Keeping an eye on all the players: The combination of bulky phosphonium tags and pressurized sample infusion transforms electrospray ionization mass spectrometry into a tool capable of producing dense data on the relative concentrations of all components of a catalytic reaction, such as the palladium‐catalyzed coupling of an aryl iodide with phenylacetylene (see graph).
Real-time
monitoring of the Suzuki–Miyaura reaction using
mass spectrometry during sequential addition of the various reaction
components suggests that a dynamic series of equilibria exist in these
solutions. Depending on conditions, the boronic acid can be dehydrated,
deprotonated, hydroxylated (or alkoxylated), or fluorinated. Palladium–phosphine
species present include Pd(0) (to which the aryl iodide rapidly oxidatively
adds), the Pd(II) aryl iodide complex, a cationic Pd(II) species formed
by dissociation of the iodide ligand, and the Pd(II) bisaryl complex
that ultimately extrudes the product through reductive elimination.
No fluorinated or hydr(alk-)oxylated palladium complexes were observed
under catalytic conditions. Several transmetalation combinations were
excluded as reactive partners, but several possibilities remain, and
more than one mechanism is likely to be operative, even under similar
conditions.
The rate of hydrodehalogenation of aryl iodides with a palladium catalyst in methanol exhibits a strong primary kinetic isotope effect from both CD3OD and CH3OD, suggesting that deprotonation plays a major role in the mechanism.
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