Yuting Li1, Yan Zhu1, Guangliang Tu1, Jingyu Zhang2, Yingsheng Zhao1. 1. Key Laboratory of Organic Synthesis of Jiangsu Province, College of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, Soochow University Suzhou 215123 China yszhao@suda.edu.cn. 2. College of Physics, Optoelectronics and Energy & Collaborative Innovation Center of Suzhou Nano Science and Technology, Soochow University Suzhou 215006 P. R. China jyzhang@suda.edu.cn.
Triarylmethane derivatives are a class of important substructures which can be usually found in organic dyes,[1] fluorescent compounds,[2] supramolecular structures, and pharmaceutically-related compounds.[3-5] In the last decade, several routes have been explored in the synthesis of the triarylmethane scaffold.[6,7] For example, the transition metal-catalyzed cross-coupling reaction has been developed to provide a direct approach to the synthesis of the triarylmethanes, which greatly enriched the synthetic methods to prepare these structures (Scheme 1a).[8-14] However, the application of this method has been limited due to the requirement for the pre-functionalization during the synthesis of suitable coupling partners. Reduction of triarylmethanol derivatives offers another approach to obtain the triarylmethanes, which usually involved a multistep process (Scheme 1b).[15,16] The Friedel–Crafts reaction is one of the most simple and widely employed routes for the preparation of triarylmethanes (Scheme 1c).[17-20] The group of Mccubbin reported a pentafluorophenylboronic acid catalyzed method for the synthesis of triarylmethanes from benzhydrol with electronic rich arenes.[21] Aoyama and co-workers developed a simple and efficient approach for alkylation of aromatics from alcohols with NaHSO4/SiO2 NaHSO4/SiO2 as the catalyst.[22] Nevertheless, this approach is limited by the substrate scope because electronic donating group-substituted arenes were required to realize the transformation. To the best of our knowledge, there are still no examples of coupling of diphenylmethanol and acetanilide.[23] In this perspective, the development of a new catalyst system to address the aforementioned limitation for Friedel–Crafts reactions is highly imperative to construct the triarylmethanes. Herein, we report a silver-catalyzed direct benzylation of acetanilides with benzhydrol derivatives as the coupling partners under mild conditions (Scheme 1d). A wide variety of functional groups are well tolerated, yielding the corresponding benzylated products in moderate to good yields. Preliminary experimental results showed that the silver ions activate the arene rings and trifluoromethanesulfonic acid (TfOH) provides the carbocations.
Scheme 1
Approaches to the synthesis of triphenylmethanes.
The skeleton of the aniline derivative was usually found in the triphenylmethane-based bioactive compounds, such as pararosaniline, leucomalachite green, malachite green, and leucocrystal violet.[1] Therefore, a highly efficient strategy for the construction the aniline-containing triphenylmethanes is highly desired.
Results and discussion
We envisioned that the aniline-containing triphenylmethane derivatives can be synthesized by treating the anilides with the benzhydrol derivatives via a transition metal catalyst. At the outset of our study, we treated acetanilide 1a with benzhydrol 2a in the presence of iron(iii) chloride (20 mol%) in dichloroethane at 120 °C to investigate whether the diphenyl-methanation could be performed. We were pleased to find that the diphenylmethylated product 3aa was generated in 5% yield, along with the rest of the starting material 1a being recovered. Encouraged by this result, we next screened various Lewis acids such as InBr3, Fe(OTf)3, Zn(OTf)2, Al(OTf)3, Sc(OTf)3, and AgOTf to improve the efficiency of the reaction (Table 1). To our great delight, a dramatically improved yield (76%) of 3aa was obtained when AgOTf was used as the catalyst. Next, we tried to decrease the catalyst loading to 5 mol%; the product 3aa was obtained in 60% yield. A satisfactory yield of 3aa could also be achieved with 10 mol% AgOTf. In addition, several other solvents including toluene, CH3CN, t-amyl-OH, and 1,4-dioxane were investigated, but none of them gave better yields than that of DCE. The control experiment showed that the catalyst is indispensable for this silver-promoted dibenzylation-reaction (see ESI†).
Optimization of reaction conditionsa
Entry
Catalyst
Solvent
Yield (%)b
1
FeCl3 20%
DCE
5
2
InBr3 20%
DCE
Trace
3
Fe(OTf)3 20%
DCE
64
4
Zn(OTf)2 20%
DCE
5
5
Al(OTf)3 20%
DCE
0
6
Sc(OTf)3 20%
DCE
0
7
AgOTf 20%
DCE
76
8
AgOTf 10%
DCE
78
9
AgOTf 5%
DCE
60
10
AgOTf 10%
Toluene
6
11
AgOTf 10%
CH3CN
0
12
AgOTf 10%
t-Amyl-OH
0
13
AgOTf 10%
1,4-Dioxane
5
Reaction conditions: 1a (0.1 mmol), 2a (0.2 mmol), cat, solvent (1 mL), 120 °C, 8 h.
