posted on 2024-07-29, 13:06authored byPartha Mondal, Nilangshu Mandal, Arun K. Pal, Ayan Datta
The mechanism of palladium-catalyzed
annulation reactions of benzamide-
and anilide-type aromatic systems with maleimides is investigated
using density functional theory. Double C–H bond activation
is key to forming the desired annulation product. The first C–H
bond activation for anilide- and amide-type ligands can occur at the ortho and benzylic C–H bonds, while the second C–H
activation occurs at the meta carbon of the aromatic
rings. For the anilide-type system, ortho and benzylic
C–H bond activations occur via four- and five-membered palladacycles,
respectively. In contrast, for the benzamide-type system, ortho and benzylic C–H bond activations occur via
five- and six-membered palladacycles, respectively. The energy span
model suggests that the initial C–H bond activation step at
the benzylic position determines the turnover frequency for both anilide-
and benzamide-type systems. Energy decomposition analysis and distortion-interaction/activation-strain
analyses are employed to understand the electronic and steric factors
controlling the turnover frequency-determining transition state.