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A computational study of solution equilibria of platinum-based ethylene hydroamination catalytic species including solvation and counterion effects: Proper treatment of the free energy of solvation

✍ Scribed by Pavel A. Dub; Rinaldo Poli


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
528 KB
Volume
324
Category
Article
ISSN
1381-1169

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✦ Synopsis


A DFT/B3LYP study of the effect of the explicit inclusion of the Me 4 P + cation (as a model of nBu 4 P + ) on the calculation of solution equilibria involving anionic Pt II complexes is reported. The calculated complexes are models of species that potentially participate in the low-energy portion of the catalytic cycle of the ethylene hydroamination by aniline catalyzed by the PtBr 2 /(nBu 4 P)Br system, namely (nBu 4 P) 2 [PtBr 4 ] (1), (nBu 4 P) 2 [Pt 2 Br 6 ] (1 ), (nBu 7), and cis-[PtBr 2 (C 2 H 4 ) 2 ] (8). The relative energies are based on gas-phase geometry optimizations followed by C-PCM calculations of the solvation effects in dichloromethane and aniline at 25 • C and 150 • C. Three different approaches have been considered to describe the relative energies in solution: E CPCM ( E el gas + G solv ), G v CPCM ( E el gas + E ZPVE gas + E v gas -T S v gas + G solv ) and G CPCM ( H gas -T S gas + G solv ), where E v gas

and S v gas includes only the vibrational contribution and G solv for each compound is the solvation free energy resulting from the C-PCM calculation. The cation-anion association was found favourable in both solvents at the E CPCM and G v CPCM levels, but nearly neutral at the G CPCM level. Consideration of the associated salts has a drastic effect on the energy scheme but significantly changes the relative energies only when doubly charged complexes are involved. The energy changes for equilibria that involve only neutral of singly charged species are not greatly affected by the cation inclusion. The G CPCM approach provides results in greater agreement with the available equilibrium data.