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Royal Society of Chemistry, New Journal of Chemistry, 1(40), p. 521-527, 2016

DOI: 10.1039/c5nj02564h

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PdII-mediated integration of isocyanides and azide ions might proceed via formal 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition between RNC ligands and uncomplexed azide

This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Abstract

Reaction between equimolar amounts of trans-[PdC(PPh3)(2)(CNR)][BF4] (R = t-Bu 1, Xyl 2) and diisopropylammonium azide 3 gives the tetrazolate trans-[PdCl(PPh3)(2)(CN(4)t-Bu)] (67%, 4) or trans-[PdCl(PPh3)(2)(CN(4)Xyl)] (72%, 5) complexes. 4 and 5 were characterized by elemental analyses (C, H, N), HRES1(+)-MS, H-1 and C-13{H-1} NMR spectroscopies. In addition, the structure of 4 was elucidated by a single-crystal X-ray diffraction. DFT calculations showed that the mechanism for the formal cycloaddition (CA) of N-3(-) to trans-[PdCl(PH3)(2)(CNMe)](+) is stepwise. The process is both kinetically and thermodynamically favorable and occurs via the formation of an acyclic NNNCN-intermediate. The second step of the formal CA, i.e. cyclization, is rate Limiting. Despite the fact that the substitution of CNMe by the N-3(-) Ligand is slightly thermodynamically favorable, we were unable to find paths on the potential energy surface for hypothetical CA between uncomplexed isocyanide and palladium-bound azide. Thus, we believe that the experimentally observed palladium tetrazolate complexes are, in fact, generated from the negatively charged uncomplexed azide and the positively charged metal-bound isocyanide species, and this reaction path is favorable from the viewpoint of Coulomb attraction.