Esaïe Reusser, Barbara Milani and Martin Albrecht*,
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Ethylene polymerization with late transition metals offers the possibility of including polar monomers for the generation of functionalized polymers. However, several palladium complexes, including those with pyridyl-functionalized pyridinium amidate (PYA) ligands [Pd(Me)(MeCN)(N,N′)]+ (with N = PYA, N′ = pyridyl), undergo rapid β-hydrogen elimination and form predominantly butene derivatives. Here, we have modified a range of elements in the catalyst design, including (i) the PYA substituents (Me, Bu, CH2OCH3), (ii) the chelating imine donor, (iii) the labile neutral ligand L, and (iv) the noncoordinating anion. These variations indicated factors that prevent (L = lutidine) or slow down ethylene conversion (imine = oxalyl, triazolyl, and pyrazolyl) and factors that accelerate it. In particular, the absence of MeCN as the coordinating ligand and the introduction of BArF as the counterion are highly beneficial and lead to efficient ethylene conversion and formation of oligomers with C20–C30 chain length. Time-dependent reaction monitoring suggests a step-growth mechanism rather than the more common chain-growth mechanism with the initial formation of butene and the subsequent conversion of butene and higher olefins. Indeed, also higher α-olefins such as 1-hexene were oligomerized with this in situ-prepared catalytic PYA palladium system.
期刊介绍:
Organometallics is the flagship journal of organometallic chemistry and records progress in one of the most active fields of science, bridging organic and inorganic chemistry. The journal publishes Articles, Communications, Reviews, and Tutorials (instructional overviews) that depict research on the synthesis, structure, bonding, chemical reactivity, and reaction mechanisms for a variety of applications, including catalyst design and catalytic processes; main-group, transition-metal, and lanthanide and actinide metal chemistry; synthetic aspects of polymer science and materials science; and bioorganometallic chemistry.