A Combined Kinetic and Computational Analysis of the Palladium-Catalysed Formylation of Aryl Bromides

21 August 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Aryl aldehydes are key synthetic intermediates in the manufacturing of active pharmaceutical ingredients. They are generated on scale (>1000 kg) through the palladium-catalysed formylation of aryl bromides using syngas (CO:H2). The best-in-class catalyst system for this reaction employs di-1-adamantyl-n-butylphosphine (cataCXium A), palladium(II) acetate, and tetramethylethylenediamine. Despite nearly 20 years since its initial report, a mechanistic understanding of this system remains incomplete. Here we use automation, kinetic analysis, and DFT calculations to develop a new mechanistic model for this best-in-class catalyst. We show that a combination of the migratory insertion step and dihydrogen activation step are likely involved in the turnover-limiting sequence. The reaction kinetics are responsive to the nature of the substrate, with electron-rich aryl bromides reacting faster and more selectively than their electron-poor counterparts due to the influence of electronics in the migratory insertion step. Our findings overturn the current paradigm and provide new mechanistic insight into palladium-catalysed formylation of aryl bromides.

Keywords

Formylation
carbonylation
aldehyde
syn gas
mechanism

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Supporting Information
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Details of experiment methods, kinetics measurements and DFT calculations
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