Deciphering the mechanism of copper-catalyzed: N -arylation between aryl halides and nitriles: A DFT study

  • Khalil Ahmad*
  • , Bilal Ahmad Khan
  • , Tashfeen Akhtar
  • , Jahanzeb Khan
  • , Soumendra K. Roy
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

The mechanism of the CuI/DMEDA-catalyzed tandem hydrolysis/N-arylation of benzonitrile with aryl iodide was studied using the DFT method. Two possible copper complexes, Int1 [CuI(DMEDA)] and Int2 (anionic analogue of Int1), were investigated for four plausible reaction pathways involved in the hydrolysis of benzonitrile. In paths A and C, the iodide ligand of Int1 and Int2 needs to be replaced with a hydroxide ion to give hydroxide-coordinated intermediates Int1-1 and Int2-1, which can eventually react with benzonitrile to hydrolyze their nitrile group to yield intermediates Int1-3 and Int2-3, respectively. In contrast, the iodide ligand can initially be replaced by benzonitrile to form benzonitrile-coordinated intermediates Int1-2 and Int2-2 (described in paths B and D), which react with the hydroxide ion to hydrolyze the nitrile group of the coordinated benzonitrile ligand to give Int1-3 and Int2-3, respectively. The intrinsic reaction coordinate (IRC) analysis of the transition states involved in the hydrolysis validated paths A and C. The activation energy and overall energy barrier for path A (25.9 and 10.6 kcal mol-1) is lower than that for path C (27.5 and 19.7 kcal mol-1), respectively. Intermediate Int1-3 tautomerizes to give intermediate Int1-4, which undergoes C-N coupling reaction with iodobenzene via an oxidative addition/reductive elimination mechanism. The hydrolysis of the nitrile group was proven to be the rate-limiting step since it has a higher activation energy (25.9 kcal mol-1) than that of the oxidative addition (22.9 kcal mol-1) and reductive elimination reactions (6.9 kcal mol-1).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)19200-19207
Number of pages8
JournalNew Journal of Chemistry
Volume43
Issue number48
DOIs
StatePublished - 2019
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry and the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique.

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Catalysis
  • General Chemistry
  • Materials Chemistry

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