Acylation Reactions of Dibenzo‐7‐phosphanorbornadiene: DFT Mechanistic Insights

Abstract Extensive DFT calculations provide deep mechanistic insights into the acylation reactions of tert‐butyl dibenzo‐7‐phosphanobornadiene with PhCOX (X=Cl, Br, I, OTf) in CH2Cl2 solution. Such reactions are initialized by the nucleophilic P⋅⋅⋅C attack to the carbonyl group to form the acylphosp...

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Main Authors: Dr. Zheng‐Wang Qu, Dr. Hui Zhu, Prof. Stefan Grimme
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley-VCH 2019-06-01
Series:ChemistryOpen
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/open.201900176
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spelling doaj-1e658d9316ae4929a9f2c93a420283792021-03-02T05:50:35ZengWiley-VCHChemistryOpen2191-13632019-06-018680781010.1002/open.201900176Acylation Reactions of Dibenzo‐7‐phosphanorbornadiene: DFT Mechanistic InsightsDr. Zheng‐Wang Qu0Dr. Hui Zhu1Prof. Stefan Grimme2Mulliken Center for Theoretical Chemistry University of Bonn Beringstr. 4 53115 Bonn GermanyMulliken Center for Theoretical Chemistry University of Bonn Beringstr. 4 53115 Bonn GermanyMulliken Center for Theoretical Chemistry University of Bonn Beringstr. 4 53115 Bonn GermanyAbstract Extensive DFT calculations provide deep mechanistic insights into the acylation reactions of tert‐butyl dibenzo‐7‐phosphanobornadiene with PhCOX (X=Cl, Br, I, OTf) in CH2Cl2 solution. Such reactions are initialized by the nucleophilic P⋅⋅⋅C attack to the carbonyl group to form the acylphosphonium intermediate A+ together with X− anion, followed either by nucleophilic X−⋅⋅⋅P attack (X=Cl, Br, and I) toward A+ to eliminate anthracene or by slow rearrangement or decomposition of A+ (X=OTf). In contrast to the first case (X=Cl) that is rate‐limited by the initial P⋅⋅⋅C attack, other reactions are rate‐limited by the second X−⋅⋅⋅P attack for X=Br and I and even thermodynamically prevented for X=OTf, leading to isolable phosphonium salts. The rearrangement of phosphonium A+ is initiated by a P‐C bond cleavage, followed either by sequential proton‐shifts to form anthracenyl acylphosphonium or by deprotonation with additional base Et3N to form neutral anthracenyl acylphosphine. Our DFT results strongly support the separated acylphosphonium A+ as the key reaction intermediate that may be useful for the transfer of acylphosphenium in general.https://doi.org/10.1002/open.201900176acylphosphineacylation reactionsreaction mechanismnorbornadienesphosphenium
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dr. Zheng‐Wang Qu
Dr. Hui Zhu
Prof. Stefan Grimme
spellingShingle Dr. Zheng‐Wang Qu
Dr. Hui Zhu
Prof. Stefan Grimme
Acylation Reactions of Dibenzo‐7‐phosphanorbornadiene: DFT Mechanistic Insights
ChemistryOpen
acylphosphine
acylation reactions
reaction mechanism
norbornadienes
phosphenium
author_facet Dr. Zheng‐Wang Qu
Dr. Hui Zhu
Prof. Stefan Grimme
author_sort Dr. Zheng‐Wang Qu
title Acylation Reactions of Dibenzo‐7‐phosphanorbornadiene: DFT Mechanistic Insights
title_short Acylation Reactions of Dibenzo‐7‐phosphanorbornadiene: DFT Mechanistic Insights
title_full Acylation Reactions of Dibenzo‐7‐phosphanorbornadiene: DFT Mechanistic Insights
title_fullStr Acylation Reactions of Dibenzo‐7‐phosphanorbornadiene: DFT Mechanistic Insights
title_full_unstemmed Acylation Reactions of Dibenzo‐7‐phosphanorbornadiene: DFT Mechanistic Insights
title_sort acylation reactions of dibenzo‐7‐phosphanorbornadiene: dft mechanistic insights
publisher Wiley-VCH
series ChemistryOpen
issn 2191-1363
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Abstract Extensive DFT calculations provide deep mechanistic insights into the acylation reactions of tert‐butyl dibenzo‐7‐phosphanobornadiene with PhCOX (X=Cl, Br, I, OTf) in CH2Cl2 solution. Such reactions are initialized by the nucleophilic P⋅⋅⋅C attack to the carbonyl group to form the acylphosphonium intermediate A+ together with X− anion, followed either by nucleophilic X−⋅⋅⋅P attack (X=Cl, Br, and I) toward A+ to eliminate anthracene or by slow rearrangement or decomposition of A+ (X=OTf). In contrast to the first case (X=Cl) that is rate‐limited by the initial P⋅⋅⋅C attack, other reactions are rate‐limited by the second X−⋅⋅⋅P attack for X=Br and I and even thermodynamically prevented for X=OTf, leading to isolable phosphonium salts. The rearrangement of phosphonium A+ is initiated by a P‐C bond cleavage, followed either by sequential proton‐shifts to form anthracenyl acylphosphonium or by deprotonation with additional base Et3N to form neutral anthracenyl acylphosphine. Our DFT results strongly support the separated acylphosphonium A+ as the key reaction intermediate that may be useful for the transfer of acylphosphenium in general.
topic acylphosphine
acylation reactions
reaction mechanism
norbornadienes
phosphenium
url https://doi.org/10.1002/open.201900176
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AT drhuizhu acylationreactionsofdibenzo7phosphanorbornadienedftmechanisticinsights
AT profstefangrimme acylationreactionsofdibenzo7phosphanorbornadienedftmechanisticinsights
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