Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.130, No.45, 14940-14940, 2008
Hydroaminoalkylation of Unactivated Olefins with Dialkylamines
The intermolecular addition of the a-C-H bonds of unactivated dialkylamines to unactivated olefins in the presence of the chloro amido complex [TaCl3(NEt2)(2)](2) (2) is described. This process forms the branched insertion products in high yields (up to 96%) and selectivities, and a rare example of an intermolecular amine-olefin coupling reaction that does not require preactivation of either substrate. The reaction is shown to encompass the addition of the primary C-H bonds in linear- and branched-methylamines, as well as secondary C-H bonds in higher dialkylamines. The related chloroanilido complex [TaCl3(NMePh)(2)](2) (4) is also shown to catalyze the addition of N-alkyl-arylamines to olefins at temperatures as low as 90 degrees C. H-1 NMR spectroscopy, identification of the catalyst structure, and deuterium-labeling experiments all suggest that reactions catalyzed by 2 and 4 occur by turnover-limiting generation of an eta(2)-imine complex. These labeling studies also imply that more favorable partitioning of the eta(2)-imine complex toward reaction with alkene versus regeneration of the starting bis-amido complex accounts for the higher reactivity of the mixed halide amido catalyst versus a homoleptic amido complex.