Aromatic N-heterocycles have been used in electrochemical CO2 reduction, but their precise role is not yet fully understood. We used first-principles quantum chemistry to determine how the molecular sizes and substituent groups of these molecules affect their standard redox potentials involving various proton and electron transfers. We then use that data to generate molecular Pourbaix diagrams to find the electrochemical conditions at which the aromatic N-heterocycle molecules could participate in multiproton and electron shuttling in accordance with the Sabatier principle. While one-electron standard redox potentials for aromatic N-heterocycles can vary significantly with molecule size and the presence of substituent groups, the two-electron and two-proton standard redox potentials depend much less on structural modifications and substituent groups. This indicates that a wide variety of aromatic N-heterocycles can participate in proton, electron, and/or hydride shuttling under suitable electrochemical conditions.
A catalyst-controlled, chemodivergent
reaction of pyrrolyl-α-diazo-β-ketoesters
with enol ethers is reported. While Cu(II) catalysts selectively promoted
a [3 + 2] cycloaddition to provide pyrrolyl-substituted 2,3-dihydrofuran
(DHF) acetals, dimeric Rh(II) catalysts afforded 6-hydroxyindole-7-carboxylates
via an unreported [4 + 2] benzannulation. The choice of enol ether
proved to be crucial in determining both regioselectivity and yield
of the respective products (up to 91% yield for Cu(II) and 82% for
Rh(II) catalysis). Furthermore, the DHF acetals were shown to serve
as precursors to 7-hydroxyindole-6-carboxylates (isomeric to the indoles
formed from Rh) and highly substituted furans in the presence of Lewis
acids. Thus, from a common pyrrolyl-α-diazo-β-ketoester,
up to three unique heterocyclic scaffolds can be achieved based on
catalyst selection.
The development of a Lewis acid-catalyzed, intramolecular ring-opening benzannulation of 5-(indolyl)2,3-dihydrofuran acetals is described. The resulting 1-hydroxycarbazole-2-carboxylates are formed in up to 90% yield in 1 h. The dihydrofuran acetals are readily accessed from the reactions of enol ethers and α-diazo-β-indolyl-β-ketoesters. To highlight the method’s synthetic utility, a formal total synthesis of murrayafoline A, a bioactive carbazole-containing natural product, was undertaken.
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