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Alkene Hydrosilylation Using Tertiary Silanes with alpha-Diimine Nickel Catalysts. Redox-Active Ligands Promote a Distinct Mechanistic Pathway from Platinum Catalysts

Author(s): Pappas, Iraklis; Treacy, Sean; Chirik, Paul J

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Abstract: Combination of the readily available α-diimine ligand, ((ArN═C(Me))2 Ar = 2,6-iPr2–C6H3), (iPrDI) with air-stable nickel(II) bis(carboxylates) generated a highly active catalyst exhibiting anti-Markovnikov selectivity for the hydrosilylation of alkenes with a variety of industrially relevant tertiary alkoxy- and siloxy-substituted silanes. A combination of the method of continuous variations with stoichiometric studies identified the formally Ni(I) hydride dimer, [(iPrDI)NiH]2 as the nickel compound formed following reduction of the carboxylate ligands. For the hydrosilylation of 1-octene with (EtO)3SiH, a rate law of [Ni]1/2[1-octene][(EtO)3SiH] in combination with deuterium-labeling studies establish dissociation of the nickel hydride dimer followed by fast and reversible alkene insertion into (iPrDI)NiH, consistent with turnover-limiting C–Si bond formation. The hydrosilylation of 1-octene with triethoxysilane, a reaction performed commercially in the silicones industry on a scale of >5 000 000 kg/year, was conducted on a 10 g scale with 96% yield and >98% selectivity for the desired product. Silicone cross-linking, another major industrial application of homogeneous hydrosilylation, was also demonstrated using the air-stable nickel and ligand precursors.
Publication Date: 24-May-2016
Citation: Pappas, Iraklis, Treacy, Sean, Chirik, Paul J. (2016). Alkene Hydrosilylation Using Tertiary Silanes with alpha-Diimine Nickel Catalysts. Redox-Active Ligands Promote a Distinct Mechanistic Pathway from Platinum Catalysts. ACS CATALYSIS, 6 (4105 - 4109. doi:10.1021/acscatal.6b01134
DOI: doi:10.1021/acscatal.6b01134
ISSN: 2155-5435
Pages: 4105 - 4109
Type of Material: Journal Article
Journal/Proceeding Title: ACS CATALYSIS
Version: Final published version. This is an open access article.



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