Equilibrium studies of α-diimine displacement in cationic allylpalladium(II) complexes by monodentate N-donors and the mechanism of allyl amination by triethylamine and pyridine

Abstract
In the cationic complexes [Pd(η3-allyl)(L–L)]ClO4[L–L = 1,2-bis(imino)ethanes or 2-(iminomethyl)-pyridines] the chelated α-diimine was rapidly and reversibly displaced by secondary amines (N-methylaniline, morpholine or piperidine), triethylamine and 4-substituted pyridines. The observed equilibrium constants Ke, increased with increasing basicity and decreasing steric requirements of the entering N-donor. They strongly depend on the α-diimine and decrease in the order RNCHCHNR RNC(Me)C(Me)NR ≈ NC5H4(CHNR)-2 (R = C6HaOMe-4). The cationic complex [Pd(η3-C3H5){NC5H4(CHNC6H4OMe-4)-2}]+ underwent a slow allyl amination by triethylamine or pyridine (L′) in the presence of fumaronitrile (fn), yielding [Pd(η2-fn){NC5H4(CHNC6H4OMe-4)-2}] and Et3[graphic omitted]CH2CHCH2 or C5H5[graphic omitted]CH2CHCH2. Kinetic studies showed that the pseudo-first-order rate constants for amination (kobs) are given by kobs=k2[L′], suggesting a direct bimolecular attack of L′ on the η3-allyl ligand. Amination hardly proceeds in the presence of the less-activated olefin dimethyl fumarate (dmf). The π-accepting properties of the olefinic ligands play an important role also in the reaction of Et3[graphic omitted]CH2CHCH2 or C5H5[graphic omitted]CH2CHCH2 with [Pd(η2-olefin){NC5H4(CHNC5H4OMe-4)-2}](olefin = fn or dmf), i.e. the reverse of the amination reaction.

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