}} }} }} }} }} In the
Hoveyda–Grubbs catalysts, the benzylidene ligands have a chelating
ortho-isopropoxy group attached to the benzene rings. The
ortho-isopropoxybenzylidene moiety is sometimes referred to as a Hoveyda chelate. The chelating oxygen atom replaces a
phosphine ligand, which in the case of the 2nd generation catalyst, gives a completely phosphine-free structure. In the following year, the second-generation of the catalyst was described in nearly simultaneous publications by two independent lab groups. By changing the steric and electronic properties of the chelate, the initiation rate of the catalyst can be modulated, such as in the
Zhan catalysts. Hoveyda–Grubbs catalysts are easily formed from the corresponding Grubbs catalyst by the addition of the chelating ligand and the use of a phosphine scavenger like
copper(I) chloride: The second-generation Hoveyda–Grubbs catalysts can also be prepared from the 1st generation Hoveyda–Grubbs catalyst by the addition of the NHC: In 2006, a water-soluble Grubbs catalyst was prepared by attaching a
polyethylene glycol chain to the
imidazolidine group. This catalyst is used in the
ring-closing metathesis reaction in water of a diene carrying an
ammonium salt group making it water-soluble as well. == Third-generation Grubbs catalyst (fast-initiating catalysts) ==