Yields were based on LC-MS analysis using acetyl benzene as an internal standard.
Reaction conditions: 1a (0.1 mmol), 2a (0.2 mmol), cat, solvent (1 mL), 120 °C, 8 h.Yields were based on LC-MS analysis using acetyl benzene as an internal standard.With the optimized conditions in hand, we next explored the substrate scope to investigate the functional group tolerance of this silver trifluoromethanesulfonate-catalyzed dibenzylation reaction (Scheme 2). Initially, a series of ortho-substituted acetanilides (1b–1f) performed well under the standard conditions, which afforded the corresponding para-diphenylmethylated products in moderate yields. It is worth noting that all the ortho-substituted acetanilides with electron withdrawing groups yielded para-dibenzylated products, whereas those with electronic donating groups (1m, 1o) afforded both the para- and ortho- position both diphenylmethylated products. This might be due to the fact that the electronic donating functional groups greatly activate the arene ring, which could trap the diphenylmethane carbon ion very quickly.
Scheme 2
Scope of acetanilidea,b. aReaction conditions: 1a–1o (0.1 mmol), 2a (0.2 mmol), AgOTf 10%, DCE (1 mL), 120 °C, 8 h. bYields of isolated products.
Next, we investigated the para-substituted acetanilides (1g, 1h, and 1l); the ortho-diphenylmethylated products were obtained in good yields, which indicated that the electronic effects greatly affect the reactivity of the acetanilides. Interestingly, all the meta-substituted substrates provide both the ortho- and para-diphenylmethylated products (3ia–3ka) in good to moderate yields. The X-ray crystal structures of 3ca, 3ha, 3jb, and 3la are shown in Fig. 1.
Fig. 1
X-ray crystal structures of 3ca, 3ha, 3jb and 3la.
The bromide substituted arenes can be further transformed into various other functional groups by well-known cross-coupling reactions.[24] Therefore, 2-bromoacetanilide was employed to investigate the scope of benzhydrol and the results were listed in Scheme 3. The results clearly show that the functional groups, such as Me, F, Cl, Br, CF3, and Ph were all fully tolerated in this reaction. All the dibenzylation took place selectively at the para-position. Even though the exact reason is unclear, we speculated that the steric effect is the major reason for the para-selectivity.
Scheme 3
Scope of benzhydrola,b. aReaction conditions: 1c (0.1 mmol), 2b–2j (0.2 mmol), AgOTf 10%, DCE (1 mL), 120 °C, 8 h. bYields of isolated products.
To further demonstrate the synthetic utility of the developed synthetic protocol, gram-scale reactions were performed. To our delight, all the scale up reactions provided the corresponding products (3aa, 3ha) in good yields (Scheme 4).
Scheme 4
Gram-scale reactions.
In order to propose the reaction mechanism of this silver-catalyzed selective dibenzylation reaction, several experiments were further performed. TfOH was used instead of AgOTf, which afforded 35% 3aa (Scheme 5a); this result indicated that silver has a significant role in the realization of the dibenzylation reaction. However, when silver acetate was used as the catalyst, no dibenzylated product was obtained and the starting material 1a was completely recovered (Scheme 5b). Interestingly, when silver acetate (10 mol%) and TfOH (10 mol%) were used to instead of AgOTf, a good yield of 3aa was achieved (Scheme 5c). Moreover, when we added a proton scavenger Et3N (10 mol%) to the reaction, the reaction was well inhibited (scheme 5d). This result might indicate that the TfOH would generate the diphenyl-methane carbocation (complex II), and the silver ions might coordinate with oxygen to activate the acetanilides (complex I). To further support this point, N-methylacetanilide was subjected to the standard reaction conditions to investigate the occurrence of dibenzylation (Scheme 5e). Impressively, there was no dibenzylated product and only the starting material was recovered, which further validated our proposal. Next, the deuteration experiment was performed by directly adding D2O into the reaction (Scheme 5f). The result from this experiment may indicate that the silver only acted as a Lewis acid in this reaction.
Scheme 5
Preliminary mechanistic study.
Based on these results and previous reports[6,7] a plausible reaction mechanism was proposed in Scheme 6. The carbocation I might be formed by combination with silver ions under acidic conditions. Meanwhile, the strong Lewis acid TfOH would enable the formation of the carbocation (complex II), which was further trapped by the complex I, affording the dibenzylated product.
Scheme 6
Proposed reaction mechanism.
Conclusions
In conclusion, we have developed a highly efficient approach for the synthesis of triphenylmethane derivatives through the direct combination of acetanilides and diphenylmethanol derivatives using AgOTf as the catalyst. A wide variety of functional groups are well tolerated, leading to the corresponding benzylated products in moderate to good yields. Preliminary experimental results indicated that the silver ions activate the arene rings and TfOH provides the carbocations. Further applications and mechanistic studies are now underway in our lab.
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