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Nickel-catalyzed ester carbonylation promoted by imidazole-derived carbenes and salts.

Changho YooShrabanti BhattacharyaXin Yi SeeDrew W CunninghamSebastian Acosta-CalleSteven T PerriNathan M WestDawn C MasonChris D MeadeChristopher W OsbornePhillip W TurnerRandall W KilgoreJeff KingJeffrey H CowdenJavier M GrajedaAlexander J M Miller
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2023)
Millions of tons of acetyl derivatives such as acetic acid and acetic anhydride are produced each year. These building blocks of chemical industry are elaborated into esters, amides, and eventually polymer materials, pharmaceuticals, and other consumer products. Most acetyls are produced industrially using homogeneous precious metal catalysts, principally rhodium and iridium complexes. We report here that abundant nickel can be paired with imidazole-derived carbenes or the corresponding salts to catalyze methyl ester carbonylation with turnover frequency (TOF) exceeding 150 hour -1 and turnover number (TON) exceeding 1600, benchmarks that invite comparisons to state-of-the-art rhodium-based systems and considerably surpass known triphenylphosphine-based nickel catalysts, which operate with TOF ~7 hour -1 and TON ~100 under the same conditions.
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