
Oxidative Cross-Coupling Reactions
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With its novel and concise approach towards important building blocks in organic chemistry and its focus on synthetic applications, this handbook is of great interest to all synthetic chemists in academia and industry alike.
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Wei Shi is an associate professor at the Huazhong Agricultural University (Wuhan, China) since 2011. He obtained his PhD at Wuhan University under the supervision of Prof. Aiwen Lei. His research interest is focused on the chemistry of alkynes and their derivatives.
Chao Liu is a professor at Lanzhou Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Science, China. He received his PhD in 2012 from the Wuhan University, China, under the supervision of Prof. Aiwen Lei. From October 2008 to October 2009 he was an exchange PhD student at Durham University, UK, in the group of Prof. Todd B. Marder. His research is focused on oxo-synthesis and selective oxidation.
Wei Liu is an associate professor at the College of Food Science and Technology, Henan University of Technology (Zhengzhou, China). He obtained his PhD from the College of Chemistry and Molecular Sciences, Wuhan University, China, in the group of Prof. Aiwen Lei in 2010. His research interest focuses on the green organic synthesis and catalytical biomass transformation.
Hua Zhang is a professor at Nanchang University, China. He obtained his PhD degree under the supervision of Prof. Aiwen Lei at Wuhan University in 2013. After that, he spent two years as a JSPS postdoctoral researcher in Prof. Kenichiro Itami?s lab at Nagoya University, Japan. His current research is focusing on non-noble transition metal catalysis.
Chuan He is a Marie Curie Research Fellow at the Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge, UK. He obtained his PhD from Wuhan University, Chain, under supervision of Prof. Aiwen Lei in 2013. He then joined Prof. Matthew Gaunt's group as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Cambridge, UK. His current research focuses on transition-metal-catalyzed C?H bond functionalization.
Content
1.1 What's oxidative coupling?
1.2 Why oxidative coupling?
1.3 How does oxidative coupling work?
1.4 Development and outlook
2. Organometals as Nucleophiles
2.1 Classification and applications of organometallic reagents
2.2 Csp-M and Csp-M as nucleophiles
2.3 Csp-M and Csp2-M as nucleophiles
2.4 Csp-M and Csp3-M as nucleophiles
2.5 Csp2-M and Csp2-M as nucleophiles
2.6 Csp2-M and Csp3-M as nucleophiles
2.7 Csp3-M and Csp3-M as nucleophiles
3. Oxidative Couplings involving the Cleavage of C-H Bonds
3.1 Theoretical understanding and methods in C-H bond activation
3.2 Oxidative coupling between organometals and hydrocarbons
3.3 Oxidative coupling between two hydrocarbons
4. Bonding including Heteroatoms via Oxidative Coupling
4.1 Oxidative C-O bond formation
4.2 Oxidative C-N bond formation
4.3 Bonding between carbon and other heteroatoms
4.4 Bonding between two heteroatoms
5. Oxidative Radical Couplings
5.1 Mechanistic studies
5.2 Radical couplings
5.3 Application of radical oxidative couplings in polymerizations
Chapter 1
Oxidative Coupling - Bonding between Two Nucleophiles
1.1 Introduction/General
1.1.1 What is Oxidative Cross-Coupling?
Transition-metal-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions have been developed to be a powerful tool for the construction of various chemical bonds since its initial discovery in the last century [1]. Owing to their great capacity for different types of bond formation, they have been widely applied in the areas of pharmaceuticals, agriculture, food industries, materials sciences, and so on [2]. Normally, in those classical cross-coupling reactions, bond formations occur between an electrophile and a nucleophile in the presence of a transition metal catalyst (Scheme 1.1, Eq. (1.1)) [3], in which no extra redox reagents are required for achieving the bond formation [4]. Both the electrophiles and the organometallic nucleophiles are usually obtained from pre-functionalization of their corresponding R-Hs (R equals C, N, O, S, etc.). However, with the development of modern synthetic methodology and the urgent demand for green and economical synthesis, traditional cross-couplings face great challenges on account of their inevitable drawbacks such as low atom economy and considerable generation of useless by-products [1, 5, 6]. At this point, direct bond formation between two nucleophiles, especially two hydrocarbons, would be an ideal alternative. As the coupling between two nucleophiles has to use an extra oxidant to promote bond formation, this type of couplings are named as oxidative cross-coupling (Scheme 1.1, Eq. (1.2)) [4, 7].
Scheme 1.1 Bond formation modes of classic cross-coupling and oxidative cross-coupling.
1.1.2 Why Oxidative Cross-Coupling?
Oxidative cross-couplings have gone through an extremely rapid development over the past decades, owing to their great potential for green and economic synthesis as well as considerable advantages over traditional cross-couplings, especially those couplings between two CH nucleophiles [8, 9]. Normally, nucleophiles can be divided into several classes: MX, CM, CH, or XH (X = N, O, S, etc.). In the MX group, salts such as metal halides are employed as reactants to form carbon-halogen bonds. In the C-M group, organometallic reagents serve as efficient carbon nucleophiles, which have been widely applied in transition-metal-catalyzed coupling reactions. Notably, CH or XH (X = N, O, S, etc.) nucleophiles exist extensively in nature, and they represent the most abundant nucleophiles. In the beginning, oxidative couplings focused on bond formations between two organometallic reagents under transition metal catalysis [10]. However, this bond formation mode does not meet the requirement of modern sustainable chemistry [11], since the organometallic reagents need to be derived from the corresponding hydrocarbons. In the following several years, replacing the organometallic reagents with various C-H or X-H nucleophiles to achieve greener oxidative couplings such as R1-H/R2-M2 and R1-H/R2-H dominated the research area, in which numerous outstanding works have been reported [12-15]. Especially, transition-metal-catalyzed oxidative R1-H/R2-H coupling with air or O2 as the oxidant is no doubt an ideal approach for bond formations [16, 17].
