| Literature DB >> 32152476 |
Francisco de Azambuja1,2, Ming-Hsiu Yang1,3, Taisiia Feoktistova4, Manikandan Selvaraju1, Alexander C Brueckner4, Markas A Grove4, Suvajit Koley1, Paul Ha-Yeon Cheong5, Ryan A Altman6.
Abstract
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32152476 PMCID: PMC7192790 DOI: 10.1038/s41557-020-0428-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem ISSN: 1755-4330 Impact factor: 24.427
Fig. 1 |C–H functionalization vs. decarboxylative cross-coupling.
Current strategies for para-selective C–H functionalization of arenes involve: a, Intrinsic substrate-derived selectivity. b, Template-assisted selectivity. c, Catalyst-controlled selectivity. d, Reagent-controlled selectivity. e, This work: base additives override conventional decarboxylative coupling (benzylation) and enable para-selective C–H functionalization of arenes (arylation).
Fig. 2 |Brønsted basicity controls selectivity.a
a, Though the addition of inorganic and non-basic amines favor generation of the benzylation product, the addition of basic amines inverts the selectivity and produces the arylated product. b, The selectivity for arylation (2) vs. benzylation (3) correlated with the basicity and the steric hindrance of the amine. Only unhindered basic amines (pKa > 8.0) favored the arylation product. a Reaction conditions: 1 (0.10 mmol), Pd(PPh3)4 (5.0 mol%), base, toluene (0.050 M), 110 °C, 24 h. 19F NMR yields (α,α,α-trifluorotoluene as standard). b Optimized conditions: 1 (0.50 mmol), Pd(PPh3)4 (2.5 mol%), Et3N (1.0 equiv.), 1,4-dioxane (0.050 M), 100 °C, 12 h. c Isolated yield. d 1 (0.10 mmol), Pd(PPh3)4 (2.5 mol%), Et3N:Pyr mixture (125 mol%), 1,4-dioxane (0.050 M), 100 °C.
Substrate scope of benzyl esters.
Reaction conditions: 5a–o or 8a–f (0.50 mmol), Pd(PPh3)4 (2.5 – 5.0 mol%), Et3N (1.0 equiv.), 1,4-dioxane (0.050 M), 100 °C, 12 – 24 h. For 10a–e,h (0.50 mmol), Pd(PPh3)4 (5.0 mol%), 2-butyl tetramethylguanidine (Bu-TMG, 1.5 equiv.), N,N-dimethylacetamide (0.25 M), 110 °C, 15 h; For 10f (0.50 mmol), Pd(PPh3)4 (5.0 mol%), (4-CF3Ph)3P (10 mol%), tetramethylguanidine (TMG, 2.0 equiv.), toluene (0.25 M), 110 °C, 15 h. Isolated yields.
110 °C.
120 °C.
Ratio of isolated product determined by 19F NMR.
1,4-dioxane (0.10 M), 120 °C.
19F NMR yields (α,α,α-trifluorotoluene as standard).
Ratio of products determined by GC-FID.
For 10g (0.10 mmol), Pd(PPh3)4 (5.0 mol%), TMG (3.0 equiv.), Cs2CO3 (3.0 equiv.), o-xylene (0.10 M), 130 °C, 12 h.
Fig. 3 |General reaction mechanism.
The arylation (2) and benzylation (3) products derive from a common Pd-Benzyl-Enolate intermediate for which the O-Bound and C-Bound Enolates exist in equilibrium. While the generates the expected benzylation product through a traditional cross-coupling mechanism, rearranges to form the Dearomatized Intermediate that bears an acidic methine proton, and an appropriate base facilitates rearomatization.
Fig. 4 |Mechanistic experiments.
a, The detection of cross-over products supports dissociation of the Pd-Benzyl-Carboxylate ion pair. b, The para hydrogen atom migrated to the benzylic position at a late stage of the reaction, as indicated using a 2H-labeled substrate. Using a double-labeled substrate the 2H does not migrate away from the Pr-containing benzyl ring, suggesting that C–C bond formation occurs prior to H-migration, and that the H-migration occurs within the solvent sphere of the substrate. c, Upon addition of MeOH-d, the lack of deuteration excludes reaction pathways involving discrete Pd–H and/or Pd–Ar intermediates that might be formed by direct C–Hpara palladation. d, The experimental KIE values at the para and benzyl positions indicate that the rate determining step occurs prior to the C–Hpara bond cleavage and C–Hbenzyl bond formation.
Fig. 5 |Energetics of key steps.
The computed reaction coordinate diagram for the formation of arylation and benzylation products from Pd-enolate complexes suggests a process controlled by Curtin-Hammett kinetics, in which the O-Bound and C-Bound enolates and the previously “hidden” Dearomatized Intermediate exist in equilibrium, and the product distribution is regulated by the energies for C–C reductive elimination vs. rearomatization. Specifically, the selectivity for arylation vs. benzylation is controlled by the ability of the amine additive to lower the energy for rearomatization (Pyridine-Deprot-TS and Me) relative to C–C reductive elimination (Benzylation-TS).