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Phosphonium Formation by Facile Carbon–Phosphorus Reductive Elimination from Gold(III)

Abstract

A recent trend in homogeneous gold catalysis has been the development of oxidative transformations relying on Au(I)/Au(III) redox cycling. Typically, phosphine-supported Au(I) precatalysts are used in the presence of strong oxidants to presumably generate phosphine Au(III) intermediates. Herein, we disclose that such Au(III) complexes can undergo facile C(aryl)-P reductive elimination to afford phosphonium salts, which have been spectroscopically and crystallographically characterized. Mechanistic studies indicate that this process occurs from cationic species at temperatures as low as -20 °C but can be accelerated in the presence of nucleophiles, such as acetonitrile and phosphines, via a five-coordinate intermediate. Importantly, this study highlights that irreversible C(aryl)-P reductive elimination is a feasible decomposition or activation pathway for phosphine-supported Au(III) catalysts and should not be ignored in future reaction development.

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