scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Evolution of a fourth generation catalyst for the amination and thioetherification of aryl halides.

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The conceptual basis and utility of the latest, "fourth-generation" palladium catalyst for the coupling of amines and related reagents with aryl halides is described and the effects of electronic properties on C-C and C-N bond-forming reductive elimination are similar.
Abstract
Many active pharmaceuticals, herbicides, conducting polymers, and components of organic light-emitting diodes contain arylamines. For many years, this class of compound was prepared via classical methods, such as nitration, reduction and reductive alkylation, copper-mediated chemistry at high temperatures, addition to benzyne intermediates, or direct nucleophilic substitution on particularly electron-poor aromatic or heteroaromatic halides. However, during the past decade, palladium-catalyzed coupling reactions of amines with aryl halides have largely supplanted these earlier methods. Successive generations of catalysts have gradually improved the scope and efficiency of the palladium-catalyzed reaction. This Account describes the conceptual basis and utility of our latest, "fourth-generation" palladium catalyst for the coupling of amines and related reagents with aryl halides. In the past five years, we have developed these catalysts using the lessons learned from previous generations of catalysts developed in our group and in other laboratories. The ligands on the fourth-generation catalyst combine the chelating properties of the aromatic bisphosphines of the second-generation systems with the steric properties and strong electron donation of the hindered alkylphosphines of the third-generation systems. The currently most reactive catalyst in this class is generated from palladium and a sterically hindered version of the Josiphos family of ligands that possesses a ferrocenyl-1-ethyl backbone, a hindered di-tert-butylphosphino group, and a hindered dicyclohexylphosphino group. This system catalyzes the coupling of aryl chlorides, bromides, and iodides with primary amines, N-H imines, and hydrazones in high yield. The reaction has broad scope, high functional group tolerance, and nearly perfect selectivity for monoarylation. It also requires the lowest levels of palladium that have been used for C-N coupling. In addition, this latest catalyst has dramatically improved the coupling of thiols with haloarenes to form C-S bonds. Using ligands that lacked one or more of the structural elements of the most active catalyst, we examined the effects of individual structural elements of the Josiphos ligand on catalyst activity. This set of studies showed that each one of these elements contributes to the high reactivity and selectivity of the catalyst containing the hindered, bidentate Josiphos ligand. Finally, we examined the effect of electronic properties on the rates of reductive elimination to distinguish between the effect of the properties of the M-N sigma-bond and the nitrogen electron pair. We have found that the effects of electronic properties on C-C and C-N bond-forming reductive elimination are similar. Because the amido ligands contain an electron pair, while the alkyl ligands do not, we have concluded that the major electronic effect is transmitted through the sigma-bond.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Palladium-Catalyzed Cross-Coupling: A Historical Contextual Perspective to the 2010 Nobel Prize

TL;DR: This Review attempts to trace the historical origin of these powerful reactions, and outline the developments from the seminal discoveries leading to their eminent position as appreciated and applied today.
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent advances in the transition metal-catalyzed twofold oxidative C–H bond activation strategy for C–C and C–N bond formation

TL;DR: This critical review covers the recent progresses on the regioselective dehydrogenative direct coupling reaction of heteroarenes, including arylation, olefination, alkynylation, and amination/amidation mainly utilizing transition metal catalysts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Applications of Palladium-Catalyzed C–N Cross-Coupling Reactions

TL;DR: An overview of Pd-catalyzed N-arylation reactions found in both basic and applied chemical research from 2008 to the present is provided.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transition Metal-Catalyzed C–H Amination: Scope, Mechanism, and Applications

TL;DR: This Review comprehensively highlights recent advances in intra- and intermolecular C-H amination reactions utilizing late transition metal-based catalysts using mechanistic scaffolds and types of reactions.
References
More filters
BookDOI

Metal-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an approach to the formation of C-X (X = N, O, S) bonds in metal-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transition Metal Catalyzed Synthesis of Arylamines and Aryl Ethers from Aryl Halides and Triflates: Scope and Mechanism.

TL;DR: Oxidative addition and reductive elimination are the central steps in new palladium-catalyzed chemistry that forms C-N and C-O bonds in arylamines and ethers.
Book ChapterDOI

Practical Palladium Catalysts for C-N and C-O Bond Formation

TL;DR: The development of new palladium catalysts for the arylation of amines and alcohols with aryl halides and sulfonates is reviewed in this article, where modifications and improvements in technical aspects of reaction development are described where appropriate.
Related Papers (5)