S. Rajagopal et Af. Spatola, MECHANISM OF PALLADIUM-CATALYZED TRANSFER HYDROGENOLYSIS OF ARYL CHLORIDES BY FORMATE SALTS, Journal of organic chemistry, 60(5), 1995, pp. 1347-1355
Chlorotoluene was hydrodehalogenated using formic acid and its salts i
n the presence of palladium-on-carbon (10% Pd/C). The hydrogen-donatin
g ability of formate salts was found to depend on the counterion of th
e formates. The activity decreased in the order: Cs+ approximate to K > NH4+ > Na+ > NHEt(3)(+) > Li+ > H+. The addition of a base such as
ammonium acetate to HCOOH accelerated the hydrogenolysis reaction rate
establishing that HCOO- ion is essential for the reaction to proceed.
Similarly, addition of a potassium salt to lithium formate increased
the rate, again suggesting the importance of the counterion. Hydrogeno
lysis experiments using molecular hydrogen revealed that HCl formed du
ring the reaction deactivated the catalyst but did not poison it compl
etely. Kinetic studies showed that the rate of hydrodechlorination by
the transfer process was independent of the substrate (2-chlorotoluene
) concentration. Both hydrogen donor (HCOONa) and the catalyst (10% Pd
/C) exhibited first order dependence. Based on the kinetic data and th
e observed isotope effect, a mechanism has been proposed involving abs
traction of formyl hydrogen by the catalyst as the rate-limiting step.
The rate expression derived was R = k' [HCOONa][Pd/C]. At higher conc
entrations of hydrogen donor, the dissociation of HCOONa was affected
and as a consequence the rate expression changed to R = k'alpha[HCOONa
][Pd/Cl], where alpha is the degree of dissociation of HCOONa.