Literature DB >> 27381976

Hydroacenes Made Easy by Gold(I) Catalysis.

Ruth Dorel1, Paul R McGonigal1, Antonio M Echavarren2,3.   

Abstract

A novel strategy for the synthesis of partially saturated acene derivatives has been developed based on a Au(I) -catalyzed cyclization of 1,7-enynes. This method provides straightforward access to stable polycyclic products featuring the backbone of the acene series, up to nonacene.
© 2016 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

Entities:  

Keywords:  1,7-enynes; Sonogashira coupling; acenes; cycloaddition; gold(I) catalysis

Year:  2016        PMID: 27381976      PMCID: PMC5132091          DOI: 10.1002/anie.201604952

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl        ISSN: 1433-7851            Impact factor:   15.336


Acenes—a class of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) made up of n linearly fused benzene rings—have been extensively studied in recent years on account of their distinctive electronic properties, which make them attractive candidates for use in molecular electronics.1 However, the application of the higher acenes (n≥6) as functional materials is limited by the rapid decrease of both solubility and stability as the number of annealed rings grows.2 Although syntheses of the parent acenes have been reported up to and including nonacene (n=9), the low stability of the higher acenes makes isolation a formidable challenge, requiring inert matrices.3 One of the most common strategies to curb the intrinsic photo‐instability of the higher acenes is the attachment of suitable stabilizing substituents,4 predominantly bulky groups close to the most reactive central rings. Nevertheless, many of these derivatives still suffer from decomposition, even in dilute solution. Another approach to circumvent acene instability is the use of protecting groups that reduce their reactivity, allowing for long‐term storage as well as imparting additional solubility, before deprotection reveals the acene.3, 5 In this regard, partially saturated acenes, which have been extensively employed as direct precursors of the corresponding fully conjugated acenes,3c, 6 can be considered to be “hydrogen‐protected”,7 exhibiting improved solubilities and excellent stabilities. The synthesis of partially hydrogenated acene derivatives has been achieved by direct reduction of the corresponding acenes or quinones.7, 8 However, these methods often require harsh conditions and are prone to produce regioisomeric mixtures. Therefore, general methods to selectively obtain partially saturated acenes still remain elusive. Cyclizations of enynes catalyzed by gold(I) complexes have emerged over the last decade as one of the most powerful tools to construct complex polycyclic architectures from relatively simple substrates under mild reaction conditions,9 and they have been successfully applied to the synthesis of functionalized aromatic frameworks.10 We have reported the cyclization of 1,6‐ and 1,7‐enynes bearing an aryl substituent at the alkyne terminus in the presence of gold(I), respectively affording naphthalene and polyhydrogenated anthracene derivatives through formal [4+2] cycloadditions.11 The cyclizations of certain 1,7‐enynes, bearing an aryl group bonded to the alkene, also afford polyhydrogenated anthracenes in the presence of gold(I) at high temperatures.12 Herein, we report ready access to stable functionalized higher hydroacenes 1 through the gold(I)‐catalyzed cyclization of suitable 1,7‐enynes in which the alkene is part of an enol ether function. We envisioned that the gold(I)‐catalyzed cyclization of the 1,7‐enynes that result from a palladium‐catalyzed Sonogashira cross‐coupling between an aryl iodide and key precursors 2, would afford hydroacenes 1 upon aromatization by elimination of a molecule of methanol (Scheme 1). By combining these two robust and broad scope metal‐catalyzed methods, a wide variety of linear hydroacenes 1 could in principle be obtained by annulation of a wide range of readily available aryl iodides.
Scheme 1

Conceptual approach to hydroacenes.

Conceptual approach to hydroacenes. The simplest 1,7‐enyne 3 a, which was assembled from iodobenzene and 2 a, was chosen as the model substrate to explore the gold(I)‐catalyzed cyclization to form 5,12‐dihydrotetracene (1 a; Table 1). The cyclization of 3 a was first examined at 25 °C in the presence of cationic gold(I) complexes A–C (10 mol %), spanning a wide range of electrophilicity. Gratifyingly, all three gold complexes successfully delivered the desired dihydrotetracene 1 a as the major product. The most electrophilic catalyst C caused the concomitant formation of a rearrangement byproduct in approximately 15 % yield, as determined by NMR spectroscopy, whereas the only identifiable byproduct in the reactions with complexes A and B was tetracycle 1 a′, which is an intermediate during the formation of 1 a.13 Thus, commercially available JohnPhos–AuI catalyst A was selected for further optimization. Lowering the catalyst loading to 5 mol % (Table 1, entry 4) increased the amount of 1 a′ that remained, even when extended reaction times were employed. Complete consumption of 1 a′ was achieved by heating the reaction at 40 °C, which drove the reaction to completion (Table 1, entry 5), even at lower catalyst loadings down to 2.5 mol %. Under the optimized reaction conditions (Table 1, entry 6) 5,12‐dihydrotetracene (1 a), which could be converted quantitatively into the parent acene,6f was isolated in 95 % yield.
Table 1

