A new palladium-catalyzed arylation process based on C-H activation has been developed. The utilization of pyridine-containing directing groups allows the beta-arylation of carboxylic acid derivatives and gamma-arylation of amine derivatives. Both primary and secondary sp3 C-H bonds, as well as sp2 C-H bonds, are reactive.
The transition-metal-catalyzed functionalization of C-H bonds is a powerful method for generating carbon-carbon bonds. Although significant advances to this field have been reported during the last decade, many challenges remain. First, most of the methods are substrate-specific and thus cannot be generalized. Second, conversions of unactivated (i.e. not benzylic or alpha to heteroatom) sp 3 C-H bonds to C-C bonds are rare, with most examples limited to t-butyl groups-a conversion that is inherently simple because there are no β-hydrogens that can be eliminated. Finally, the palladium, rhodium, and ruthenium catalysts routinely used for the conversion of C-H bonds to C-C bonds are expensive. Catalytically active metals that are cheaper and less exotic (e.g. copper, iron, and manganese) are rarely used.This Account describes our attempts to provide solutions to these three problems. We have developed a general method for directing-group-containing arene arylation by aryl iodides. Using palladium acetate as the catalyst, we arylated anilides, benzamides, benzoic acids, benzylamines, and 2-substituted pyridine derivatives under nearly identical conditions. We have also developed a method for the palladium-catalyzed auxiliary-assisted arylation of unactivated sp 3 C-H bonds. This procedure allows for the β-arylation of carboxylic acid derivatives and the γ-arylation of amine derivatives. Furthermore, copper catalysis can be used to mediate the arylation of acidic arene C-H bonds (i.e. those with pKa values <35 in DMSO). Using a copper iodide catalyst in combination with a base and a phenanthroline ligand, we successfully arylated electron-rich and electron-deficient heterocycles and electron-poor arenes possessing at least two electron-withdrawing groups. The reaction exhibits unusual regioselectivity: arylation occurs at the most hindered position. This coppercatalyzed method supplements the well-known C-H activation/borylation methodology, in which functionalization usually occurs at the least hindered position. We also describe preliminary investigations to determine the mechanisms of these transformations. We anticipate that other transition metals, including iron, nickel, cobalt, and silver, will also be able to facilitate deprotonation/arylation reaction sequences.
We have developed a method for auxiliary-directed, palladium-catalyzed β-arylation and alkylation of sp 3 and sp 2 C-H bonds in carboxylic acid derivatives. The method employs a carboxylic acid 2-methylthioaniline-or 8-aminoquinoline amide substrate, aryl or alkyl iodide coupling partner, palladium acetate catalyst, and an inorganic base. By employing 2-methylthioaniline auxiliary, selective monoarylation of primary sp 3 C-H bonds can be achieved. If arylation of secondary sp 3 C-H bonds is desired, 8-aminoquinoline auxiliary may be used. For alkylation of sp 3 and sp 2 C-H bonds, 8-aminoquinoline auxiliary affords the best results. Some functional group tolerance is observed and amino-and hydroxyacid derivatives can be functionalized. Preliminary mechanistic studies have been performed. A palladacycle intermediate has been isolated, characterized by X-ray crystallography, and its reactions have been studied.
CONSPECTUS In recent years, carbon–hydrogen bond functionalization has evolved from an organometallic curiosity to mainstream applications in the synthesis of complex natural products and drugs. The use of C–H bonds as a transformable functional group is advantageous because these bonds are the most abundant functionality in organic molecules. One-step conversion of these bonds to the desired functionality shortens synthetic pathways, saving reagents, solvents, and labor. Less chemical waste is generated as well, showing that this chemistry is environmentally beneficial. This Account describes the development and use of bidentate, monoanionic auxiliaries for transition-metal-catalyzed C–H bond functionalization reactions. The chemistry was initially developed to overcome the limitations with palladium-catalyzed C–H bond functionalization assisted by monodentate directing groups. By the use of electron-rich bidentate directing groups, functionalization of unactivated sp3 C–H bonds under palladium catalysis has been developed. Furthermore, a number of abundant base-metal complexes catalyze functionalization of sp2 C–H bonds. At this point, aminoquinoline, picolinic acid, and related compounds are among the most used and versatile directing moieties in C–H bond functionalization chemistry. These groups facilitate catalytic functionalization of sp2 and sp3 C–H bonds by iron, cobalt, nickel, copper, ruthenium, rhodium, and palladium complexes. Exceptionally general reactivity is observed, enabling, among other transformations, direct arylation, alkylation, fluorination, sulfenylation, amination, etherification, carbonylation, and alkenylation of carbon–hydrogen bonds. The versatility of these auxilaries can be attributed to the following factors. First, they are capable of stabilizing high oxidation states of transition metals, thereby facilitating the C–H bond functionalization step. Second, the directing groups can be removed, enabling their use in synthesis and functionalization of natural products and medicinally relevant substances. While the development of these directing groups presents a significant advance, several limitations of this methodology are apparent. The use of expensive second-row transition metal catalysts is still required for efficient sp3 C–H bond functionalization. Furthermore, a disadvantage is the need to install and subsequently remove the relatively expensive directing group.
A general method for copper-catalyzed arylation of sp 2 C-H bonds with pKa's below 35 has been developed. The method employs aryl halide as the coupling partner, lithium alkoxide or K 3 PO 4 base, and DMF, DMPU, or mixed DMF/xylenes solvent. A variety of electron-rich and electron-poor heterocycles such as azoles, caffeine, thiophenes, benzofuran, pyridine oxides, pyridazine, and pyrimidine can be arylated. Furthermore, electron-poor arenes possessing at least two electronwithdrawing groups on benzene ring can also be arylated. Two arylcopper-phenanthroline complex intermediates were independently synthesized.
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