Transition Metal Complexes and Main Group Frustrated Lewis Pairs for Stoichiometric and Catalytic P-P and H-H Bond Activation

Stoichiometric and catalytic small molecule activation reactions are vital for the synthesis of new materials. The activation of phosphorus-hydrogen or phosphorus-phosphorus bonds allows for the facile synthesis of new phosphorus-containing molecules for a wide variety of applications.1 An invest...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Geier, Stephen
Other Authors: Stephan, Douglas
Language:en_ca
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1807/26180
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-26180
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OTU.1807-261802013-04-17T04:18:44ZTransition Metal Complexes and Main Group Frustrated Lewis Pairs for Stoichiometric and Catalytic P-P and H-H Bond ActivationGeier, Stephenfrustrated Lewis pairssmall molecule activation0488Stoichiometric and catalytic small molecule activation reactions are vital for the synthesis of new materials. The activation of phosphorus-hydrogen or phosphorus-phosphorus bonds allows for the facile synthesis of new phosphorus-containing molecules for a wide variety of applications.1 An investigation of the P-H dehydrocoupling reaction was undertaken utilizing two rhodium(I) based catalysts. Over the course of this investigation it was found that the Rh(I) systems were also active catalysts for the reverse reaction: phosphorus-phosphorus bond hydrogenation (and hydrosilylation). This reaction was exploited for the synthesis of novel phosphines from P-P bound species. Molecules with P-P bonds were reacted in a stoichiometric fashion with the catalyst precursor, producing a variety of novel species with interesting bonding features which shed some light on the reaction mechanism. Following the discovery in 2006 that a linked phosphine-borane system could reversibly activate hydrogen2 a tremendous effort has been put forth to understand and expand this unprecedented reactivity.3,4 This new archetype for metal-free small molecule activation, containing a bulky Lewis acid and Lewis base which are unable to bond directly due to steric repulsion, has been termed a “frustrated Lewis pair” (FLP).3,4 The FLP concept is expanded to include bulky P-P bound species, pyridines and P-O bound Lewis bases as partners for B(C6F5)3. In some cases small molecule activation produced ion pairs or zwitterions related to those found for reactions with tertiary phosphines,3,4 but in others novel reaction pathways were discovered including phosphorus-phosphorus bond cleavage, catalytic hydrogenations and the formation of novel intramolecular FLPs. An unexpected situation was observed for the pair of 2,6-lutidine with B(C6F5)3, where adduct formation was observed along with free Lewis acid and base, but H2 activation by the FLP proceeded smoothly. Covalently bound phosphinoboranes of the general formula R2PB(C6F5)2 are synthesized. While systems with small R groups dimerized, monomers existed for cases with bulkier R groups. These monomers were found to exhibit extraordinarily short phosphorus-boron bonds yet were still capable of H2 activation analogous to bimolecular phosphine-borane systems. These systems also showed unique reactivity with Lewis acids and Lewis bases. This work further demonstrates the broad and general utility of the FLP concept in the synthesis of new materials and in catalytic transformations.Stephan, Douglas2010-112011-02-15T21:18:11ZNO_RESTRICTION2011-02-15T21:18:11Z2011-02-15T21:18:11ZThesishttp://hdl.handle.net/1807/26180en_ca
collection NDLTD
language en_ca
sources NDLTD
topic frustrated Lewis pairs
small molecule activation
0488
spellingShingle frustrated Lewis pairs
small molecule activation
0488
Geier, Stephen
Transition Metal Complexes and Main Group Frustrated Lewis Pairs for Stoichiometric and Catalytic P-P and H-H Bond Activation
description Stoichiometric and catalytic small molecule activation reactions are vital for the synthesis of new materials. The activation of phosphorus-hydrogen or phosphorus-phosphorus bonds allows for the facile synthesis of new phosphorus-containing molecules for a wide variety of applications.1 An investigation of the P-H dehydrocoupling reaction was undertaken utilizing two rhodium(I) based catalysts. Over the course of this investigation it was found that the Rh(I) systems were also active catalysts for the reverse reaction: phosphorus-phosphorus bond hydrogenation (and hydrosilylation). This reaction was exploited for the synthesis of novel phosphines from P-P bound species. Molecules with P-P bonds were reacted in a stoichiometric fashion with the catalyst precursor, producing a variety of novel species with interesting bonding features which shed some light on the reaction mechanism. Following the discovery in 2006 that a linked phosphine-borane system could reversibly activate hydrogen2 a tremendous effort has been put forth to understand and expand this unprecedented reactivity.3,4 This new archetype for metal-free small molecule activation, containing a bulky Lewis acid and Lewis base which are unable to bond directly due to steric repulsion, has been termed a “frustrated Lewis pair” (FLP).3,4 The FLP concept is expanded to include bulky P-P bound species, pyridines and P-O bound Lewis bases as partners for B(C6F5)3. In some cases small molecule activation produced ion pairs or zwitterions related to those found for reactions with tertiary phosphines,3,4 but in others novel reaction pathways were discovered including phosphorus-phosphorus bond cleavage, catalytic hydrogenations and the formation of novel intramolecular FLPs. An unexpected situation was observed for the pair of 2,6-lutidine with B(C6F5)3, where adduct formation was observed along with free Lewis acid and base, but H2 activation by the FLP proceeded smoothly. Covalently bound phosphinoboranes of the general formula R2PB(C6F5)2 are synthesized. While systems with small R groups dimerized, monomers existed for cases with bulkier R groups. These monomers were found to exhibit extraordinarily short phosphorus-boron bonds yet were still capable of H2 activation analogous to bimolecular phosphine-borane systems. These systems also showed unique reactivity with Lewis acids and Lewis bases. This work further demonstrates the broad and general utility of the FLP concept in the synthesis of new materials and in catalytic transformations.
author2 Stephan, Douglas
author_facet Stephan, Douglas
Geier, Stephen
author Geier, Stephen
author_sort Geier, Stephen
title Transition Metal Complexes and Main Group Frustrated Lewis Pairs for Stoichiometric and Catalytic P-P and H-H Bond Activation
title_short Transition Metal Complexes and Main Group Frustrated Lewis Pairs for Stoichiometric and Catalytic P-P and H-H Bond Activation
title_full Transition Metal Complexes and Main Group Frustrated Lewis Pairs for Stoichiometric and Catalytic P-P and H-H Bond Activation
title_fullStr Transition Metal Complexes and Main Group Frustrated Lewis Pairs for Stoichiometric and Catalytic P-P and H-H Bond Activation
title_full_unstemmed Transition Metal Complexes and Main Group Frustrated Lewis Pairs for Stoichiometric and Catalytic P-P and H-H Bond Activation
title_sort transition metal complexes and main group frustrated lewis pairs for stoichiometric and catalytic p-p and h-h bond activation
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/1807/26180
work_keys_str_mv AT geierstephen transitionmetalcomplexesandmaingroupfrustratedlewispairsforstoichiometricandcatalyticppandhhbondactivation
_version_ 1716580427219599360