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Impact of the Methylene Bridge Substitution in Chelating NHC-Phosphine Mn(I) Catalyst for Ketone Hydrogenation.

Ekaterina S GulyaevaRuqaya BuhaibehMohamed BoundorKarim AzouziJérémy WillotStéphanie BastinCarine DuhayonChristine LepetitOleg A FilippovJean-Baptiste SortaisDmitry A ValyaevYves Canac
Published in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2024)
Systematic modification of the chelating NHC-phosphine ligand (NHC = N-heterocyclic carbene) in highly efficient ketone hydrogenation Mn(I) catalyst fac-[(Ph 2 PCH 2 NHC)Mn(CO) 3 Br] has been performed and the catalytic activity of the resulting complexes was evaluated using acetophenone as a benchmark substrate. While the variation of phosphine and NHC moieties led to inferior results than for a parent system, the incorporation of a phenyl substituent into the ligand methylene bridge improved catalytic performance by ca. 3 times providing maximal TON values in the range of 15000-20000. Mechanistic investigation combining experimental and computational studies allowed to rationalize this beneficial effect as an enhanced stabilization of reaction intermediates including anionic hydride species fac-[(Ph 2 PC(Ph)NHC)Mn(CO) 3 H] - playing a crucial role in the hydrogenation process. These results highlight the interest of such carbon bridge substitution strategy being rarely employed in the design of chemically non-innocent ligands.
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