Optimization of the gold(I)‐catalyzed cyclization of 3 a.[a]

Entry[Au] [mol %] T [°C]Yield 1 a [%][b] Yield 1 a′ [%][b]
1 A (10)25955
2 B (10)25955
3 C (10)2585[c] 0
4 A (5)257525
5 A (5)40≥99 (96)0
6 A (2.5)40≥99 (95)0
7 A (1)4090 (84)10

[a] Yield determined by 1H NMR spectroscopy. [b] Yields of isolated products in parentheses. [c] Byproduct observed (ca. 15 %).

Optimization of the gold(I)‐catalyzed cyclization of 3 a.[a] [a] Yield determined by 1H NMR spectroscopy. [b] Yields of isolated products in parentheses. [c] Byproduct observed (ca. 15 %). The substrate generality for the synthesis of functionalized dihydrotetracenes was examined (Table 2) under these optimized reaction conditions. Thus, starting from 2 a 14 as the common precursor, a series of enynes 3 were prepared under standard Sonogashira cross‐coupling conditions starting from substituted iodobenzenes, before being subjected to the gold(I)‐catalyzed cyclization. In general, good to excellent yields (46–99 %) were obtained for the 1,7‐enynes tested. Enynes bearing both electron‐rich and electron‐poor aryl groups at the alkyne terminus efficiently afforded the corresponding dihydrotetracenes. 7‐Substituted 5,12‐dihydrotetracenes were selectively accessed from ortho‐substituted iodobenzenes (1 b, 1 f, 1 k), whereas 1,7‐enynes derived from para‐substituted iodobenzenes provided 8‐substituted 5,12‐dihydrotetracenes (1 c–e, 1 g–j, 1 l,m). Several 5,12‐dihydrotetracene derivatives were prepared bearing carbonyl (1 d,e) or halide (1 h–j, 1 l) groups, which are convenient functional handles for further synthetic manipulations. Although the cyclization of meta‐substituted enynes also provided dihydroacenes, the expected mixtures of regioisomeric 7‐ and 8‐substituted 5,12‐dihydrotetracenes were obtained, and therefore these substrates were not explored further.
Table 2

Scope of the gold(I)‐catalyzed cyclization of 1,7‐enynes 3 to form dihydrotetracenes.[a]

EntryR 3 [% yield] 1 [% yield]
1H 3 a (95) 1 a (95)
22‐Me 3 b (72) 1 b (68)
34‐Me 3 c (67) 1 c (54)
44‐COMe 3 d (88) 1 d (59)
54‐CHO 3 e (73) 1 e (71)
62‐OMe 3 f (86) 1 f (77)
74‐OMe 3 g (86) 1 g (60)
84‐F 3 h (99) 1 h (76)
94‐Br 3 i (88) 1 i (67)
104‐I 3 j (55) 1 j (99)
112‐Ph 3 k (60) 1 k (46)
124(4‐IC6H4) 3 l (46) 1 l (71)
134‐SiMe3 3 m (82) 1 m (55)

[a] Reaction conditions: a) ArI, PdCl2(PPh3)3, CuI, Et3N, 40 °C, 1.5 h. b) A (2.5 mol %), CH2Cl2, 40 °C, 1 h. ORTEP plots (50 % thermal ellipsoids) of the X‐ray crystal structures of 1 a, 1 e, 1 g, and 1 h are shown. Atoms: oxygen (red), fluorine (green), hydrogen (white), carbon (gray).15

