Oxides Affording Phosphines(III) and Their Metal Catalysts

Oxides Affording Phosphines(III) and Their Metal Catalysts

pubs.acs.org/Organometallics Article A Mild One-Pot Reduction of Phosphine(V) Oxides Affording Phosphines(III) and Their Metal Catalysts Łukasz Kapusniak,́ Philipp N. Plessow, Damian Trzybinski,́ Krzysztof Wozniak,́ Peter Hofmann, and Phillip Iain Jolly* Cite This: Organometallics 2021, 40, 693−701 Read Online ACCESS Metrics & More Article Recommendations *sı Supporting Information ABSTRACT: The metal-free reduction of a range of phosphine(V) oxides employing oxalyl chloride as an activating agent and hexachlorodisilane as reducing reagent has been achieved under mild reaction conditions. The method was successfully applied to the reduction of industrial waste byproduct triphenylphosphine(V) oxide, closing the phosphorus cycle to cleanly regenerate triphenylphosphine(III). Mechanistic studies and quantum chemical calculations support the attack of the dissociated chloride anion of intermediated phosphonium salt at the silicon of the disilane as the rate-limiting step for deprotection. The exquisite purity of the resultant phosphine(III) ligands after the simple removal of volatiles under reduced pressure circumvents laborious purification prior to metalation and has permitted the facile formation of important transition metal catalysts. ■ INTRODUCTION Scheme 1. Phosphine Synthesis: Background and This a Applications of Phosphine(III) Ligands and Synthesis. Work Phosphines and their derivatives are of significant importance to both academic and industrial chemistry. In particular, within organic chemistry phosphine(III) compounds have a distin- guished history, mediating classical transformations such as the Appel,1 Mitsunobu,2 and Wittig3,4 reactions. Additionally, the ready modulation of electronic and steric properties of phosphine(III) has made them excellent ligands for the formation of well-defined transition metal complexes,5 although recalcitrant phosphine(V) oxides arise, when 6 Downloaded via KIT BIBLIOTHEK on April 16, 2021 at 16:05:05 (UTC). phosphine(III) compounds are employed as labile ligands or the metal complexes are simply decomposed, in the a (V) (V) ff (III) presence of a suitable oxidant.7 Arguably, the stoichiometric Left: (a) direct reduction of P OorP Sa ording P ; (b) conversion of P(V)OorP(V)S to activated phosphonium salt; (c) formation of phosphine(V) oxide waste from the above-named reduction of activated phosphonium salt to P(III); (d) conversion of See https://pubs.acs.org/sharingguidelines for options on how to legitimately share published articles. organic reactions presents an even greater issue, especially on activated phosphonium salt to phosphine−borane; (e) deprotection 3,4 (V) (III) the industrial scale, as the conversion of P O to the P of phosphine−borane affording P(III). Right-top: (f) BASFs con- oxidation state is nontrivial (vide infra). version of Ph3PO to Ph3P using phosgene and silicon. Right-bottom: Direct Reduction of Phosphine(V) Oxide. Given the (g) Paradies et al. recent conversion of Ph3PO to Ph3P using oxalyl significance of phosphine(III) compounds, a variety of chloride and pressurized hydrogen. Center-bottom: (h) this work. anaerobic syntheses have been reported.8,9 However, the sensitivity of phosphine(III) to oxidation (requiring only − TBAF,28 HSi(OEt) /Ti(O-i-Pr) ,29 PhSiH ,30 32 1,1,3,3- minutes to hours) has led to the widespread use of “protected” 3 4 3 tetramethyldisiloxane (TMDS) with CuX ,33 polymethyl- phosphines,10 such as phosphine−borane adducts11,12 and 2 hydrosiloxane (PMHS),34,35 1,3-diphenyldisiloxane phosphine(V) sulfides13,14 but predominantly phosphine(V) − oxides.15 17 These precursors tolerate the reaction conditions necessary to construct more complex architectures18 although Received: December 18, 2020 the protection must be removed in the penultimate12,19 or Published: March 5, 2021 final20,21 step of the ligand synthesis. Thus, much attention has been focused on the conversion of P(V)OtoP(III)15,16 (Scheme 1a), including the use of silanes and siloxanes such as 22−25 26 24,27 HSiCl3, HSiCl3/Ph3P, Si2Cl6, Si2Me6 with CsF/ © 2021 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.organomet.0c00788 693 Organometallics 2021, 40, 693−701 Organometallics pubs.acs.org/Organometallics Article 36 37 (DPDS), and (EtO)2MeSiH/(RO)2P(O)OH; aluminum this, a simple procedure for the conversion of 4 to 5 would be a 38,39 40 41 hydrides such as LiAlH4, LiAlH4/CeCl3, AlH3, and great advantage. Such a process might also permit access to 42 HAl(i-Bu)2; low-valent metals such as SmI2/HMPA other challenging phosphine(III) and metal catalysts as well as (hexamethylphosphoramide)43 or Cp TiCl /Mg;44 hydrocar- permitting the recovery of the valuable phosphine(III) ligands: 2 2 − bon/activated carbon;45 and electrochemical reduction.46 48 A “closing the phosphorus cycle” is of increasing importance due − mild iodine-catalyzed reduction of phosphine(V) oxides to environmental and availability concerns.82 84 Herein, we employing a sacrificial electron-rich phosphine