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An unusual nickel-copper-mediated alkyne homocoupling reaction for the active-template synthesis of [2]rotaxanes

An unusual nickel-copper-mediated alkyne homocoupling reaction for the active-template synthesis of [2]rotaxanes
An unusual nickel-copper-mediated alkyne homocoupling reaction for the active-template synthesis of [2]rotaxanes
We report on an unusual Ni-/Cu-mediated alkyne homocoupling reaction, directed through the cavity of a bidentate macrocyclic ligand by chelated metal ions to furnish [2]rotaxanes in excellent (up to 95%) yields. This is the first active metal template reaction to employ an octahedral coordination geometry metal ion, Ni(II), and the study provides some interesting mechanistic insights into the mixed bimetallic reaction mechanism. The mixed-metal catalyst system was discovered serendipitously when Cu(I) was added to a Ni(II)-catalyzed alkyne homocoupling reaction in an attempt to facilitate chloride?acetylide ligand exchange. The role of Cu(I) in the reaction is, in fact, quite different from that originally intended. The effectiveness of having both nickel and copper present can be rationalized by the nature of a ?-activated, ?-bonded, bimetallic intermediate in which the substitution of Ni(II) for one Cu(I) ion in the classic bimetallic Glaser reaction mechanism apparently aids reductive elimination of the acetylide ligands. The system may prove useful for the development of general mixed-metal protocols for catalytic alkyne coupling reactions as well as being a highly effective route to rotaxanes with bis-acetylene threads, which are potentially useful for materials applications (insulated molecular wires) and in molecular machines (rigid, nonfolding axles).
0002-7863
6243-6248
Crowley, James D.
2d5e4e7f-b835-496a-a7db-e1a1856226db
Goldup, Stephen M.
0a93eedd-98bb-42c1-a963-e2815665e937
Gowans, Nicholas D.
21c29fff-1ce3-4069-aaf2-bff3499687b3
Leigh, David A.
826353b6-267f-44cd-a7e7-adf0c34f66c9
Ronaldson, Vicki E.
d345332b-8a06-48a5-88c9-74d444686af7
Slawin, Alexandra M.Z.
45b99a30-c91c-4306-be37-6b7b0ec0affd
Crowley, James D.
2d5e4e7f-b835-496a-a7db-e1a1856226db
Goldup, Stephen M.
0a93eedd-98bb-42c1-a963-e2815665e937
Gowans, Nicholas D.
21c29fff-1ce3-4069-aaf2-bff3499687b3
Leigh, David A.
826353b6-267f-44cd-a7e7-adf0c34f66c9
Ronaldson, Vicki E.
d345332b-8a06-48a5-88c9-74d444686af7
Slawin, Alexandra M.Z.
45b99a30-c91c-4306-be37-6b7b0ec0affd

Crowley, James D., Goldup, Stephen M., Gowans, Nicholas D., Leigh, David A., Ronaldson, Vicki E. and Slawin, Alexandra M.Z. (2010) An unusual nickel-copper-mediated alkyne homocoupling reaction for the active-template synthesis of [2]rotaxanes. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 132 (17), 6243-6248. (doi:10.1021/ja101121j). (PMID:20377187)

Record type: Article

Abstract

We report on an unusual Ni-/Cu-mediated alkyne homocoupling reaction, directed through the cavity of a bidentate macrocyclic ligand by chelated metal ions to furnish [2]rotaxanes in excellent (up to 95%) yields. This is the first active metal template reaction to employ an octahedral coordination geometry metal ion, Ni(II), and the study provides some interesting mechanistic insights into the mixed bimetallic reaction mechanism. The mixed-metal catalyst system was discovered serendipitously when Cu(I) was added to a Ni(II)-catalyzed alkyne homocoupling reaction in an attempt to facilitate chloride?acetylide ligand exchange. The role of Cu(I) in the reaction is, in fact, quite different from that originally intended. The effectiveness of having both nickel and copper present can be rationalized by the nature of a ?-activated, ?-bonded, bimetallic intermediate in which the substitution of Ni(II) for one Cu(I) ion in the classic bimetallic Glaser reaction mechanism apparently aids reductive elimination of the acetylide ligands. The system may prove useful for the development of general mixed-metal protocols for catalytic alkyne coupling reactions as well as being a highly effective route to rotaxanes with bis-acetylene threads, which are potentially useful for materials applications (insulated molecular wires) and in molecular machines (rigid, nonfolding axles).

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More information

Published date: 8 April 2010
Organisations: Organic Chemistry: Synthesis, Catalysis and Flow

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 370659
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/370659
ISSN: 0002-7863
PURE UUID: cdce29e2-56ed-42d4-9d33-e443aa804f53
ORCID for Stephen M. Goldup: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3781-0464

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Date deposited: 03 Nov 2014 13:36
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 18:20

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Contributors

Author: James D. Crowley
Author: Nicholas D. Gowans
Author: David A. Leigh
Author: Vicki E. Ronaldson
Author: Alexandra M.Z. Slawin

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