Title: Catalytic applications
1Catalytic applications
2Basic Chemical Concepts
1 The Metal 1.1 Oxidation State and
Electron Count 1.2 Coordinative
Unsaturation 2 Important Properties of Ligands
2.1 CO, R2CCR2, PR3, and H- as Ligands
2.2 Alkyl, Allyl, and Alkylidene Ligands 3
Important Reaction Types 3.1 Oxidative
Addition and Reductive Elimination 3.2
Insertion Reactions 3.3 b-Hydride
Elimination 3.4 Nucleophilic Attack on a
Coordinated Ligand 4 Energy ConsiderationsThermo
dynamics and Kinetics 5 Catalytic Cycle and
Intermediates 5.1 Kinetic Studies 5.2
Spectroscopic Studies 5.3 Model Compounds
and Theoretical Calculations
3The Metal
1.1 Oxidation State and Electron Count
4-
- 1.2 Coordinative Unsaturation
- When the electron count is lt 18, the metal
complex is often classified as coordinatively
unsaturated. - RhCl(PPh3)3 is coordinatively unsaturated.
- RhH(CO)(PPh3)3 and Co(CO)4- are coordinatively
saturated. - Cp2Zr(THF)(CH3) is also coordinatively
unsaturated because of facile - displacement of weakly bound solvent molecule.
- Coordinatively unsaturation ? highly reactive
? tend to form extra bonds with (CO, PPh3, H-)
until 18 e- reached. - Coordinatively unsaturation can be
induced by bulky ligands.
LPR3
5 Steric bulkiness of monodentate phosphine
described by cone angle
6Important Properties of Ligands
- Ligand coordinate onto a metal.
- Lewis base (s donor)
- H2O, NH3, H-
- Lewis acid (p acid ligands)
- CO, NO, H2 and CH2CH2 capable of accepting
electrons from the metal through back-donation.
7Back-donation donating metal d orbitals and the
ligand p acceptor orbitals match (s for H2) .
82.2 Alkyl, Allyl, and Alkylidene Ligands
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10Important Reaction Type
3.1 Oxidative Addition and Reductive Elimination
Oxidative Addition
11Reductive eliminations
12Insertion
2.10 migratory insertion 2.8 hydrogenation 2.9
polymerization 2.10 CO involving catalytic
reactions 2.11 CO hydrogenation
13note cis insertion
14ß-hydride elimination
1. hydrogenation 2. alkene polymeration
153.4 Nucleophilic Attack on a Coordinated Ligand
2.12 Wacker Process 2.13 epoxidation 2.14 Models
for water gas shift reaction (rate constant
different can be 109 compared with free CO)
164 Energy Considerations-Thermodynamics and
Kinetics
Thermodynamics Gibbs free energy ?G (?G lt
0) Kinetic Free energy of activation ?G (?G
accessible)
17In diagram a ?G ?G 2- ?G1 In diagram b I
intermediate lower energy than TS For
spontaneous reaction ?G lt 0 ?G ?H - T?S 1. ?H
lt 0 (enthalpy) 2. ?S gt 0 (entropy)
5 CATALYTIC CYCLE AND INTERMEDIATES
- MLn1 precatalyst or catalyst precursor
- Four Catalytic immediates in the example shown
below - How to derive a catalytic cycles??
- Kinetics studies (information on the
rate-determining step) - spectroscopic investigation (in situ
spectroscopic investigation, require certain
level of concentration, intermediates may never
be observed)
183.studies on model compounds (enzymes)
4.computation
19Kinetics Studies Ligand dissociation step
(will addition of more L, rate of reactions
decreased) Spectroscopic investigation
Infrared / multinuclear NMR (eq, 31P, 2H)
Rh porphyrin catalyzed
cyclopropanation
20In situ NMR studies between diazo compound and
catalyst precursor shows the presence of 2.1 and
2.2
21Model Compounds
e.g. 1
The model compound of epoxidation by high-valent
metals ions.
22e.g. 2.
The model compound for studying the reductive
elimination of acetone (Complex 2.5 made from
RhCl(PPh3)3 with propylene oxide, no O.A. with
acetone)
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24Theoretical Calculations
Catalytic polymerization physical properties of
the polymer obtained depend on the catalysts.
25The elastomeric property of the polypropylene
depends on the relative amounts of 2.6 and 2.7.
The energy required for the interconversion
between the two states depends on the R group and
can be theoretically calculated. On the basis of
such calculations, for a variety of metallocene
catalysts with different R groups, the
elastomeric property of the final polypropylene
has been correctly predicted.