화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.116, No.9, 3792-3800, 1994
Homogeneous Catalytic Carbonylation of Nitroaromatics .8. Kinetic and Mechanistic Studies of the Carbon-Nitrogen Bond and Product Forming Steps from Ru(pH(2)Pch(2)CH(2)Pph(2))(Co)(2)(C(O)Och3)(2) - The Turnover Limiting Reactions in the Catalytic Cycle
Mechanistic studies of the reaction of (OC-6-32)-dicarbonylbis(methoxycarbonyl)[1,2-bis(diphenylphosphino)ethane] ruthenium(II) with p-toluidine to form N,N’-di-p-tolylurea are presented. The overall reaction was studied from 22 to 103 degrees C and was found to be first order with respect to each reactant. Spectroscopic and kinetic studies between 22 and 52 degrees C showed that the reaction proceeds through a species, Ru(dppe)(CO)(2)[C(O)OCH3][C(O)-NH(p-tolyl)], which is in equilibrium with Ru(dppe)(CO)(2)[C(O)OCH3](2). The mechanism of the C-N bond forming step is proposed to involve nucleophilic attack on a coordinated Ru-CO moiety with subsequent cleavage of the C(O)-OMe bond. The methoxycarbonyl-carbamoyl complex decomposes in a unimolecular fashion to liberate CH3OH, the starting catalyst Ru(dppe)(CO)(3), and p-tolyl isocyanate, which is immediately scavenged by excess amine to form N,N’-di-p-tolylurea. Studies of the analogous bis(isopropylcarbamoyl) complex provided supporting evidence for isocyanate elimination. Thermolysis of (OC-6-32)-dicarbonylbis(isopropylcarbamoyl)[1,2-bis(diphenylphosphino)ethane] ruthenium(II) yields isopropylamine, the starting catalyst Ru(dppe)(CO)(3), and isopropyl isocyanate, which reacts with isopropylamine over time to form diisopropylurea. The kinetics obtained from all of the stoichiometric reactions were combined into a suitable expression and found to lie on the same Arrhenius activation energy plot as the overall rate of the catalytic reaction.