4.5 Article

Oxidative addition to main group versus transition metals: Insights from the Activation Strain model

Journal

JOURNAL OF ORGANOMETALLIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 691, Issue 21, Pages 4341-4349

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.jorganchem.2006.03.006

Keywords

Activation Strain model; bond activation; oxidative addition; catalysis; density functional calculations; alkaline earths; transition metals

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We have studied the oxidative addition of the methane C-H and chloromethane C-Cl bonds to a number of main group (Be, Mg and Ca) and transition metals (Pd, Zn and Cd), using relativistic density functional theory (DFT) at ZORA-BLYP/TZ2P. The purpose is to better understand what causes the characteristic differences in reactivity between main group and transition metals towards oxidative addition. Thus, we have analyzed our model reactions using the Activation Strain model in which the activation energy Delta E-not equal is decomposed into the activation strain Delta E-strain(not equal) of and the stabilizing TS interaction Delta E-int(not equal) between the reactants in the activated complex: Delta E-not equal = AE(strain)(not equal) + Delta E-int(not equal). Activation of the C-H bond goes with higher barriers than activation of the C-Cl bond because the higher bond strength of the former translates into a higher activation strain Delta E-strain(not equal). The barriers for bond activation increase along Pd < Be, Ca < Mg < Zn, Cd. This can be straightforwardly understood through the TS-interaction Delta E-int(not equal) that is, in terms of the bonding capabilities of the metals. Pd yields the lowest barriers because it achieves the most stabilizing Delta E-int(not equal). This is the result of the small HOMO-LUMO gap between its occupied 4d and unfilled 5s AOs, which makes Pd both a good electron donor and acceptor. Zn and Cd yield the highest barriers because the large HOMO-LUMO gap between the occupied valence ns and unfilled valence np AOs makes them both poor donors and poor acceptors of electronic charge. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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