American Chemical Society, Inorganic Chemistry, 18(51), p. 9683-9693, 2012
DOI: 10.1021/ic300923c
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Unlike some other Ir(III) hydrides, the aminopyridine complex [(2-NH(2)-C(5)NH(4))IrH(3)(PPh(3))(2)] (1-PPh(3)) does not insert CO(2) into the Ir-H bond. Instead 1-PPh(3) loses H(2) to form the cyclometalated species [(κ(2)-N,N-2-NH-C(5)NH(4))IrH(2)(PPh(3))(2)] (2-PPh(3)), which subsequently reacts with CO(2) to form the carbamato species [(κ(2)-O,N-2-OC(O)NH-C(5)NH(4))IrH(2)(PPh(3))(2)] (10-PPh(3)). To study the insertion of CO(2) into the Ir-N bond of the cyclometalated species, a family of compounds of the type [(κ(2)-N,N-2-NR-C(5)NH(4))IrH(2)(PR'(3))(2)] (R = H, R' = Ph (2-PPh(3)); R = H, R' = Cy (2-PCy(3)); R = Me, R' = Ph (4-PPh(3)); R = Ph, R' = Ph (5-PPh(3)); R = Ph, R' = Cy (5-PCy(3))) and the pyrimidine complex [(κ(2)-N,N-2-NH-C(4)N(2)H(3))IrH(2)(PPh(3))(2)] (6-PPh(3)) were prepared. The rate of CO(2) insertion is faster for the more nucleophilic amides. DFT studies suggest that the mechanism of insertion involves initial nucleophilic attack of the nitrogen lone pair of the amide on CO(2) to form an N-bound carbamato complex, followed by rearrangement to the O-bound species. CO(2) insertion into 1-PPh(3) is reversible in the presence of H(2) and treatment of 10-PPh(3) with H(2) regenerates 1-PPh(3), along with Ir(PPh(3))(2)H(5).