The aqueous synthesis of Pd(II) complexes with alkylated tripeptides led to the hydrolysis of the peptides at low pH values and mixtures of complexed peptides were formed. A non-aqueous synthetic… Click to show full abstract
The aqueous synthesis of Pd(II) complexes with alkylated tripeptides led to the hydrolysis of the peptides at low pH values and mixtures of complexed peptides were formed. A non-aqueous synthetic route allowed the formation and isolation of single products and their characterization. Pd(II) complexes with α-Asp(OR)AlaGly(OR), β-Asp(OR)AlaGly(OR), and TrpAlaGly(OR) (R = H or alkyl) as tri and tetradentate chelates were characterized. The tridentate coordination mode was accompanied by a fourth monodentate ligand that was shown to participate in both ligand exchange reactions and a direct removal to form the tetradentate coordination mode. The tetradentate coordination revealed a rare a hemi labile carbonyl goup coordination mode to Pd(II). Reactivity with small molecules such as ethylene, acids, formate, and episulfide was investigated. Under acidic conditions and in the presence of ethylene; acetaldehyde was formed. The Pd(II) is a soft Lewis acid and thiophilic and the complexes abstract sulfur from episulfide at apparent modest catalytic rates. The complexes adopt a square planar geometry according to a spectroscopic analysis and DFT calculations that were employed to evaluate the most energetically favorable coordination geometry and compared with the observed infrared and NMR data.
               
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