Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemistry University of Victoria P.O. Box 1700, STN CSC Victoria British Columbia Canada V8W 2Y2
2. Max-Planck-Institut für Kohlenforschung Kaiser-Wilhelm-Platz 1 45470 Mülheim an der Ruhr Germany
Abstract
AbstractTwo Mo(0) phosphenium complexes containing ancillary secondary phosphine ligands have been investigated with respect to their ability to participate in electrophilic addition at unsaturated substrates and subsequent P−H hydride transfer to “quench” the resulting carbocations. These studies provide stoichiometric “proof of concept” for a proposed new metal‐catalyzed electrophilic hydrophosphination mechanism. The more strongly Lewis acidic phosphenium complex, [Mo(CO)4(PR2H)(PR2)]+ (R=Ph, Tolp), cleanly hydrophosphinates 1,1‐diphenylethylene, benzophenone, and ethylene, while other substrates react rapidly to give products resulting from competing electrophilic processes. A less Lewis acidic complex, [Mo(CO)3(PR2H)2(PR2)]+, generally reacts more slowly but participates in clean hydrophosphination of a wider range of unsaturated substrates, including styrene, indene, 1‐hexene, and cyclohexanone, in addition to 1,1‐diphenylethylene, benzophenone, and ethylene. Mechanistic studies are described, including stoichiometric control reactions and computational and kinetic analyses, which probe whether the observed P−H addition actually does occur by the proposed electrophilic mechanism, and whether hydridic P−H transfer in this system is intra‐ or intermolecular. Preliminary reactivity studies indicate challenges that must be addressed to exploit these promising results in catalysis.
Funder
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada