6533b7d5fe1ef96bd12647e7

RESEARCH PRODUCT

The Grignard Reaction − Unraveling a Chemical Puzzle

Raphael Mathias PeltzerJürgen GaussMichele CascellaOdile EisensteinOdile Eisenstein

subject

Nucleophilic addition010405 organic chemistrySchlenk equilibriumRadicalGrignard reactionGeneral Chemistry010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesBiochemistryCatalysis0104 chemical sciences[CHIM.THEO]Chemical Sciences/Theoretical and/or physical chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundColloid and Surface ChemistryEnergy profilechemistryNucleophileFluorenoneComputational chemistry[CHIM]Chemical Sciences[CHIM.COOR]Chemical Sciences/Coordination chemistryReactivity (chemistry)ComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS

description

More than 100 years since its discovery, the mechanism of the Grignard reaction remains unresolved. Ambiguities arise from the concomitant presence of multiple organomagnesium species and the competing mechanisms involving either nucleophilic addition or the formation of radical intermediates. To shed light on this topic, quantum-chemical calculations and ab initio molecular dynamics simulations are used to study the reaction of CH3MgCl in tetrahydrofuran with acetaldehyde and fluorenone as prototypical reagents. All organomagnesium species coexisting in solution due to the Schlenk equilibrium are found to be competent reagents for the nucleophilic pathway. The range of activation energies displayed by all of these compounds is relatively small. The most reactive species are a dinuclear Mg complex in which the substrate and the nucleophile initially bind to different Mg centers and the mononuclear dimethyl magnesium. The radical reaction, which requires the homolytic cleavage of the Mg-CH3 bond, cannot occur unless a substrate with a low-lying π*(CO) orbital coordinates the Mg center. This rationalizes why a radical mechanism is detected only in the presence of substrates with a low reduction potential. This feature, in turn, does not necessarily favor the nucleophilic addition, as shown for the reaction with fluorenone. The solvent needs to be considered as a reactant for both the nucleophilic and the radical reactions, and its dynamics is essential for representing the energy profile. The similar reactivity of several species in fast equilibrium implies that the reaction does not occur via a single process but by an ensemble of parallel reactions.

10.1021/jacs.9b11829http://hdl.handle.net/10852/83918