Agenda

26 Sep 2022 12:00

The Grignard Reaction: Solving a Century-old Puzzle by Molecular Simulations

Campus Scientifico Mestre

Department of Molecular Sciences and Nanosystems and the European Centre for Living Technology (ECLT) are glad to invite you to the seminar:

"The Grignard Reaction: Solving a Century-old Puzzle by Molecular Simulations"

Michele Cascella
University of Oslo, Norway 
Visiting Scholar at ECLT

26th September 2022, 12.00 AM

Go here to participate through Zoom Meeting!

ID: 82074548825
passcode: seminar1

Abstract:
The Grignard Reaction: Solving a Century-old Puzzle by Molecular Simulations The Grignard reaction is a venerable process for the synthesis of carbon-carbon bonds discovered in 1900, which paved the way to modern organometallic synthesis. The reaction exploits the so-called Grignard reagent RMgX (with X a halogen, and R an organic residue), a compound characterised by strong affinity to electron-poor carbons like in carbonyl moieties. Grignardlike reagents are daily used for organic synthesis and constitute today a critical asset for the production of a broad range of valuable compounds. For example, 85% of the drugs manufactured by the pharmaceutical industry require the use of these reagents at least in one step of their synthesis [1]. Despite their extensive use, the molecular structures in solution and associated reaction mechanisms of these main group organometallic reagents are, to date, still little known or understood. This hampers the optimisation of their performance, with detrimental effects on both the costs for their industrial use, and on the environmental impact of related industrial processes. Here, I will first present how by applying state-of-the-art computational modelling based on ab initio molecular dynamics and enhanced sampling techniques, we were able to characterise the Schlenk equilibrium for model CH3MgCl, which regulates the interconversion of the reagent into all its monomeric and dimeric isoforms [2]. I will then describe the mechanistic insights of the Grignard reaction against model acetaldehyde substrate [3]. The winning strategy to obtain this 120-year long waited result lies in adopting an accurate and unbiased physical description of all the species in solution, including the solvent itself. In particular, I will show how solvent fluctuations at the first coordination shell of Mg are key for the evolution of the Schlenk equilibrium, and how solvent dynamics is directly connected to the mechanism(s) of the Grignard reaction. Finally, I will briefly discuss how the nature of the substrate can promote the competition of a radical-based mechanism against the most commonly understood nucleophilic attack.

References
1. DB Collum Acc. Chem. Res. 1993, 26, 227; G Wu, M Huang, Chem. Rev. 2006, 106, 2596
2. RM Peltzer, O Eisenstein, A Nova, M Cascella J. Phys. Chem B. 2017, 121, 4226
3. RM Peltzer, J Gauss, O Eisenstein, M Cascella J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2020, 142, 2984 1

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Supported by:

PhD Program in STBNM

PhD Program in Chemistry

Language

The event will be held in English

Organized by

DSNM / ECLT

Link

http://unive.zoom.us/j/82074548825

Downloads

Poster 348 KB

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