Title: TransitionMetal Catalyzed Alkane Activation
1Transition-Metal Catalyzed Alkane Activation
2Overview
- I. Significance
- II. Challenges and Early Solutions
- Reactivity
- Selectivity Catalysis
- III. Recent Developments
- Alkane Dehydrogenation
- Alkane Metathesis
- Alkane Borylation
- IV. Summary
3Significance
Ethylene(110 million tons/year) Propylene(65
million tons/year)
Thermal Cracking
Current Oil Refining for Petrochemicals
LPG or light HCs, 850C, milliseconds
Fractional Distillation
Petrochemicals
Catalytic Reforming
Aromatics (70 million tons/year)
Light HCs, 500C/50atm Pt or Re chloride catalyst
- Problems
- Energy Intensive ()
- High Emissions
- Poor Selectivity
- Many Steps
4Overview
- I. Significance
- II. Challenges and Early Solutions
- Reactivity
- Selectivity Catalysis
- IV. Recent Developments
- Alkane Dehydrogenation
- Alkane Metathesis
- Alkane Borylation
- V. Future Work
- VI. Summary
5Reactivity Challenges
- 5 Modes of C-H Activation
- 1.) Oxidative Addition (Isolated Intermediate)
- 2.) Electrophilic Activation (Direct
Functionalization) - 3.) Sigma Bond Metathesis (4-membered T.S.)
6Reactivity Challenges cont.
- 5 Modes of C-H Activation
- 4.) 1,2-Addition (Alkane MNonmetal)
- 5.) Metalloradical Activation (H-Atom
Abstraction)
Wolczanski, JACS, 1988,110, 8731
7Reactivity Challenges cont.
- Difficulty of C-H Activation
- Inherently non-reactive (Paraffinlow affinity)
- HOMOs Deep Lying s-Bonding Orbitals
- LUMOs High Energy s Orbitals
- Sterically Hindered
- Reagent has 3 choices
- 1.) Donate e-density to C-H s (NO)
- 2.) Abstract C-H s-bonding es (LAs
superacids) - 3.) Do both (carbenes) CH2 CH4 C2H6
(diamagnetic low-valent metals)
Crabtree, Chem. Rev. 1985, 85, 245 Hoffman,
JACS, 1971, 93, 6188
8Reactivity Solutions
- First SP3 C-H Activation
- Chatt and Davidson 1965
- Driven by Chelate Effect
- Gave Intermolecular C-H Addition of Arene but not
Alkanes
Chatt, Davidson, J. Chem. Soc., 1965, 843
9Reactivity Solutions cont.
- Shilov 1972 (hydroxylation/chlorination)
- Crabtree 1979 (transfer dehydrogenation)
- Groves 1979 (biomimetic hydroxylation)
Shilov, Kinet. Katal. 1972, 13, 534 Crabtree,
JACS, 1979,101, 7738 Groves, JACS, 1979, 101,
1032
10Overview
- I. Significance
- II. Challenges and Early Solutions
- Reactivity
- Selectivity Catalysis
- III. Recent Developments
- Alkane Dehydrogenation
- Alkane Metathesis
- Alkane Borylation
- IV. Summary
11Selectivity Challenges
- Alkane Dehydrogenation
- Alkane Oxidation
- Methane Oxidation
12Selectivity Solutions
- Selective Dehydrogenation (Zakrzewski)
- Selective Carbonylation (Tanaka)
- Selective Oxidation (Periana)
Zakrzewski, Chem. Commun. 1982,1235Tanaka, Chem
Commun. 1987, 758 Periana, Science, 1993, 341
13Methane Oxidation
- Key Features
- CH3OSO3H Stability
- HgX Species
14MethaneOxidation
- Industrial 3-Step Process?
15Overview
- I. Significance
- II. Challenges and Early Solutions
- Reactivity
- Selectivity Catalysis
- III. Recent Developments
- Alkane Dehydrogenation
- Alkane Metathesis
- Alkane Borylation
- IV. Summary
16Recent Developments
- Hartwig 1997 Science, 277, 211 (1997)
-
None of these (Alkane C-H activation
approaches) has provided a single isomer of a
useful organic product from an alkane.
17Alkane Dehydrogenation
- n-Octane Dehydrogenation
- Observations
- Kinetic Regioselectivity Favors 1-Octene
- nbe Reacts with (PCP)IrH2 2X Faster than tbe
- nbe gives higher selectivity for 1-octene
- Higher Acceptor Concentrations Favor 1-Octene
- Ultimately
- Octene isomer distribution is determined by the
relative rates of isomerization and
dehydrogenation.
Jensen, Goldman, JACS, 1999, 121, 4086
18Proposed Dehydrogenation/Isomerization Cycle
19Alkane Dehydrogenation
- Test Hypothesis
- They Proposed
- 1-decene should react with (PCP)IrH2 as
efficiently as 1-octene - Rate of 1-octene isomerization should be slower
20Proposed Dehydrogenation/Isomerization Cycle
21Alkane Dehydrogenation
- Results
- 84 1-Octene at 94 mM (94 Turnovers)
- High Concentrations of 1-Octene?
- Selectively Remove 1-Octene?
- System Inherently Limited?
22Overview
- I. Significance
- II. Challenges and Early Solutions
- Reactivity
- Selectivity Catalysis
- III. Recent Developments
- Alkane Dehydrogenation
- Alkane Metathesis
- Alkane Borylation
- IV. Summary
23Alkane Metathesis
- Burnett and Hughes 1973
- Solves Product Inhibition Problem?