Taking the comparison between traditional cross-couplings and oxidative R1-H/R2-H couplings into account, usually, the electrophilic organohalides and the nucleophilic organometal reagents are more or less obtained from their corresponding C-H compounds in order to make the carbon site reactive enough to achieve C-C bond formation under catalytic conditions (Scheme 1.2, General Classic Synthetic Route). In this case, more reaction steps and more waste are unavoidable. Along with the development of chemical societies and the requirement for more sustainable chemical process arises the question whether C-C bond formations can be achieved directly from the C-H substrates that do not need to be pre-functionalized. It will greatly shorten the synthetic route and reduce the generation of waste. To form C-H bonds from C-H substrates, only hydrogen has to be released. Therefore, atom economy is considerably enhanced, demonstrating great potential for pharmaceutical and industrial application. Usually, an oxidant is required to accept the hydrogen; therefore, it was named as oxidative cross-coupling. Until now, various oxidants have been developed including peroxides, copper salts, silver salts, and so on [4, 7]. Oxygen gas is perhaps the most appealing oxidant for oxidative cross-couplings, as H2O is usually the side product. Recently, cross-coupling with hydrogen revolution has been demonstrated to achieve C-C and C-heteroatom bond formations in the absence of an external oxidant [18-24]. Those developments put forward the area of oxidative cross-coupling into more practical and more environmentally benign processes.
Scheme 1.2 Comparison between classic synthetic route and oxidative cross-coupling.
1.1.3 How Does Oxidative Cross-Coupling Work?
In the initially reported oxidative cross-coupling reactions, palladium catalysis was predominantly used for a long time for achieving various bond formations between two nucleophiles. For the mechanistic aspect, the general catalytic cycle of palladium-catalyzed oxidative coupling reactions can be elucidated from Scheme 1.3 [25]. As shown in Scheme 1.3, the catalytic cycle generally starts from a high valent Pd species. Consequent transmetalation of two different nucleophiles with the Pd species affords a Nu1-Pd-Nu2 intermediate, followed by reductive elimination to afford the coupling product Nu1-Nu2 and release of a low valent palladium species [Pdn], which can be reoxidized by a proper oxidant to regenerate the [Pdn+2] species. From the catalytic cycle in Scheme 1.3, we can see that both of the nucleophiles are involved in the final product, while the oxidant only acts as the electron acceptor to reoxidize the [Pdn] species without going into the coupling product. Generally, most of the palladium-catalyzed reactions are not supposed to be radical processes. Along with the development of oxidative cross-couplings, more and more first-row transition metal catalysis has been discovered, in which single-electron transfer (SET) processes become common phenomena.
Scheme 1.3 General catalytic cycle of palladium-catalyzed oxidative cross-coupling reactions.
1.1.4 Development and Outlook
Although oxidative cross-couplings between two nucleophiles form a still "young" research field compared to traditional cross-couplings, numerous excellent works have been reported on oxidative cross-couplings between two different hydrocarbons. In addition, several comprehensive reviews have been reported to summarize the recent advances in oxidative couplings between two C-H or X-H nucleophiles. However, challenges still remain in this research area. As hydrocarbons usually have different reactive C-H bonds, achieving chemoselective and regioselective C-H functionalization is still a challenging task. Moreover, understanding of this concept is still superficial and incomplete, and the mechanistic study in this area is still in its primary stage. In addition, developing mild and efficient transition-metal-catalyzed oxidative couplings between two C-H or X-H nucleophiles with air or O2 as the terminal oxidant is still in urgent demand. Further, external-oxidant-free oxidative cross-coupling between two hydrocarbons with liberation of hydrogen gas would also be a promising direction for oxidative cross-couplings.
References
- 1. de Meijere, A. and Diederich, F. (2004) Metal-Catalyzed Cross-Coupling Reactions; 2nd, completely rev. and enl. ed.;, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim.
- 2. Beller, M. and Bolm, C. (2004) Transition Metals for Organic Synthesis: Building Blocks and Fine Chemicals; 2nd rev. and enl. ed.;, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim.
- 3. Hartwig, J.F. (2010) Organotransition Metal Chemistry: From Bonding to Catalysis, University Science Books, Sausalito, California.
- 4. Liu, C., Zhang, H., Shi, W., and Lei, A. (2011) Bond formations between two nucleophiles: transition metal catalyzed oxidative cross-coupling reactions. Chem. Rev., 111, 1780-1824.
- 5. de Meijere, A., tom Dieck, H., and Stiftung Volkswagenwerk (1987) Organometallics in Organic Synthesis: Aspects of a Modern Interdisciplinary Field, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, New York.
- 6. Negishi, E.-i. and de Meijere, A. (2002) Handbook of Organopalladium Chemistry for Organic Synthesis, Wiley-Interscience, New York.
- 7. Liu, C., Yuan, J., Gao, M., Tang, S., Li, W., Shi, R., and Lei, A. (2015) Oxidative coupling between two hydrocarbons: an update of recent C-H functionalizations. Chem. Rev., 115, 12138-12204.
- 8. Le Bras, J. and Muzart, J. (2011) Intermolecular dehydrogenative Heck reactions. Chem. Rev., 111, 1170-1214.
- 9. Yeung, C.S. and Dong, V.M. (2011) Catalytic dehydrogenative cross-coupling: forming carbon-carbon bonds by oxidizing two carbon-hydrogen bonds. Chem. Rev., 111, 1215-1292.
- 10. Shi, W., Liu, C., and Lei, A. (2011) Transition-metal catalyzed oxidative cross-coupling reactions to form C-C bonds involving organometallic reagents...
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