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CuH‐Catalysed Hydroamination of Styrene with Hydroxylamine Esters: A Coupled Cluster Scrutiny of Mechanistic Pathways
Author(s) -
Tobisch Sven
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
chemistry – a european journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.687
H-Index - 242
eISSN - 1521-3765
pISSN - 0947-6539
DOI - 10.1002/chem.201600230
Subject(s) - hydroamination , chemistry , hydroxylamine , transmetalation , catalysis , catalytic cycle , regioselectivity , medicinal chemistry , oxidative addition , reductive elimination , hydride , combinatorial chemistry , organic chemistry , metal
Abstract A detailed computational exploration of mechanistic intricacies of the copper(I) hydride (CuH)‐catalysed hydroamination of styrene with a prototype hydroxylamine ester by a recently reported [(dppbz)CuH] catalyst (dppbz≡{P^P}≡1,2‐bis(diphenylphosphino)‐benzene) is presented. A variety of plausible mechanistic avenues have been pursued by means of a sophisticated computational methodology, from which a general understanding of the factors controlling hydroamination catalysis emerged. The catalytically competent {P^P}Cu I hydride, which is predominantly present as its dimer, involves in irreversible hydrocupration proceeding with complete 2,1 regioselectivity to form a secondary {P^P}Cu I benzyl intermediate. Its interception with benzylamine ester produces the branched tertiary amine product and {P^P}Cu I benzoate upon intramolecular S N 2 disruption of the amine electrophile′s N−O linkage, to precede a highly rapid, strongly exergonic C−N bond‐forming reductive elimination. The {P^P}Cu I benzoate corresponds to the catalyst resting state and its conversion back into the {P^P}Cu I hydride upon transmetalation with a hydrosilane is turnover limiting. The effect of electronic perturbations at the amine electrophile upon the reaction rate for productive hydroamination catalysis and also non‐productive reduction of the hydroxylamine ester has been gauged, which unveiled a more fundamental insight into catalytic structure‐performance relationships.