4.7 Article

Manganese-Catalyzed Hydroboration of Terminal Olefins and Metal-Dependent Selectivity in Internal Olefin Isomerization- Hydroboration

Journal

INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 60, Issue 1, Pages 494-504

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.0c03451

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Azrieli Foundation (Israel)
  2. Technion EVPR Fund-Mallat Family Research Fund
  3. Taub Foundation
  4. Council for Higher Education in Israel
  5. Australian Government
  6. Forrest Research Foundation Scholarship
  7. Australian Government Research Training Program
  8. Australian Research Council Future Fellowship [FT170100373]

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The study reports a manganese complex that shows high selectivity for terminal alkenes in hydroboration reactions, in contrast to cobalt which exhibits different selectivity towards internal alkenes, leading to different reaction pathways and product structures.
In the past decade, the use of earth-abundant metals in homogeneous catalysis has flour shed. In particular, metals such as cobalt and iron have been used extensively in reductive transformations including hydrogenation, hydroboration, and hydrosilylation. Manganese, on the other hand, has been considerably less explored in these reductive transformations. Here, we report a well-defined manganese complex, [Mn((BDI)-B-iPr)(OTf)(2)] (2a; BDI = bipyridinediimine), that is an active precatalyst in the hydroboration of a variety of electronically differentiated alkenes (>20 examples). The hydroboration is specifically selective for terminal alkenes and occurs with exclusive anti-Markovnikov selectivity. In contrast, when using the analogous cobalt complex [Co((BDI)-B-iPr)(OTf)(2)] (3a), internal alkenes are hydroborated efficiently, where a sequence of isomerization steps ultimately leads to their hydroboration. The contrasting terminal versus internal alkene selectivity for manganese and cobalt was investigated computationally and is further discussed in the herein-reported study.

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