Investigations of the reactivity of palladium and platinum complexes with molecular oxygen and characterization of a gold(III)-alkene complex
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Scheuermann, Margaret Louise
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Abstract
Understanding the reactivity of metal complexes with molecular oxygen will facilitate the
development of catalysts that can enable the widespread use of molecular oxygen as an oxidant
for organic synthesis. This thesis presents two new classes of reactions between metal complexes
and molecular oxygen. Neutral five-coordinate Pt complexes were tested for reactivity in the
presence of molecular oxygen. In arene solution, the complexes (tBuMe2nacnac)PtMe3 (1,
tBuMe2nacnac- = [((4-tBu-2,6-Me2C6H2)NC(CH3))2CH]-), (Me3Me-nacnac)PtMe3 (2,
Me3Me-nacnac- = [((2,4,6-Me3C6H2)NC(CH3))2CCH3]-), and (tBu2PyPyr)PtMe3 (3,
tBu2PyPyr- = 3,5-di-tert-butyl-2-(2-pyridyl)pyrrolide) reacted immediately with oxygen to form
peroxo species in which two oxygen atoms bridge between the metal center and a carbon atom in
the ligand backbone. In contrast, no reaction between (iPr2AnIm)PtMe3 (4a, iPr2AnIm- = [o-
C6H4-{N(C6H3iPr2)}(CH=NC6H3iPr2)]-) or (Me3AnIm)PtMe3 (4b, Me3AnIm- = [o-C6H4-
{N(C6H2Me3)}(CH=NC6H2Me3)]-) and oxygen was observed. As activation of oxygen by five-
coordinate PtIV species was found to involve cooperation between the metal center and the
ligand, the ability of the ligand to participate in the oxygen binding appears to be a vital
component. Oxygen atom transfer reactions of the novel peroxo species are also presented. In a
separate study, an unusual reaction involving the activation of both molecular oxygen and a C-H
bond at the same metal center was investigated. Pd(P(Ar)(tBu)2)2 (15, Ar = naphthyl) was found
to react with molecular oxygen at room temperature in arene solvent to form a hydroxide dimer
in which one equivalent of phosphine per Pd was lost and the remaining phosphine was
cyclometalated through the naphthyl ring. At low temperature, two intermediates were observed.
The nature of these intermediates suggests a mechanism involving initial reaction of Pd(P(Ar)
(tBu)2)2 with O2 followed by the C-H activation step. In a final chapter unrelated to oxygen
reactivity, the generation and characterization of a goldIII-alkene complex by NMR and X-ray
crystallography is presented. Such species have been proposed as intermediates in catalytic
reactions but until recently none had been observed.
Description
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013
