Differences between the elimination of early and late transition metals: DFT mechanistic insights into the titanium-catalyzed synthesis of pyrroles from alkynes and diazenes

Jiandong Guo, Xi Deng, Chunyu Song, Yu Lu, Shuanglin Qu, Yanfeng Dang, Zhi Xiang Wang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

27 Scopus citations

Abstract

Early transition metals (TMs), such as titanium, generally resist undergoing reductive elimination to form C-X bonds due to their weak electronegativity. By analyzing the mechanism of the titanium-catalyzed synthesis of pyrroles from alkynes and diazenes, the present study revealed that titanium is able to promote C-N bond formation via an unconventional elimination pathway, passing through a comparatively stable masked TiII complex (i.e., IM4) rather than pyrrole directly. The formation of IM4 originates from the bilateral donation and back-donation between Ti and the pyrrole ligand. Formally, it could be considered that the two electrons resulting from the unconventional reductive elimination are temporarily buffered by back-donation to a symmetry-allowed unoccupied π-orbital of the pyrrole ring in IM4 rather than becoming a lone pair on a Ti center as adopted in the catalysis of late TMs. Because of its stability, IM4 requires additional oxidation by diazene to liberate pyrrole. The triplet counterpart (IM4T) of IM4 is more stable than IM4, but the elimination is unlikely to reach IM4T, because the process is spin-forbidden and the spin-orbit coupling is weak. Alternatively, one may consider the forming pyrrole in IM4 as a redox-active ligand, reserving the two electrons resulting from the formal reductive elimination and then releasing the electrons when IM4 is oxidized by diazene. These insights allow us to propose the conditions for early TMs to undergo a similar elimination, whereby the forming product will have symmetry-allowed frontier molecular orbitals to form donation and back-donation bonding with a TM center and a substrate possessing a comparatively strong oxidizing ability to oxidize an IM4-like intermediate for product release. These insights may provide another way of constructing C-X bonds through a similar reductive elimination pathway, using early TM catalysts.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)2413-2425
Number of pages13
JournalChemical Science
Volume8
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 2017

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
We thank the anonymous reviewers for providing insightful comments and helping us to improve the study, and Professor Tonks for helpful discussion. We acknowledge the financial support from the National Science Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 21573263 and 21373216).

Publisher Copyright:
© The Royal Society of Chemistry.

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