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Download fileIn Situ Catalyst Modification in Atom Transfer Radical Reactions with Ruthenium Benzylidene Complexes
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posted on 2016-05-17, 00:00 authored by Juneyoung Lee, Jessica
M. Grandner, Keary M. Engle, K. N. Houk, Robert H. GrubbsRuthenium benzylidene complexes are
well-known as olefin metathesis
catalysts. Several reports have demonstrated the ability of these
catalysts to also facilitate atom transfer radical (ATR) reactions,
such as atom transfer radical addition (ATRA) and atom transfer radical
polymerization (ATRP). However, while the mechanism of olefin metathesis
with ruthenium benzylidenes has been well-studied, the mechanism by
which ruthenium benzylidenes promote ATR reactions remains unknown.
To probe this question, we have analyzed seven different ruthenium
benzylidene complexes for ATR reactivity. Kinetic studies by 1H NMR revealed that ruthenium benzylidene complexes are rapidly
converted into new ATRA-active, metathesis-inactive species under
typical ATRA conditions. When ruthenium benzylidene complexes were
activated prior to substrate addition, the resulting activated species
exhibited enhanced kinetic reactivity in ATRA with no significant
difference in overall product yield compared to the original complexes.
Even at low temperature, where the original intact complexes did not
catalyze the reaction, preactivated catalysts successfully reacted.
Only the ruthenium benzylidene complexes that could be rapidly transformed
into ATRA-active species could successfully catalyze ATRP, whereas
other complexes preferred redox-initiated free radical polymerization.
Kinetic measurements along with additional mechanistic and computational
studies show that a metathesis-inactive ruthenium species, generated
in situ from the ruthenium benzylidene complexes, is the active catalyst
in ATR reactions. Based on data from 1 H, 13C, and 31P NMR spectroscopy and X-ray crystallography,
we suspect that this ATRA-active species is a RuxCly(PCy3)z complex.