Due to the low intrinsic acidity of amines, palladium-catalyzed C-N cross-coupling has been plagued continuously by the necessity to employ strong, inorganic, or insoluble bases. To surmount the many practical obstacles associated with these reagents, we utilized a commercially available dialkyl triarylmonophosphine-supported palladium catalyst that facilitates a broad range of C-N coupling reactions in the presence of weak, soluble bases. The mild and general reaction conditions show extraordinary tolerance for even highly base-sensitive functional groups. Additionally, insightful heteronuclear NMR studies using N-labeled amine complexes provide evidence for the key acidifying effect of the cationic palladium center.
A novel oxidative
N-heterocyclic carbene-catalyzed reaction pathway
has been discovered. Alkyl and aryl enals undergo β-hydroxylation
via oxygen atom transfer from electron-deficient nitrobenzenes, followed
by trapping of the resultant acyl azolium by the solvent. The proposed
mechanism involves a single electron transfer event to initiate the
reaction followed by radical recombination. This represents a profound
mechanistic departure from the established two-electron disconnects
in NHC catalysis.
An unprecedented NHC catalyzed annulation of enals to form 3,4-disubstituted cyclopentanones has been discovered. Aryl enals undergo dimerization in the presence of a single-electron oxidant to form C2 symmetric cyclopentanones. A cross-reaction has also been developed, allowing for the synthesis of differentially substituted cyclopentanones. Mechanistically, the reaction is thought to proceed through radical intermediates, further establishing the synthetic utility of this class of reactivity.
Recent
advances in Pd-catalyzed carbon–nitrogen cross-coupling
have enabled the use of soluble organic bases instead of insoluble
or strong inorganic bases that are traditionally employed. The single-phase
nature of these reaction conditions facilitates their implementation
in continuous flow systems, high-throughput optimization platforms,
and large-scale applications. In this work, we utilized an automated
microfluidic optimization platform to determine optimal reaction conditions
for the couplings of an aryl triflate with four types of commonly
employed amine nucleophiles: anilines, amides, primary aliphatic amines,
and secondary aliphatic amines. By analyzing trends in catalyst reactivity
across different reaction temperatures, base strengths, and base concentrations,
we have developed a set of general recommendations for Pd-catalyzed
cross-coupling reactions involving organic bases. The optimization
algorithm determined that the catalyst supported by the dialkyltriarylmonophosphine
ligand AlPhos was the most active in the coupling of each amine nucleophile.
Furthermore, our automated optimization revealed that the phosphazene
base BTTP can be used to facilitate the coupling of secondary alkylamines
and aryl triflates.
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