Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.131, No.43, 15627-15627, 2009
Cleavage of sp(3) C-O Bonds via Oxidative Addition of C-H Bonds
(PCP)Ir (PCP = kappa(3)-C6H3-2,6-[CH2P(t-Bu)(2)](2)) is found to undergo oxidative addition of the methyl-oxygen bond of etectron-poor methyl aryl ethers, including methoxy-3,5-bis(trifluoromethyl)benzene and methoxypentafluorobenzene, to give the corresponding aryloxide complexes (PCP)Ir(CH3)(OAr). Although the net reaction is insertion of the Ir center into the C-O bond, density functional. theory (DFT) calculations and a significant kinetic isotope effect [k(CH3OAr)/k(CD3OAr) = 4.3(3)] strongly argue against a simple insertion mechanism and in favor of a pathway involving C-H addition and alpha-migration of the OAr group to give a methylene complex followed by hydride-to-methylene migration to give the observed product. Ethoxy aryl ethers, including ethoxybenzene, also undergo C-O bond cleavage by (PCP)Ir, but the net reaction in this case is 1,2-elimination of ArO-H to give (PCP)Ir(H)(OAr) and ethylene. DFT calculations point to a low-barrier pathway for this reaction that proceeds through C-H addition of the ethoxy methyl group followed by beta-aryl oxide elimination and Loss of ethylene. Thus, both of these distinct C-O cleavage reactions proceed via initial addition of a C(sp(3))-H bond, despite the fact that such bonds are typically considered inert and are much stronger than C-O bonds.