Literature DB >> 28960610

A Zinc Catalyzed C(sp3 )-C(sp2 ) Suzuki-Miyaura Cross-Coupling Reaction Mediated by Aryl-Zincates.

Richard J Procter1, Jay J Dunsford1, Philip J Rushworth2, David G Hulcoop2, Richard A Layfield1, Michael J Ingleson1.   

Abstract

The Suzuki-Miyaura (SM) reaction is one of the most important methods for C-C bond formation in chemical synthesis. In this communication, we show for the first time that the low toxicity, inexpensive element zinc is able to catalyze SM reactions. The cross-coupling of benzyl bromides with aryl borates is catalyzed by ZnBr2 , in a process that is free from added ligand, and is compatible with a range of functionalized benzyl bromides and arylboronic acid pinacol esters. Initial mechanistic investigations indicate that the selective in situ formation of triaryl zincates is crucial to promote selective cross-coupling reactivity, which is facilitated by employing an arylborate of optimal nucleophilicity.
© 2017 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

Entities:  

Keywords:  alkylation; boron; cross-coupling; transmetallation; zincate

Year:  2017        PMID: 28960610      PMCID: PMC5915750          DOI: 10.1002/chem.201704170

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Chemistry        ISSN: 0947-6539            Impact factor:   5.236


The selective formation of carboncarbon bonds is arguably the most important transformation in synthetic chemistry. Among the most widely used CC bond forming reactions is the Suzuki–Miyaura (SM) cross coupling reaction,1, 2 which is even utilized on large scale in industry.3 This powerful method couples a boron based organic nucleophile with an organic electrophile, typically catalyzed by Pd or Ni compounds.4 Recently, catalysts based on other metals, particularly less toxic metals (relative to Pd/Ni),5 for example, copper6 and iron (which has the lowest toxicity rating),7 that offer alternative reactivity profiles, and/or reduced costs, have gained increasing attention. However, zinccatalyzed SM reactions are, to the best of our knowledge, unknown. This is despite the attractive features of zinc which include: (i) low toxicity (in contrast to Ni compounds, zinc has the same low toxicity rating as iron),5 and (ii) relatively high abundance, thus zinc compounds are inexpensive and have low supply risk.8 The use of stoichiometric organozinc reagents in coupling reactions is well established, particularly the Pdcatalyzed Negishi reaction.9 More recently, stoichiometric organozinc reagents have been used in coupling reactions that do not require transition‐metal catalysts.10 Of specific relevance to this work is the coupling of arylboronic acids with benzyl bromides in the presence of excess Et2Zn (Scheme 1 a). The proposed mechanism involves a zinc cation activating benzyl bromides for SN2 substitution.11 Diaryl zinc species have also been reacted with alkyl halides (including benzylic) to form C(sp2)−C(sp3) bonds in the abscence of a catalyst, provided the reaction was carried out in weakly‐coordinating aromatic solvents (Scheme 1 b).12 These recent developments, although notable, all use stoichiometric (or super‐stoichiometric) quantities of zinc reagents. The use of sub‐stoichiometric zinc compounds in CC coupling is extremely rare, with the only example, to the best of our knowledge, being the coupling of alkyl Grignard reagents with α–hydroxy ester triflates catalyzed by ZnCl2 (Scheme 1 c).13 We sought to develop a catalytic zinc cross‐coupling reaction that uses arylboron nucleophiles. This requires an arylborate able to convert zinc halide by‐products from cross‐coupling back to arylzinc species that are effective for cross‐coupling with organic electrophiles. Herein, we realize this goal using readily accessible arylborate nucleophiles derived from arylboronic acid pinacol esters, with ZnBr2 proving to be an effective catalyst for coupling these arylborates with benzyl halides.
Scheme 1

Zinc compounds in “catalyst‐free” coupling reactions.