Scope of the gold(I)‐catalyzed cyclization of 1,7‐enynes 3 to form dihydrotetracenes.[a] [a] Reaction conditions: a) ArI, PdCl2(PPh3)3, CuI, Et3N, 40 °C, 1.5 h. b) A (2.5 mol %), CH2Cl2, 40 °C, 1 h. ORTEP plots (50 % thermal ellipsoids) of the X‐ray crystal structures of 1 a, 1 e, 1 g, and 1 h are shown. Atoms: oxygen (red), fluorine (green), hydrogen (white), carbon (gray).15 The gold(I)‐catalyzed cyclization was applied to the preparation of extended PAHs and partially hydrogenated heteroacenes (Table 3). Dihydrobenzotetracene 1 n, dihydrodibenzotetracene 1 o, and dihydronaphthopentacene 1 p were prepared in good to excellent yields by cyclization of the enynes resulting from the coupling of 2 a with 2‐iodonaphthalene, 9‐iodophenanthrene, and 1‐iodopyrene, respectively. Dihydroheteroacenes 1 q and 1 r were similarly obtained from 2‐iodothiophene and 2‐iodobenzothiophene. Moreover, expanded precursors 2 b and 2 c bearing additional fused benzene rings could be employed successfully to synthesize dihydrodibenzotetracene 1 s and dihydropentacene 1 t, respectively.
Table 3

Synthesis of expanded dihydroPAHs and dihydroheteroacenes.[a]

1 n (99 %) 1 o (99 %)
1 p (65 %)
1 q (93 %) 1 r (88 %)
1 s (61 %) 1 t (63 %)

[a] ORTEP plots (50 % thermal ellipsoids) of the crystal structures of 1 n, 1 o, and 1 q. Atom colors are the same as those in Table 2; the sulfur atom of 1 q is shown in yellow.14

Synthesis of expanded dihydroPAHs and dihydroheteroacenes.[a] [a] ORTEP plots (50 % thermal ellipsoids) of the crystal structures of 1 n, 1 o, and 1 q. Atom colors are the same as those in Table 2; the sulfur atom of 1 q is shown in yellow.14 To further illustrate the potential of this gold(I)‐catalyzed cyclization method, di‐ and tri‐1,7‐enynes were prepared from terminal alkynes 2 a–c and the corresponding di‐ and triiodoarenes. Interestingly, these polyenynes underwent the desired multiple gold(I)‐catalyzed cyclizations under the reaction conditions optimized for the cyclization of 3 a to cleanly afford products 4 (Scheme 2). Poly‐dihydrotetracenes 4 a and 4 b were thus prepared, providing a new route to stable and relatively soluble precursors of acene‐based materials, which have shown good performance as n‐type materials in organic field‐effect transistors.16 Similarly, the double cyclization of a dienyne derived from 2,5‐diiodothiophene afforded 4 c, which is known to be a precursor of a fully aromatic sulfur‐containing heptacene analogue.17 Most remarkable was the double cyclization of dienynes derived from 1,4‐diiodobenzene, which regioselectively provided compounds 4 d–f as the sole products, constituting isolable, stable derivatives of heptacene, dibenzo[a,p]heptacene, and nonacene, respectively.
Scheme 2

Synthesis of polyhydroacenes by multiple gold(I)‐catalyzed cyclizations.

Synthesis of polyhydroacenes by multiple gold(I)‐catalyzed cyclizations. To confirm the structure of 4 d, crystalline dibromo derivative 5 was prepared and its structure was unambiguously assigned by X‐ray diffraction analysis (Scheme 3). Thus, not only was the linearity of 4 d confirmed, but a potential entry to functionalized larger hydroacenes was generated.
Scheme 3

Dibromination of 4 d. ORTEP plot (50 % thermal ellipsoids) of the crystal structure of 5. Atom colors are the same as those in Table 2; bromine atoms are shown in orange.14

Dibromination of 4 d. ORTEP plot (50 % thermal ellipsoids) of the crystal structure of 5. Atom colors are the same as those in Table 2; bromine atoms are shown in orange.14 In summary, we have developed a versatile annulation for the preparation of partially saturated acene derivatives based on a Sonogashira coupling and a gold(I)‐catalyzed cyclization of aryl‐tethered 1,7‐enynes 3, which takes place efficiently under mild reaction conditions and tolerates a range of functionalities. Furthermore, double and triple cyclizations can be performed on suitable polyenynes, allowing the assembly of the backbone of larger acenes up to nonacene. Investigations into the metal surface‐assisted aromatization of larger hydroacenes to obtain the corresponding parent acenes and the synthesis of new annulation synthons are currently underway. As a service to our authors and readers, this journal provides supporting information supplied by the authors. Such materials are peer reviewed and may be re‐organized for online delivery, but are not copy‐edited or typeset. Technical support issues arising from supporting information (other than missing files) should be addressed to the authors. Supplementary Click here for additional data file.
  37 in total

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2.  Gold-catalyzed synthesis of substituted tetrahydronaphthalenes.

