| Literature DB >> 27282773 |
Thilo Krause1, Sabrina Baader1, Benjamin Erb1, Lukas J Gooßen1.
Abstract
Amide bond-forming reactions are of tremendous significance in synthetic chemistry. Methodological research has, in the past, focused on efficiency and selectivity, and these have reached impressive levels. However, the unacceptable amounts of waste produced have led the ACS GCI Roundtable to label 'amide bond formation avoiding poor atom economy' as the most pressing target for sustainable synthetic method development. In response to this acute demand, we herein disclose an efficient one-pot amide coupling protocol that is based on simple alkynes as coupling reagents: in the presence of a dichloro[(2,6,10-dodecatriene)-1,12-diyl]ruthenium catalyst, carboxylate salts of primary or secondary amines react with acetylene or ethoxyacetylene to vinyl ester intermediates, which undergo aminolysis to give the corresponding amides along only with volatile acetaldehyde or ethyl acetate, respectively. The new amide synthesis is broadly applicable to the synthesis of structurally diverse amides, including dipeptides.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27282773 PMCID: PMC4906407 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms11732
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Atom-efficient approaches to amide bond formation.
(a) Thermal or Lewis acid-mediated dehydration of ammonium carboxylates. (b) Catalytic addition of alcohols to nitriles. (c) Dehydrogenative coupling of alcohols with amines. (d) Oxidative coupling of aldehydes and amines. (e) Oxidative coupling of alkynes and amines.
One-pot activation and amidation of carboxylic acids with acetylene*.
Scope of the amidation with acetylene as the activating agent*.
Scope of the amidation with ethoxyacetylene as activating agent*.
Figure 2Catalytic amide condensation via enol esters.
The proposed catalytic cycle starts with the coordination of a carboxylate and an alkyne to the ruthenium catalyst, followed by an addition of the carboxylate to the alkyne. After protonolysis, the enol ester intermediate is released, which then acts as an acylating agent for the amine, yielding the desired amide along with the carbonyl-byproduct.