Nucleophilic Substitution at Heteroatoms-Identity Substitution Reactions at Phosphorus and Sulfur Centers: Do They Proceed in a Concerted (SN2) or Stepwise (A-E) Way?

Molecules. 2022 Jan 18;27(3):599. doi: 10.3390/molecules27030599.

Abstract

The mechanisms of three selected identity substitution reactions at phosphorus and sulfur occurring with stereospecific inversion have been investigated using density functional theory (DFT). The first identity reaction between methoxyl anion and methyl ethylphenylphosphinate 1 reported in 1963 has been shown to proceed in a stepwise fashion according to the addition-elimination (A-E) mechanism involving formation of a pentacoordinate phosphorus intermediate (TBI-1). In contrast, the results of DFT studies of the identity chloride exchange reaction in (ethoxy)ethylphosphonochloridothionate 3 in acetone solution provided evidence that it proceeds synchronously according to the classical Ingold's SN2-P mechanism. DFT calculations of the methoxyl-methoxy exchange reaction at sulfur in methyl p-toluenesulfinate 4 catalyzed by trifluoroacetic acid in methanol revealed that it proceeds stepwise (A-E mechanism), involving the formation of the high-coordinate sulfurane intermediate. In both identity transesterification reactions, 1 and 4, the transiently formed trigonal bipyramidal intermediates with the two methoxyl groups occupying apical positions (TBI-1 and TBI-4) have higher free energy barriers for the Berry-type pseudorotation than those for direct decomposition to starting phosphinate and sulfinate ensuring stereospecific inversion of configuration at the phosphinyl and sulfinyl centers. Thus, the DFT method proved its usefulness in the distinction between both mechanisms that are often indistinguishable by kinetic measurements.

Keywords: DFT calculations; mechanism; nucleophilic substitution; phosphorus; stereochemistry; sulfur.