Ok, so far as my understanding goes, the palladium acetate is used because it is air stable and so, it allows the ligands to be attached in situ. Yeah I'm pretty lost when I'm looking at these reaction conditions. There are a few phosphine ligands they use with 2 phosphine groups per molecule and some with only one.
Am I right that they are basically kicking off the acetates and replacing with phosphine's ligands via a transmetalation?
I'm lost.
For example if the phosphine ligand was tritertbutyl phosphine, would this result in a hexadentate palladium complex? Meh...