Non-innocent Role of the Halide Ligand in the Copper-Catalyzed Olefin Aziridination Reaction
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Abstract
In the context of copper-catalyzed nitrene transfer
to olefins, many systems operate upon mixing a CuX salt (X =
halide, OTf) and a polydentate N-based ligand, assuming that the
X ligand is displaced from the coordination sphere toward a
counterion position. Herein, we demonstrated that such general
assumption should be in doubt since studies carried out with the
well-defined copper(I) complexes (TTM)CuCl and [(TTM)Cu-
(NCMe)]PF6 (TTM = tris(triazolyl)methane ligand) demonstrate
a dual behavior from a catalytic and mechanistic point of view that
exclusively depends on the presence or absence of the chloride
ligand bonded to the metal center. When coordinated, the
turnover-limiting step corresponds to the formation of the
carbon−nitrene bond, whereas in its absence, the highest barrier
corresponds to the formation of the copper−nitrene intermediate
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Bibliographic citation
Rodríguez, M. R., M Rodríguez, A., López-Resano, S., Pericàs, M. A., Díaz-Requejo, M. M., Maseras, F., & Pérez, P. J. (2022). Non-innocent Role of the Halide Ligand in the Copper-Catalyzed Olefin Aziridination Reaction. In ACS Catalysis (Vol. 13, Issue 1, pp. 706–713). American Chemical Society (ACS). https://doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.2c05069















