An Iron(II) Ylide Complex as a Masked Open-Shell Iron Alkylidene Species in Its Alkylidene-Transfer Reactions with Alkenes

J Am Chem Soc. 2017 Mar 15;139(10):3876-3888. doi: 10.1021/jacs.7b00484. Epub 2017 Mar 1.

Abstract

Transition-metal alkylidenes are important reactive organometallic intermediates, and our current knowledge on them has been mainly restricted to those with closed-shell electronic configurations. In this study, we present an exploration on open-shell iron alkylidenes with a weak-field tripodal amido-phosphine-amido ligand. We found that a high-spin (amido-phosphine-amido)iron(II) complex can react with (p-tolyl)2CN2 to afford a high-spin (amido-ylide-amido)iron(II) complex, 2, which could transfer its alkylidene moiety to a variety of alkenes, either the electron-rich or electron-deficient ones, to form cyclopropane derivatives. The reaction of 2 with cis-β-deuterio-styrene gave deuterated cyclopropane derivatives with partial loss of the stereochemical integrity with respect to the cis-styrene. Kinetic study on the cyclopropanation reaction of 2 with 4-fluoro-styrene disclosed the activation parameters of ΔH = 23 ± 1 kcal/mol and ΔS = -20 ± 3 cal/mol/K, which are comparable to those of the cyclopropanation reactions involving transition-metal alkylidenes. However, the cyclopropanation of para-substituted styrenes by 2 shows a nonlinear Hammett plot of log(kX/kH) vs σp. By introduction of a radical parameter, a linear plot of log(kX/kH) vs 0.59σp + 0.55σc was obtained, which suggests the "nucleophilic" radical nature of the transition state of the cyclopropanation step. In corroboration with the experimental observations, density functional theory calculation on the reaction of 2 with styrene suggests the involvement of an open-shell (amido-phosphine-amido)iron alkylidene intermediate that is higher in energy than its (amido-ylide-amido)iron(II) precursor and an "outer-sphere" radical-type mechanism for the cyclopropanation step. The negative charge distribution on the alkylidene carbon atoms of the open-shell states (S = 2 and 1) explains the high activity of the cyclopropanation reaction toward electron-deficient alkenes. The study demonstrates the unique activity of open-shell iron alkylidene species beyond its closed-shell analogues, thus pointing out their potential synthetic usage in catalysis.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't