was developed report a new activation/deprotection of phosphine(V) oxides by Laven and Kullberg,49 while Li et al.50 employed less without the use of harsh reaction conditions, metals, or expensive phosphite, although in both cases P(V)O- sacrificial phosphanes. Intermediate CPSs are directly con- containing contaminants must be removed from the final verted to desired phosphines by reaction with hexachlor- products. Thus, disadvantages of these procedures include odisilane. Mechanistic details have been elucidated by harsh reaction conditions, toxic and/or highly reactive, experimentation and supported by computation. The “one- potentially explosive reducing agents, narrow scope or pot” procedure affords excellent yields of pure phosphine(III) 51,52 52 undesirable side reactions, e.g.,C−P, C−O, or P− ligands that can be telescoped into formation of transition 53−56 N bond cleavage, and laborious column chromatography metal catalysts without the prior need for silica gel to purify the desired phosphine(III). chromatography. Reduction of Activated Chlorophosphonium Salts. (V) The inherent stability of the P O has compelled others to ■ RESULTS AND DISCUSSION explore sequential activation reduction methods, i.e., the conversion of the phosphine(V) oxide to more reactive Reduction of Activated CPSs with Disilane. In 1996, chlorophosphonium salts (CPS) and subsequent reduction BASF reported the generation of tetrachlorosilane (SiCl4) (Scheme 1b,c). Horner, Hoffmann, and Beck first published when the CPS, Ph3PCl2 (2), was heated with elemental silicon the reduction of chlorotriphenylphosphonium chloride at 185 °C.69 Not wanting to expose our ligand precursor to 57 (Ph3PCl2) in 1958, with both LiAlH4 and sodium. The such harsh reaction conditions, we hypothesized that following year a sequential activation and deprotection was hexachlorodisilane might serve as a suitable surrogate for published, converting triphenylphosphine(V) oxide (Ph3PO) elemental silicon and similarly generate 2 equiv of SiCl4 on fi rst to activated CPS, Ph3PCl2, before it was reduced to reactions with a CPS. The abundant industrial byproduct 58 3,4 triphenylphosphine (Ph3P) with sodium metal. Being readily Ph3PO (1) appeared to be the ideal test substrate, and was ff 59 a orded via inexpensive chlorinating reagents, CPSs have easily converted to activated Ph3PCl2 (2) with inexpensive also been reduced with aluminum/metal salts,60 alkali oxalyl chloride.59 Gratifyingly on reaction with 1.1 equiv of 57,58 57,61,62 63 45 1 metals, LiAlH4, thiols/Et3N, activated carbon, hexachlorodisilane (Si2Cl6) at room temperature, both H 64 46−48,65,66 31 Hantzsch ester/Et3N, electrochemically, elemental NMR and P NMR indicated the immediate, clean, and 67,68 69 70 29 aluminum or silicon, and hydrogenolysis, which may complete formation of Ph3P(3), with Si NMR showing only 71,72 δ − be catalyzed by frustrated Lewis pairs (FLPs). Harsh metal the formation of tetrachlorosilane, SiCl4 ( = 18.8 ppm). bases and Grignard reagents have even been used to deprotect Motivated by the ability of Si2Cl6 to reduce 2, we chose to certain CPSs.73 Alternatively, CPS can be converted to explore other disilanes (Table 1, entries 2−10): 1,1,2,2- − 74,75 76−79 phosphine boranes by either NaBH4 or LiBH4, tetrachloro-1,2-dimethyldisilane (Si Me Cl ), hexamethyl- “ ” 2 2 4 although ultimately the borane protecting group itself disilane (Si2Me6), and hexaphenyldisilane (Si2Ph6), which requires removal (Scheme 1b,d,e). might generate the corresponding attractive byproducts Motivation to Develop a New Facile Reduction of Phosphine(V) Oxides. Our interest in phosphine(V) oxides Table 1. Reaction of Phosphonium Salts with Disilanes reduction originates from our desire to explore bulky N- phosphinomethyl-functionalized N-heterocyclic carbene li- gands (NHCPs)80,81 as potential ligands for new olefin metathesis catalyst (Scheme 2).19 Progress has been severely a Scheme 2. Problematic Reduction of NHCP Precursor entry CPS 2a−c, X = disilane equiv time conv to 3 [%]a 1ClSi2Cl6 1.1 5 min 100 2ClSi2Me2Cl4 1.1 5 min 0 3ClSi2Me2Cl4 1.1 1 day 28 4ClSi2Me2Cl4 1.1 2 days 55 aSynthesis of NHCP 6 via the challenging reduction of phosphine(V) 5ClSi2Me2Cl4 1.1 3 days 72 oxide in azolium salt 4 to phosphine(III) 5. 6ClSi2Me2Cl4 1.1 4 days 78 7ClSi2Me2Cl4 1.1 5 days 83 8ClSiMe Cl 1.1 6 days 100 ffi 2 2 4 hampered due to di culties accessing azolium salt 5, with the 9ClSi2Me6 1.0 1 day 0 problematic reduction of 4 being achievable only with a large 10 Cl Si2Ph6 1.0 1 day 0 excess of trichlorosilane (27.0 equiv) in anhydrous degassed 11 OTf Si Cl 1.1 10 min 7 19 2 6 chlorobenzene at elevated temperature over 2 days. As well 12 OTf Si2Cl6 1.1 1 day 80 as the lengthy reaction time, we experienced some reprodu- 13 OTf Si2Cl6 1.1 2 days 100 Cl cibility issues, with the unsuccessful reduction being 14 BAr Si2Cl6 4 2 days 0 accompanied by the decomposition of the precious azolinium 4, previously obtained via a multistep synthesis.19 In light of aConversion judged by 31P NMR of 2a−c relative to 3.

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