4.8 Article

Why is the Ir(III)-Mediated Amido Transfer Much Faster Than the Rh(III)-Mediated Reaction? A Combined Experimental and Computational Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 138, Issue 42, Pages 14020-14029

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.6b08211

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Funding

  1. Institute for Basic Science in Korea [IBS-R010-D1]

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The mechanism of the Ir(III)- and Rh(III)-mediated C-N coupling reaction, which is the key step for catalytic C-H amidation, was investigated in an integrated experimental and computational study. Novel amidating agents containing a 1,4,2-dioxazole moiety allowed for designing a stoichiometric version of the catalytic C-N coupling reaction and giving access to reaction intermediates that reveal details about each step of the reaction. Both DFT and kinetic studies strongly point to a mechanism where the M(III)-complex engages the amidating agent via oxidative coupling to form a M(V)-imido intermediate, which then undergoes migratory insertion to afford the final C-N coupled product. For the first time, the stoichiometric versions of the Ir- and Rh-mediated amidation reaction were compared systematically to each other. Iridium reacts much faster than rhodium (similar to 1100 times at 6.7 degrees C) with the oxidative coupling being so fast that the activation of the initial Ir(III)-complex becomes rate-limiting. In the case of Rh, the Rh-imido formation step is rate-limiting. These qualitative differences stem from a unique bonding feature of the dioxazole moiety and the relativistic contraction of the Ir(V), which affords much more favorable energetics for the reaction. For the first time, a full molecular orbital analysis is presented to rationalize and explain the electronic features that govern this behavior.

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