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Dialkyl Ether Formation at High-Valent Nickel
Author(s) -
Franck Le Vaillant,
Edward J. Reijerse,
Markus Leutzsch,
Josep Cornellà
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - Uncategorized
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.0c07381
Subject(s) - reductive elimination , chemistry , alkoxide , bimetallic strip , ether , nickel , reactive intermediate , oxidative addition , medicinal chemistry , catalysis , polymer chemistry , combinatorial chemistry , organic chemistry
In this article, we investigated the I 2 -promoted cyclic dialkyl ether formation from 6-membered oxanickelacycles originally reported by Hillhouse. A detailed mechanistic investigation based on spectroscopic and crystallographic analysis revealed that a putative reductive elimination to forge C(sp 3 )-OC(sp 3 ) using I 2 might not be operative. We isolated a paramagnetic bimetallic Ni III intermediate featuring a unique Ni 2 (OR) 2 (OR = alkoxide) diamond-like core complemented by a μ-iodo bridge between the two Ni centers, which remains stable at low temperatures, thus permitting its characterization by NMR, EPR, X-ray, and HRMS. At higher temperatures (>-10 °C), such bimetallic intermediate thermally decomposes to afford large amounts of elimination products together with iodoalkanols. Observation of the latter suggests that a C(sp 3 )-I bond reductive elimination occurs preferentially to any other challenging C-O bond reductive elimination. Formation of cyclized THF rings is then believed to occur through cyclization of an alcohol/alkoxide to the recently forged C(sp 3 )-I bond. The results of this article indicate that the use of F + oxidants permits the challenging C(sp 3 )-OC(sp 3 ) bond formation at a high-valent nickel center to proceed in good yields while minimizing deleterious elimination reactions. Preliminary investigations suggest the involvement of a high-valent bimetallic Ni III intermediate which rapidly extrudes the C-O bond product at remarkably low temperatures. The new set of conditions permitted the elusive synthesis of diethyl ether through reductive elimination, a remarkable feature currently beyond the scope of Ni.

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