< Terug naar vorige pagina

Publicatie

Oriented External Electric Fields and Ionic Additives Elicit Catalysis and Mechanistic Crossover in Oxidative Addition Reactions

Tijdschriftbijdrage - Tijdschriftartikel

Judiciously applied oriented external electric fields (OEEFs) exert catalytic effects on the kinetics and improve the thermodynamics of chemical reactions. Herein, we examine the ability of OEEFs to assist catalysts and show that the rate of oxidative addition between palladium catalysts and alkyl/aryl electrophiles can be controlled by an OEEF applied along the direction of electron reorganization (the "reaction axis"). The concerted mechanism of oxidative addition proceeds through a transition state with moderate charge transfer character. We demonstrate that OEEFs along the reaction axis can control this charge transfer and impart electrostatic catalysis. When the applied field exceeds a certain critical value (∼0.15 V/Å), we observed a mechanistic crossover from the concerted to a dissociative CSNAr type of reactivity for aryl electrophiles. To our surprise, alkyl electrophiles follow a hitherto unexplored SN2 pathway for the reaction with large transition state stabilization at relatively low OEEFs. A valence-bond state correlation diagram (VBSCD) is employed to comprehend the results. Finally, although the catalytic effect of salt additives in oxidative addition is known, its mechanism is still under debate. Our findings further show evidence that salt additives exert electric-field effects on the rate of cross-coupling reactions, and their cocatalytic effects can be judiciously reproduced by applied external electric fields. As such, we propose that the use of additives (anionic or cationic) is an experimentally viable strategy to implement external electric-field effects in routinely used oxidative addition catalysis.

Tijdschrift: J. Am. Chem. Soc.
ISSN: 0002-7863
Issue: 8
Volume: 142
Pagina's: 3836-3850
Jaar van publicatie:2020
CSS-citation score:3
Toegankelijkheid:Closed