TY - JOUR
T1 - Nickel-Mediated Radical Capture
T2 - Evidence for a Concerted Inner-Sphere Mechanism
AU - Spielvogel, Ethan H.
AU - Yuan, Jonathan
AU - Hoffmann, Norah M.
AU - Diao, Tianning
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.
PY - 2025/6/11
Y1 - 2025/6/11
N2 - Nickel catalysis enables cross-coupling of a broad scope of C(sp3) moieties by mediating carbon-carbon bond formation from carbon-centered radicals. A widely proposed mechanism involves stepwise radical capture by a nickel(II) complex that forms a nickel(III) intermediate. The alternative pathway, a concerted radical capture and carbon-carbon bond formation, has been largely overlooked. This study investigates the ligand effect and kinetics of nickel-mediated radical capture and reductive elimination, which provide evidence to distinguish between stepwise and concerted pathways. Through radical clock experiments, spectroscopic investigation, electrochemical studies, and multivariate linear regression analysis of a series of [(pybox)Ni(Ar)]BArF4 complexes, we established a strong correlation between the rate of radical capture and HOMO and LUMO energies, along with positive charge stabilization at nickel and the aryl actor ligand. These data rule out the stepwise formation of a nickel(III) intermediate and support a concerted pathway. Redox-active nitrogen ligands and nonredox-active phosphine ligands exhibit contrasting reactivity, with only redox-active ligands facilitating radical capture and carbon-carbon bond formation. This critical role of ligand redox activity can be attributed to the participation of the LUMO in bond cleavage and formation. Among redox-active ligands, bidentate and tridentate ligands exhibit similar rates, suggesting a consistent mechanism with relatively minimal ancillary ligand effect. Our results highlight the critical interplay between ligand electronics, sterics, and orbital contributions, offering valuable design principles for nickel-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions involving radical intermediates.
AB - Nickel catalysis enables cross-coupling of a broad scope of C(sp3) moieties by mediating carbon-carbon bond formation from carbon-centered radicals. A widely proposed mechanism involves stepwise radical capture by a nickel(II) complex that forms a nickel(III) intermediate. The alternative pathway, a concerted radical capture and carbon-carbon bond formation, has been largely overlooked. This study investigates the ligand effect and kinetics of nickel-mediated radical capture and reductive elimination, which provide evidence to distinguish between stepwise and concerted pathways. Through radical clock experiments, spectroscopic investigation, electrochemical studies, and multivariate linear regression analysis of a series of [(pybox)Ni(Ar)]BArF4 complexes, we established a strong correlation between the rate of radical capture and HOMO and LUMO energies, along with positive charge stabilization at nickel and the aryl actor ligand. These data rule out the stepwise formation of a nickel(III) intermediate and support a concerted pathway. Redox-active nitrogen ligands and nonredox-active phosphine ligands exhibit contrasting reactivity, with only redox-active ligands facilitating radical capture and carbon-carbon bond formation. This critical role of ligand redox activity can be attributed to the participation of the LUMO in bond cleavage and formation. Among redox-active ligands, bidentate and tridentate ligands exhibit similar rates, suggesting a consistent mechanism with relatively minimal ancillary ligand effect. Our results highlight the critical interplay between ligand electronics, sterics, and orbital contributions, offering valuable design principles for nickel-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions involving radical intermediates.
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U2 - 10.1021/jacs.5c01554
DO - 10.1021/jacs.5c01554
M3 - Article
C2 - 40443109
AN - SCOPUS:105006934104
SN - 0002-7863
VL - 147
SP - 19632
EP - 19642
JO - Journal of the American Chemical Society
JF - Journal of the American Chemical Society
IS - 23
ER -