Zinc compounds in “catalyst‐free” coupling reactions. Although neutral aryl boranes exchange aryl for alkyl on reaction with dialkylzinc reagents,14, 15 in order to transmetallate to zinc halides, more strongly nucleophilic arylboranes are required.16, 17 Attempts using arylboronic esters activated by alkoxides led to transfer of the alkoxide group to zinc in preference to the aryl group (see Figure S2). In contrast, the lithium borate, [tBuB(Pin)Ph]Li, 1 a, selectively and rapidly (<30 min for complete consumption of 1 a) transfers an aryl group to zinc dihalides (halide=Br or Cl) in ether solvents, as indicated by the formation of tert‐butylboronic acid pinacol ester (tBuBPin) by NMR spectroscopy (no PhBPin is observed precluding Zn−tBu formation). An alternative pathway, rapid alkyl transfer from 1 a to form ZnBu species, followed by rapid reaction of these with ArylBPin to form Aryl−Zn species is precluded, based on the slow reaction between ZnEt2 and ArylBpin (<5 % aryl transfer after 30 mins). With an effective boron to ZnX2 transmetallating agent in hand, the transmetallation from boron to zinc in arene solvents was attempted, but it did not proceed significantly, since it was hindered by the low solubility of the aryl borate reagent and zinc halides. Arene solvents were essential in previous work on coupling stoichiometric Ar2Zn with alkyl halides, whereas in ether solvents, coupling was effectively quenched.12 By performing the transmetallation in cyclopentyl methyl ether (CPME) and then replacing CPME with benzene, the arylzinc product reacted with 3‐methoxybenzyl bromide (2 a) to generate the desired product (3 a) within 1 h at 20 °C. Subsequently, we found that using 10 mol % of zinc dihalide both steps can be performed in CPME, with heating enabling the cross‐coupling step (Scheme 2), albeit with a lower hetero/homo coupling ratio. In contrast, using ArylBPin/ZnEt2 mixtures with 2 a as the electrophile led to minimal C(sp2)−C(sp3) cross‐coupling after 18 h at 60 °C.
Scheme 2

Top, cross coupling via a solvent switch, bottom cross coupling all in CPME.

Top, cross coupling via a solvent switch, bottom cross coupling all in CPME. The transmetallation and cross‐coupling steps in ether solvents were optimized using 4‐fluorobenzyl bromide, 2 b (enabling quantitative in situ analysis by 19F NMR spectroscopy). This revealed that lower temperatures and other ether solvents resulted in high selectivity for heterocoupling (see Table 1). It is noteworthy that successful cross‐coupling was observed using dioxane as the solvent (entry 3), whereas ZnPh2 effectively does not undergo cross‐coupling with benzylbromides in dioxane, even at 60 °C over 18 h.11 Although highly selective cross‐coupling was observed in both dioxane and 2‐MeTHF, 2‐MeTHF was utilized for this study due to its superior safety profile. Control reactions were performed next to examine the possibility of trace‐metal catalysis.18 ZnBr2 obtained from multiple sources and of different purity (including 99.999 % purity) produced similar coupling outcomes. When the reaction was performed without ZnBr2, no 3 b is formed, and only minor homocoupling (4 b) is observed (entry 6). Catalysis by trace copper or nickel impurities is disfavored on the basis of lower hetero‐/homocoupling selectivity (entries 7 and 8). FeBr2 was examined, and significant heterocoupling was observed (entry 9). However, FeBr2 is precluded as a “trace metal catalyst” in this chemistry due to significant reactivity differences compared to ZnBr2 (e.g. FeBr2 is an effective catalyst for heterocoupling using 1 a and aryl Grignard reagents, whereas ZnBr2 does not couple aryl Grignard reagents with benzylbromides, see the Supporting information for further discussion). A Pd catalyst also gave high heterocoupling selectivity (entry 10). However, in the coupling of 4‐bromobenzylbromide (an electrophile containing both an aryl CBr and benzylic CBr bond) with 1 a, ZnBr2 selectively couples through the benzylic carbon. In contrast, under identical conditions Pd(PPh3)4 cross‐couples through both the C(sp2)−Br and the C(sp3)−Br, thus precluding Pd impurities as the catalyst in this protocol (see Supporting Information). Finally, under these conditions MgBr2 led to no heterocoupling (entry 11). These results strongly support a zinccatalyzed cross‐coupling between 1 a and 2 b.
Table 1

Optimization and impurity catalysis controls.

