]  
EISENBERG DC, 1991, ISR J CHEM, V31, P55
[27]   ANIONIC GROUP-6 TRANSITION-METAL CARBONYL HYDRIDES AS REDUCING AGENTS - KETONES, ALDEHYDES, AND EPOXIDES [J].
GAUS, PL ;
KAO, SC ;
YOUNGDAHL, K ;
DARENSBOURG, MY .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1985, 107 (08) :2428-2434
[28]   ELECTRON-TRANSFER MECHANISM FOR A HYDRIDE-TRANSFER REACTION - EVIDENCE FOR SELECTIVE ALPHA-HYDRIDE ABSTRACTION FROM A TRANSITION-METAL ALKYL [J].
HAYES, JC ;
COOPER, NJ .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1982, 104 (20) :5570-5572
[29]   COORDINATION CHEMISTRY OF DIHYDROGEN [J].
HEINEKEY, DM ;
OLDHAM, WJ .
CHEMICAL REVIEWS, 1993, 93 (03) :913-926
[30]   HYDROGENASE ENZYME REACTIVITY MODELING WITH A TRANSITION-METAL DIHYDROGEN COMPLEX [J].
HEMBRE, RT ;
MCQUEEN, S .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1994, 116 (05) :2141-2142