Monovalent copper as a potential catalyst for formation of acetaldehyde via the migration of methyl radicals to the coordinated carbonyl in the complex (CO)Cu-CH3
aChemistry Department, NCRN, PO Box 9001, Beer-Sheva, Israel
bR. Bloch Coal Research Center and Chemistry Department, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, PO Box 653, Beer-Sheva, Israel
cThe College of Judea and Samaria, Ariel, Israel
Abstract:
Cuaq+ forms stable complexes with carbon monoxide in aqueous solutions. Furthermore it reacts very fast with aliphatic radicals. The reaction of Cu(CO)maq+ with methyl radicals, •CH3 was studied using the pulse-radiolysis technique. The results point out that methyl radicals react with Cu(CO)aq+ to form an unstable intermediate with a CuII-C σ bond identified as (CO)CuII-CH3+, k = (1.1±0.2) × 109 M−1 s−1. This intermediate has a strong LMCT charge transfer band (λmax = 385 nm, max = 2500 M−1 cm−1) which is similar to the absorption bands of other transient complexes with CuII-alkyl σ bonds. The coordinated carbon monoxide in (CO)CuII-CH3+ inserts into the copper—carbon bond (or rather the coordinated methyl migrates to the coordinated carbon monoxide ligand) at a rate of (3.0±0.8) × 102 s−1 to form the copperacetyl complex (CO)mCuII-C(CH3)=O+ (λmax = 480 nm, max = 2100 M−1 cm−1). The rate of formation of (CO)CuII-CH3+ and of the insertion reaction are pH independent. The complex (CO)mCuII-C(CH3)=O+ is also unstable and decomposes heterolytically to yield acetaldehyde and Cuaq2+ as the final stable products. This reaction is slightly pH dependent. The same reactivity pattern has been observed for the Cu(COnaq+ complexes (n = 2 or 3). The results clearly point out that CO remains coordinated to transient complexes of the type CuII-alkyl.