EntrySolventT [°C]catalyst (mol %) 3 b [%][a] 4 b [%][a]
1THF60ZnBr2 (10)473
2Benzene/THF 10:175ZnBr2 (10)703
3Dioxane60ZnBr2 (10)861
42‐MeTHF60ZnBr2 (10)901
52‐MeTHF80ZnBr2 (10)873
62‐MeTHF60No catalyst016
72‐MeTHF60CuBr (13)4526
82‐MeTHF60NiBr2(PPh3)2 (3)2627
92‐MeTHF60FeBr2 (11)848
102‐MeTHF60Pd(PPh3)4 (3)932
112‐MeTHF60MgBr2 (10)<112
12[b] 2‐MeTHF60ZnBr2 (10)47<1

[a] By 19F NMR spectroscopy and GCMS. [b] using Li[nBuB(Pin)Ph] (5) instead of 1 a.

Optimization and impurity catalysis controls. [a] By 19F NMR spectroscopy and GCMS. [b] using Li[nBuB(Pin)Ph] (5) instead of 1 a. Optimization of the boron nucleophile also was explored briefly. When the nbutyl congener of t‐butyl borate 1 a (Li[nBuB(Pin)Ph], 5) was used instead of 1 a, 3 b was cleanly formed, however, the reaction was slower than when 1 a was used (compare entries 4 and 12. In contrast, using the alternative phenyl source Na[BPh4] led to minimal conversion to 3 b after 18 h (<15 % 3 b, see Supporting Information). Finally, 1.5 equivalents of 1 a was found to improve cross‐coupling yields (lower equivalents of 1 a did not lead to full consumption of the electrophile). This zinccatalyzed cross‐coupling was compatible with electron‐withdrawing and donating groups (Table 2). It was also tolerant of halide, CF3, OCF3, alkyl, ether, thioether and heteroaryl groups, with excellent heterocoupling selectivity throughout. Electron‐withdrawing groups on the arylborate, for example, p‐(OCF3), are compatible but result in a slower reaction (only 30 % heterocoupling after 24 h), so they require longer reaction times. Although ketone and aldehyde functional groups proved to be incompatible, esters and acetals were both amenable to coupling. Benzyl chlorides reacted slower than the analogous bromides, while 2° benzyl electrophiles also reacted more slowly than 1° benzyl bromides, however, both are also viable substrates if longer reaction times are used. Bromodiphenylmethane and methylallyl bromide were also effectively cross‐coupled, however, octylbromide and cycloheptylbromide were not amenable. The formation of 3 o was highly selective (>95 %) with minimal products from cine‐ or tele‐substitution observed, indicating that an organometallic ipsocoupling process dominates.10g The observed scope is consistent with an SN2 mechanism, and the minor amounts of homocoupling observed (<5 %) is attributed to a zinc‐free reaction based on Table 1 entry 6. Radical scavengers such as 9,10‐dihydroanthracene (used in zinc‐mediated radical borylations),19 and styrene (a scavenger used in radical reactions involving arylborates)20 did not inhibit heterocoupling.
Table 2

Substrate scope for the zinc catalyzed C(sp3)−C(sp2) coupling.

[a] With benzyl chloride. [b] 72 hours.