- Significance
- Replace Fischer-Tropsch Process (CO H2
Alkanes)? - Tighter MW distribution (C9-C20)
- Less Energy Intensive
- Lower Emissions
Burnett, R.L. Hughes, T. R. J. Catal. 1973, 31,
55
24Alkane Metathesis
- Goldman, Brookhart 2006 Science
- Catalytic Alkane Metathesis by Tandem Alkane
Dehydrogenation-Olefin Metathesis - Dual Catalytic System
Goldman, Brookhart,M. Science 2006, 312, 257.
25Alkane Metathesis Cycle
26Alkane Metathesis
27Alkane Metathesis
- 2 Questions
- 1. Pentane Heptane (Isomerization)?
- 2. Metathesis Catalyst Decomposition?
28Alkane Metathesis
- Pentane Heptane?
- Isomerization Before Metathesis?
- Solution
- Alternative (PCP)Ir Catalyst?
- Catalyze Isomerization more slowly?
29Alkane Metathesis
- Different (PCP)Ir Catalyst
30Alkane Metathesis
- 2. Metathesis Catalyst Decomposition?
- More Catalyst Reinitiates Metathesis
- 13C, 1H, and 31P NMR Reaction Monitoring
- Early Reaction Times
- 2-Methyl-2-Phenylbutane
- Late Reaction Times
- 2,6-Diisopropylaniline (Decreased Reaction Rate)
31Alkane Metathesis
- More Robust Metathesis Catalyst?
- Reaction F
- Turnover Potential of Robust Metathesis Catalyst
- 4.37M Product from 5.1M SM
- 486 Turnovers (wrt Ir)
32Alkane Metathesis
- Future Studies
- Metathesis Catalyst
- More Robust Catalysts Higher TONs
- Dehydrogenation Catalyst
- More Active Catalysts More TONs Before
Metathesis Catalyst Decomposition - Less Isomerization-Prone Catalysts Greater
Selectivity
33Overview
- I. Significance
- II. Challenges and Early Solutions
- Reactivity
- Selectivity Catalysis
- III. Recent Developments
- Alkane Dehydrogenation
- Alkane Metathesis
- Alkane Borylation
- IV. Summary
34Alkane Borylation
- Hartwig 1997 Science, 277, 211 (1997)
-
What Does He Have To Offer????
35Terminal Selectivity
Eliminates Alkane at 110C
Eliminates Alkane at -15C
Bergman, JACS, 1982, 104, 352 Jones,
Organometallics, 1983, 2, 562
36Alkane Borylation
- Why Borylation?
- Versatile Synthetic Intermediates
- Used Directly as Suzuki Reagents
- Boronates Can Be Converted to
- Alcohols
- Amines
- Ketones
- Boron Reagent Can be Recycled
37Alkane Borylation
- Background
- Transition-Metal Boryl Complexes
- Properties
- Empty P-Orbital Interesting Structure/Reactivity
- Strong s-Donor
- Unsaturation Metal Back-Donation
Hartwig, J. F. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1993, 115, 4908
38Alkane Borylation
- Initial Observations
- Can X-H be C-H?
39Alkane Borylation
- First C-H Borylation
- First Example of Fp Complex C-H Activation
- Does Boron Have Special C-H Activating Properties?
Hartwig, J. F. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1995, 117,
11357 Hartwig, Science 1997, 277, 211
40Alkane Borylation
- Selectivity
- Something Special About Boron?
41Alkane Borylation
- Thermal Catalytic Borylation
Hartwig, Science 2000, 287, 1995
42Alkane Borylation
43Alkane Borylation
- Computational Studies
- Sigma-Bond Metathesis Pathway?
- 10 Kcal/mol Lower In Energy Than Oxidative
Addition Pathway
Hall, M. B. Hartwig, J. F. J. Am. Chem. Soc.
2002, 124, 858
44Alkane Borylation
- Intermediate Isolation
- Intermediates A B
- NMR Data of A B Show B-H Interaction
- 1H NMR Hydride Signal Sharpens Upon 11B
Decoupling - 1H-11B HMQC Shows Cross Peaks
Hartwig, J. F. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2005, 127, 2538
45Alkane Borylation
- Crystal Structures of Intermediates A B
- Evidence For Significant
- B-H Interaction
46Alkane Borylation
- Dissociation of Borane
- Rates of dissociation directly proportional to
rates of alkane activation (B faster than A) - These are the 16-electron species that react with
alkanes
47Alkane Borylation
- Conclusions
- Borylation is Catalytic and Selective Because
- Significant B-H Bonding Character
- Facilitates borane formation to generate reactive
species. - Stabilizes the transition state for C-H bond
cleavage (computational) - Stabilizes the product from C-H cleavage (comp)
- Boron P-Orbital
- Participates in C-H bond cleavage (comp)
- Thermodynamics
- Formation of B-C bond (112Kcal/mol) provides
driving force
48Summary
- Alkane Dehydrogenation
- Excellent Kinetic Selectivity for 1-Alkenes
- Isomerization Problem
- Alkane Metathesis
- Longer Alkanes From Shorter Alkanes
- High Turnover Numbers Possible
- Metathesis Catalyst Decomposition
- Alkane Borylation
- Excellent Terminal Selectivity
- Boron is Unique
- Possible With Ruthenium
- Cost of Boronate Reagents