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Formation of Ruthenium Carbenes by gem-Hydrogen Transfer to Internal Alkynes: Implications for Alkyne trans-Hydrogenation.


ABSTRACT: Insights into the mechanism of the unusual trans-hydrogenation of internal alkynes catalyzed by {Cp*Ru} complexes were gained by para-hydrogen (p-H2) induced polarization (PHIP) transfer NMR spectroscopy. It was found that the productive trans-reduction competes with a pathway in which both H?atoms of H2 are delivered to a single alkyne C?atom of the substrate while the second alkyne C?atom is converted into a metal carbene. This "geminal hydrogenation" mode seems unprecedented; it was independently confirmed by the isolation and structural characterization of a ruthenium carbene complex stabilized by secondary inter-ligand interactions. A detailed DFT study shows that the trans alkene and the carbene complex originate from a common metallacyclopropene intermediate. Furthermore, the computational analysis and the PHIP NMR data concur in that the metal carbene is the major gateway to olefin isomerization and over-reduction, which frequently interfere with regular alkyne trans-hydrogenation.

SUBMITTER: Leutzsch M 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4955229 | biostudies-literature | 2015 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Formation of Ruthenium Carbenes by <i>gem</i>-Hydrogen Transfer to Internal Alkynes: Implications for Alkyne <i>trans</i>-Hydrogenation.

Leutzsch Markus M   Wolf Larry M LM   Gupta Puneet P   Fuchs Michael M   Thiel Walter W   Farès Christophe C   Fürstner Alois A  

Angewandte Chemie (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) 20150831 42


Insights into the mechanism of the unusual <i>trans</i>-hydrogenation of internal alkynes catalyzed by {Cp*Ru} complexes were gained by para-hydrogen (p-H<sub>2</sub>) induced polarization (PHIP) transfer NMR spectroscopy. It was found that the productive <i>trans</i>-reduction competes with a pathway in which both H atoms of H<sub>2</sub> are delivered to a single alkyne C atom of the substrate while the second alkyne C atom is converted into a metal carbene. This "<i>geminal</i> hydrogenation"  ...[more]

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