Substituent and solvent effects in the insertion and isomerization of olefins by platinum (bis-phosphine) complexes: An ab initio study of the Pt(PR3)(2)H(propene)(+) model systems
S. Creve et al., Substituent and solvent effects in the insertion and isomerization of olefins by platinum (bis-phosphine) complexes: An ab initio study of the Pt(PR3)(2)H(propene)(+) model systems, ORGANOMETAL, 18(10), 1999, pp. 1967-1978
Traditional ab initio (HF, MP2) and density functional theory (DFT) calcula
tions are applied on the cationic Pt(PR3)(2)(H)(propene)(+) complexes (R =
H, F, CH3) in order to study the insertion of propene in the Pt-H bond. In
general, insertion and beta-elimination barriers tend to be small. Insertio
n barriers of about 10 kJ/mol are found for R = H and 3-9 kJ/mol for R = CH
3, and an almost negligible insertion barrier appears for R = F (2-4 kJ/mol
). Since propene insertion can generate both linear propyl and branched iso
propyl complexes, it is possible to study the distribution between these tw
o complexes, which is of importance for catalyst selectivity. It turns out
that linear complexes are favored over branched ones, in agreement with ava
ilable experimental data. The energy gap between the two forms decreases in
the order R = Me > R = H > R = F. Another point of interest is the double-
bond isomerization of propene which can arise from isopropyl complexes. Two
pathways are identified: a direct exchange of beta-hydrogens in the beta-a
gostic isopropyl complex ("isopropyl rock") and a process in which isomeriz
ation occurs by association and dissociation of a coordinating solvent mole
cule (acetonitrile was used in the present study). Which one of these two p
rocesses dominates seems to depend on the nature of the solvent and the sub
stituents on the phosphines. Even though very few experimental data are ava
ilable, a satisfying agreement is found between optimized geometries and X-
ray data of a related compound as well as between computed and experimental
product distributions. The calculated "isopropyl rock" barriers are also i
n accord with recent NMR measurements from which the barrier could be deter
mined. Finally, a crude estimate of the isomerization rate seems to agree w
ith the theoretical predictions.