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Mechanism and Activity of Ruthenium Olefin Metathesis Catalysts: The Role of Ligands and Substrates from a Theoretical Perspective
280
Citations
50
References
2004
Year
Materials ScienceInorganic ChemistryChemical EngineeringEngineeringAlkene MetathesisRuthenium Carbene CatalystsCatalytic SynthesisHeterogeneous CatalysisExcess EnergyOrganic ChemistryOrganometallic CatalysisCatalysisHomogeneous CatalysisChemistryMolecular CatalysisTheoretical PerspectiveRuthenium Olefin MetathesisOlefin Metathesis
The reaction mechanism of olefin metathesis by ruthenium carbene catalysts is studied by gradient-corrected density functional calculations (BP86). Alternative reaction mechanisms for the reaction of the "first-generation" Grubbs-type catalyst (PCy(3))(2)Cl(2)Ru=CH(2) (1) for the reaction with ethylene are studied. The most likely dissociative mechanism with trans olefin coordination is investigated for the metathesis reaction between the "first-" and the "second-generation" Grubbs-type catalysts 1 and (H(2)IMes)(PCy(3))Cl(2)Ru=CH(2) (2) with different substrates, ethylene, ethyl vinyl ether, and norbornene, and a profound influence of the substrate is found. In contrast to the degenerate reaction with ethylene, the reactions with ethyl vinyl ether and norbornene are strongly exergonic by 8-15 kcal/mol, and this excess energy is released after passing through the metallacyclobutane structure. While the metallacyclobutane is in a deep potential minimum for degenerate metathesis reactions, the energy barrier for the [2+2] cycloreversion vanishes for the most exergonic reactions. On the free energy surface under typical experimental conditions, the rate-limiting steps for the overall reactions are then either metallacyclobutane formation for 1 or phosphane ligand dissociation for 2.
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