Substrate scope for the zinc catalyzed C(sp3)−C(sp2) coupling. [a] With benzyl chloride. [b] 72 hours. With a closed‐shell mechanism favoured, and neutral diarylzinc reagents precluded as the active species (since ZnPh2 and 2 a do not cross‐couple in dioxane),11 the formation of anionic arylzincates from 1 a was explored in 2‐MeTHF. Anionic zincates are more nucleophilic than Ar2Zn species, and are often more effective in the transfer of aryl groups to electrophiles;21 for example, [tBu2PhZn]Li cleanly arylates MeI.22 To assess for zincate formation, two equivalents of 1 a were reacted with ZnBr2 at 20 °C; in <10 mins tBuBPin had completely formed (by NMR spectroscopy) indicating transfer of two equivalents of phenyl to zinc (Scheme 3). The composition of the ensuing zincate species will most likely predominantly be of the form {[PhZnBr]−} (x+y=3, n=1 or higher aggregates), although only a single set of 1H and 13C phenyl resonances were observed, which is consistent with rapid exchange on the NMR timescale (as is the case throughout these experiments).23 The zincate assignment is supported by significant changes in the 1H and 13C{1H} NMR spectra on addition of one equivalent of LiBr to ZnPh2, whereas a second equivalent of LiBr results in only very minor chemical‐shift changes (indicating minimal formation of [PhZnBr]2− {x+y=4} species).
Scheme 3

Reaction outcomes between 1 a and ZnBr2.

Reaction outcomes between 1 a and ZnBr2. To determine if an aryl group can be transferred from 1 a to a diarylzinc species, equimolar ZnPh2 and 1 a were reacted. This resulted in slow (at 20 °C) transfer to form [ZnPh3]− (with a diagnostic δ13C=168.8 for the ipso Cphenyl in 2‐MeTHF)24 and tBuBpin. At 60 °C approximately 2 h were required for formation of [ZnPh3]− from ZnPh2 and 1 a. Li[ZnPh3], synthesized from ZnPh2 and one equivalent of PhLi has a closely comparable δ13Cipso for the Zn−Ph moiety (169.5 ppm in 2‐MeTHF). Transmetallation from 1a to zinc species still proceeds in the presence of LiBr; for example, using a 1:2 mixture of ZnPh2/LiBr, 35 % aryl transfer from 1 a to zinc occurs after 1 h at 60 °C, thus aryl transfer to {[PhxZnBry]−} species does occur. Li[ZnPh3] only interacts weakly with 1 equivalent of LiBr (as indicated by very minor changes in the 1H and 13C NMR resonances, max. Δδ=0.02 ppm; addition of a second equivalent of LiBr results in no observable Δδ). As [Ar4Zn]2− are documented, 24, 25 attempts to form [Ph4Zn]2− using 1 a were explored. However, the addition of 1 a to [Ph3Zn]− (made in situ) did not lead to any observable aryl transfer (by NMR spectroscopy) disfavoring formation of [Ph4Zn]2− under these conditions. Attempts to crystallise these zincates failed; nevertheless, the above reactions indicate that a major Zn species present during catalysis is [ZnPh3]−. However, [PhZnBr] (x+y=3 or 4, n=1 or 2, y≥1) will also be present, and will presumably increase in concentration as catalysis proceeds, due to the formation of LiBr as a by‐product from cross‐coupling along with consumption of 1a. It is notable that combining 1 a and ZnX2 does not produce any observable [Ph4Zn]2− in contrast to using PhLi. Therefore using borate 1 a allows [Ar3Zn]− to be selectively accessed without any dianioic zincate formation.24 It is also notable that Na[BPh4] gives drastically different transmetallation outcomes to 1 a, since it does not transfer an aryl to ZnPh2 in 2‐MeTHF (at 20 °C or 60 °C), and thus does not produce any observable [Ph3Zn]−. A relative nucleophilicity scale in 2‐MeTHF for these nucleophiles is shown in Scheme 4, with 1 a uniquely positioned between the monoanionic triaryl and dianionic tetraaryl zincates.
Scheme 4

Relative aryl nucleophilicity (in 2‐MeTHF).

