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AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

SHINING A SPOTLIGHT ON AFRICAN RESEARCH

chemical engineering

New mechanistic insights into the iridium-phosphanooxazoline-catalyzed hydrogenation of unfunctionalized olefins: A DFT and kinetic study

Chemistry - A European Journal, Volume 9, No. 1, Year 2003

The reaction mechanism of the iridium-phosphanooxazoline-catalyzed hydrogenation of unfunctionalized olefins has been studied by means of density functional theory calculations (B3LYP) and kinetic experiments. The calculations suggest that the reaction involves an unexpected IrIII-IrV catalytic cycle facilitated by coordination of a second equivalent of dihydrogen. Thus, in the rate-determining migratory insertion of the substrate alkene into an iridium-hydride bond, simultaneous oxidative addition of the bound dihvdrogen occurs. The kinetic data shows that the reaction is first order with respect to hydrogen pressure. This is interpreted in terms of an endergonic coordination of this second equivalent of dihydrogen, although a rate-determining step, in which coordinated solvent is replaced by dihydrogen, could not be ruled out. Furthermore, the reaction was found to be zeroth order with respect to the alkene concentration. This correlates well with the calculated exothermicity of substrate coordination, and the catalyst is thus believed to coordinate an alkene in the resting state. On the basis of the proposed catalytic cycle, calculations were performed on a full-sized system with 88 atoms to assess the appropriateness of the model calculations. These calculations were also used to explain the enantioselectivity exerted by the catalyst.

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