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3.  The most stable and fully characterized functionalized heptacene.

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Review 4.  Gold and platinum catalysis--a convenient tool for generating molecular complexity.

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5.  Functionalized higher acenes: hexacene and heptacene.

Authors:  Marcia M Payne; Sean R Parkin; John E Anthony
Journal:  J Am Chem Soc       Date:  2005-06-08       Impact factor: 15.419

6.  Combining gold and palladium catalysis: one-pot access to pentasubstituted arenes from furan-yne and en-diyne substrates.

Authors:  A Stephen K Hashmi; Mohammad Ghanbari; Matthias Rudolph; Frank Rominger
Journal:  Chemistry       Date:  2012-05-21       Impact factor: 5.236

7.  Sulfur containing stable unsubstituted heptacene analogs.

Authors:  Puran K De; Douglas C Neckers
Journal:  Org Lett       Date:  2011-11-30       Impact factor: 6.005

8.  Metal-Free Dehydrogenative Diels-Alder Reactions of 2-Methyl-3-Alkylindoles with Dienophiles: Rapid Access to Tetrahydrocarbazoles, Carbazoles, and Heteroacenes.

Authors:  Liejin Zhou; Bing Xu; Junliang Zhang
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2015-06-10       Impact factor: 15.336

9.  The longest acenes.

Authors:  Holger F Bettinger; Christina Tönshoff
Journal:  Chem Rec       Date:  2014-11-21       Impact factor: 6.771

10.  Acenes generated from precursors and their semiconducting properties.

Authors:  Motonori Watanabe; Kew-Yu Chen; Yuan Jay Chang; Tahsin J Chow
Journal:  Acc Chem Res       Date:  2013-04-23       Impact factor: 22.384

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Authors:  Hiroko Yamada; Hironobu Hayashi
Journal:  Photochem Photobiol Sci       Date:  2022-06-07       Impact factor: 4.328

Review 2.  Strategies for the Synthesis of Higher Acenes.

Authors:  Ruth Dorel; Antonio M Echavarren
Journal:  European J Org Chem       Date:  2016-11-16

3.  On-surface synthesis of heptacene on Ag(001) from brominated and non-brominated tetrahydroheptacene precursors.

Authors:  Luciano Colazzo; Mohammed S G Mohammed; Ruth Dorel; Pawel Nita; Carlos García Fernández; Paula Abufager; Nicolás Lorente; Antonio M Echavarren; Dimas G de Oteyza
Journal:  Chem Commun (Camb)       Date:  2018-09-11       Impact factor: 6.222

4.  Higher Acenes by On-Surface Dehydrogenation: From Heptacene to Undecacene.

Authors:  Rafal Zuzak; Ruth Dorel; Marek Kolmer; Marek Szymonski; Szymon Godlewski; Antonio M Echavarren
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2018-06-07       Impact factor: 15.336

Review 5.  Recent Progress in High Linearly Fused Polycyclic Conjugated Hydrocarbons (PCHs, n > 6) with Well-Defined Structures.

Authors:  Wangqiao Chen; Fei Yu; Qun Xu; Guofu Zhou; Qichun Zhang
Journal:  Adv Sci (Weinh)       Date:  2020-04-22       Impact factor: 16.806

6.  Annulative π-extension of BODIPYs made easy via gold(i)-catalyzed cycloisomerization.

Authors:  Jorge Labella; Gonzalo Durán-Sampedro; M Victoria Martínez-Díaz; Tomás Torres
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7.  Hydroacenes Made Easy by Gold(I) Catalysis.

Authors:  Ruth Dorel; Paul R McGonigal; Antonio M Echavarren
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2016-07-06       Impact factor: 15.336

Review 8.  Shapeshifting molecules: the story so far and the shape of things to come.

Authors:  Aisha N Bismillah; Brette M Chapin; Burhan A Hussein; Paul R McGonigal
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2019-12-05       Impact factor: 9.825

9.  Synthesis of Phenacene-Helicene Hybrids by Directed Remote Metalation.

Authors:  Sindhu Kancherla; Kåre B Jørgensen
Journal:  J Org Chem       Date:  2020-08-26       Impact factor: 4.354

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