Relative aryl nucleophilicity (in 2‐MeTHF). The stoichiometric coupling reactivity of various zincates with 2 b was assessed to determine if any heterocoupling occurs (and the selectivity for heterocoupling). In each case, benzylbromide 2 b was combined with a zincate mixture containing a specific ratio; for example, ZnPhBr, generated by combining ZnPh2 (or ZnBr2) with PhLi (or 1 a) and LiBr. On combining [ZnPh4]2− (formed from PhLi and ZnPh2)24 and 2 b in 2‐MeTHF, 2 b was consumed within 20 min at 25 °C. However, this led exclusively to the homocoupled product 4 b (Table 3, entry 1). Therefore, for selective heterocoupling, [Ar4Zn]2− species have to be avoided, presumably since these are stronger reducing agents, and thus lead to single‐electron‐transfer reactivity. In contrast, [ZnPh3]− (made from PhLi and ZnPh2) on combination with 2 b predominantly led to heterocoupling (entry 2). Repeating in the presence of LiBr also led to formation of [ZnPh3]− (confirmed by comparable δ13C for the ipso Cphenyl, entry 4) and a comparable coupling outcome. Notably, a 1:1 mixture of 1 a/ZnPh2 (post heating at 60 °C for 18 h) when reacted with 2 b produced predominantly 3 b, with a slightly improved hetero/homo coupling ratio (entry 3 compared to 2, or 4), suggesting that tBuBPin may subtly affect the catalytic process and thus the overall selectivity. A number of mixed zincates, [PhZnBr] (with δ13C resonances supporting the presence of ZnBr moieties),26 were reacted with 2 b; reactivity was slow at 60 °C, and either more 4 b was produced than 3 b (entry 5), or no reaction was observed at all (entry 6). Therefore, the triarylzincates appear to be essential to lead to significant heterocoupling. This is consistent with the increased efficacy of 1.5 equivalents of 1 a relative to 1.1 equivalents in the catalysis, because otherwise low activity bromidezincates will dominate as the reaction progresses.
Table 3

Zincate reactivity with 2 b.

Entry x Ph y Brδ13C (ipso)T [°C] 3 b [%][a] 4 b [%][a]
140171.425[b] 0100
230169.5605911
3[c] 30168.860699
432169.4606311
522160.460310
613158.76000

[a] Yields by 19F NMR spectroscopy and GC‐MS, mass balance where appropriate is unreacted 2 b. [b] 20 min. [c] from ZnPh2 and borate 1 a instead of PhLi.

Zincate reactivity with 2 b. [a] Yields by 19F NMR spectroscopy and GC‐MS, mass balance where appropriate is unreacted 2 b. [b] 20 min. [c] from ZnPh2 and borate 1 a instead of PhLi. Previously, zinc Lewis acids were proposed to activate benzylbromides by coordination to bromide, thereby facilitating SN2 substitution by arylborates or zincates.11 To assess if Lewis acids are present during catalysis, Et3PO was added (using the conditions from Table 1 entry 4) after 3 h. The 31P{1H} NMR spectrum showed a downfield shift of 12.44 ppm compared to free Et3PO, confirming that Lewis acidic species are present. However, this may well be due to lithium Lewis acids, since a similar (Δδ=13.98 ppm) downfield shift was observed upon addition of Et3PO to LiBr in 2‐MeTHF. Furthermore, a 2:1 mixture of ZnPh2/1 a was heated in 2‐MeTHF until 1 a was consumed, targeting a 1:1 mixture of Lewis acidic ZnPh2(solvent) and zincate [ZnPh3]−. To this mixture, 2 b was added, and the reaction was heated to 60 °C for 1 h, leading to poor coupling selectivity (3 b/4 b of 2.8:1). Therefore, under these conditions, zinc Lewis acid mediated coupling is disfavoured, and a mechanism involving SN2 substitution by a triarylzincate is preferred, possibly involving substrate activation by Li+ salts. In conclusion, benzyl halides can be coupled with aryl borates using ZnBr2 as catalyst. To the best of our knowledge this is the first zinc,catalyzed Suzuki–Miyaura reaction. Initial studies indicate an SN2 mechanism, with triarylzincates as the key nucleophiles. Our findings represent an advance in the development of less toxic, base‐metal cross‐coupling catalysts as alternatives to established methodologies using noble metals, and further investigations into the detailed mechanism and scope of the reaction are ongoing.

Conflict of interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest. 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.
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