| Literature DB >> 32432808 |
Sebastian Govaerts1, Lucrezia Angelini1, Charlotte Hampton1, Laia Malet-Sanz2, Alessandro Ruffoni1, Daniele Leonori1.
Abstract
Vicinal diamines are ubiquitous materials in organic and medicinal chemistry. The direct coupling of olefins and amines would be an ideal approach to construct these motifs. However, alkene diamination remains a long-standing challenge in organic synthesis, especially when using two different amine components. We report a general strategy for the direct and selective assembly of vicinal 1,2-diamines using readily available olefin and amine building blocks. This mild and straightforward approach involves in situ formation and photoinduced activation of N-chloroamines to give aminium radicals that enable efficient alkene aminochlorination. Owing to the ambiphilic nature of the β-chloroamines produced, conversion into tetra-alkyl aziridinium ions was possible, thus enabling diamination by regioselective ring-opening with primary or secondary amines. This strategy streamlines the preparation of vicinal diamines from multistep sequences to a single chemical transformation.Entities:
Keywords: alkylamines; aminochlorination; diamination; nitrogen radicals; olefin functionalization
Year: 2020 PMID: 32432808 PMCID: PMC7497254 DOI: 10.1002/anie.202005652
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ISSN: 1433-7851 Impact factor: 16.823
Scheme 1A) Vicinal diamines are high‐value materials in chemical sciences. B) Current strategies for olefin diamination do not enable the direct use of alkylamines. C) The construction of unsymmetrical diamines requires multistep syntheses while the strategy reported here assembles them in a single step. D) Recent developments for olefin aminochlorination. E) The proposed mechanism for olefin diamination involves the generation of an aminium radical to achieve an aminochlorination reaction, which is followed by aziridinium formation and regioselective ring‐opening. F) This radical‐polar crossover strategy offers a different disconnection to classical approaches.
Scheme 2Development of the aminochlorination reaction using piperidine 1 and olefin 10.
Scheme 3A) Substrate scope for the aminochlorination of olefins with different amine and olefin building blocks and its use to assemble chlorinated drug analogues. B) Aminochlorination of styrenes results in aminohydroxylation products.
Scheme 4A) Reaction profiles for the formation of aziridinium 59 from 11. B) Aziridinium ring opening with Et2NH 8 is immediate. C) Development of a procedure for direct olefin diamination. D) Substrate scope for the direct olefin diamination using a range of different amine and olefin building blocks. [a] A basic work‐up was performed before addition of NaI and the amine. [b] Upon addition of NaI and the amine, the mixture was warmed to 60 °C. [c] In this case the aziridinium was formed using Ag(BF4). [d] In this case the N‐chloroamine was purified before addition of NaI.* Denotes the minor constitutional isomer.
Scheme 5A) Styrene diamination provides a different regioselectivity. B) The use of primary amines enables the preparation of trialkyl aziridines. C) Further diversification of β‐chloroamine and use of the reduction process for the 3‐step synthesis of benproperine. [a] A basic work‐up was performed before addition of NaI and the amine. [b] Upon addition of NaI and the amine the mixture was warmed to 60 °C. [c] In this case the aziridinium was formed using Ag(BF4). * Denotes the minor constitutional isomer.