Gaurav Bhalla
University of Southern California
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Publication
Featured researches published by Gaurav Bhalla.
Chemical Communications | 2002
Roy A. Periana; Xiang Yang Liu; Gaurav Bhalla
A novel, thermally stable, homogeneous Ir catalyst for the anti-Markovnikov, hydroarylation of olefins is shown to operate by arene CH activation via the formation of a bisacac-O,O phenyl-Ir(III) species.
Green Chemistry | 2011
Gaurav Bhalla; Steven M. Bischof; Somesh K. Ganesh; Xiang Yang Liu; Clinton Jones; Andrey Borzenko; William J. Tenn; Daniel H. Ess; Brian G. Hashiguchi; Kapil S. Lokare; Chin Hin Leung; Jonas Oxgaard; William A. Goddard; Roy A. Periana
The mechanism of the hydroarylation reaction between unactivated olefins (ethylene, propylene, and styrene) and benzene catalyzed by [(R)Ir(μ-acac-O,O,C3)-(acac-O,O)2]2 and [R-Ir(acac-O,O)2(L)] (R = acetylacetonato, CH3, CH2CH3, Ph, or CH2CH2Ph, and L = H2O or pyridine) Ir(III) complexes was studied by experimental methods. The system is selective for generating the anti-Markovnikov product of linear alkylarenes (61:39 for benzene + propylene and 98:2 for benzene + styrene). The reaction mechanism was found to follow a rate law with first-order dependence on benzene and catalyst, but a non-linear dependence on olefin. 13C-labelling studies with CH313CH2-Ir-Py showed that reversible β-hydride elimination is facile, but unproductive, giving exclusively saturated alkylarene products. The migration of the 13C-label from the α to β-positions was found to be slower than the C–H activation of benzene (and thus formation of ethane and Ph-d5-Ir-Py). Kinetic analysis under steady state conditions gave a ratio of the rate constants for CH activation and β-hydride elimination (kCH: kβ) of ∼0.5. The comparable magnitude of these rates suggests a common rate determining transition state/intermediate, which has been shown previously with B3LYP density functional theory (DFT) calculations. Overall, the mechanism of hydroarylation proceeds through a series of pre-equilibrium dissociative steps involving rupture of the dinuclear species or the loss of L from Ph-Ir-L to the solvento, 16-electron species, Ph-Ir(acac-O,O)2-Sol (where Sol refers to coordinated solvent). This species then undergoes trans to cisisomerization of the acetylacetonato ligand to yield the pseudo octahedral species cis-Ph-Ir-Sol, which is followed by olefin insertion (the regioselective and rate determining step), and then activation of the C–H bond of an incoming benzene to generate the product and regenerate the catalyst.
Science | 2003
Roy A. Periana; Oleg Mironov; Doug Taube; Gaurav Bhalla; Clinton Jones
Journal of Molecular Catalysis A-chemical | 2004
Roy A. Periana; Gaurav Bhalla; William J. Tenn; Kenneth J. H. Young; Xiang Yang Liu; Oleg Mironov; Clinton Jones; Vadim R. Ziatdinov
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2005
William J. Tenn; Kenneth J. H. Young; Gaurav Bhalla; Jonas Oxgaard; William A. Goddard; Roy A. Periana
Organometallics | 2010
Steven M. Bischof; Daniel H. Ess; Steven K. Meier; Jonas Oxgaard; Robert J. Nielsen; Gaurav Bhalla; William A. Goddard; Roy A. Periana
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2003
Antek Wong-Foy; Gaurav Bhalla; Xiang Yang Liu; Roy A. Periana
Organometallics | 2005
Gaurav Bhalla; Jonas Oxgaard; William A. Goddard; Roy A. Periana
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2005
Gaurav Bhalla; Xiang Yang Liu; Jonas Oxgaard; William A. Goddard; Roy A. Periana
Organometallics | 2005
Gaurav Bhalla; Jonas Oxgaard; William A. Goddard; Roy A. Periana