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1.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; : e202409854, 2024 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38950149

ABSTRACT

An organophosphorus redox-catalyzed method for the direct electrophilic cyanation of C(sp2)-H nucleophiles with sodium cyanate (NaOCN) is reported. The catalytic deoxyfunctionalization of the OCN- anion is enabled by the use of a small-ring phosphacyclic (phosphetane) catalyst in combination with a terminal hydrosilane O-atom acceptor and a malonate-derived bromenium donor. In situ spectroscopy under single-turnover conditions demonstrate that insoluble inorganic cyanate anion is activated by bromide displacement on a bromophosphonium catalytic intermediate to give a reactive N-bound isocyanatophosphonium ion, which delivers electrophilic "CN+" equivalents to nucleophilic (hetero)arenes and alkenes with loss of a phosphine oxide. These results demonstrate the feasibility of deoxyfunctionalization of insoluble inorganic salts by PIII/PV=O catalyzed phase transfer activation.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(44): 24184-24190, 2023 Nov 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37877607

ABSTRACT

A series of structurally constrained phosphenium ions based on pyridinylmethylamidophenolate scaffolds are shown to undergo P(III)/P(V) oxidative addition with C-H bonds of alkynes, alkenes, and arenes. Nonactivated substrates such as benzene, toluene, and deactivated chlorobenzene are phosphorylated in quantitative yields. Computational and spectroscopic studies suggest a low-barrier isomerization from a bent to a T-shaped isomer that initiates a phosphorus-ligand-cooperative pathway and subsequent ring-chain tautomerism. Remarkably, C-H bond activations occur reversibly, allowing for reductive elimination back to P(III) at elevated temperatures or the exchange with other substrates.

3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(41): 22735-22744, 2023 Oct 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37812176

ABSTRACT

A method for deoxyfluorination of aliphatic primary, secondary, and tertiary alcohols is reported, employing a nontrigonal phosphorus triamide for base-free alcohol activation in conjunction with an organic soluble fluoride donor and a triarylborane fluoride shuttling catalyst. Mechanistic experiments are consistent with a reaction that proceeds by the collapse of an oxyphosphonium fluoroborate ion pair with fluoride transfer. The substrate scope complements existing deoxyfluorination methods and enables the preparation of homochiral secondary and tertiary alkylfluorides by stereoinversion of the substrate alcohol.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(1): 41-46, 2023 01 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36562776

ABSTRACT

A synthetic method for the reductive transformation of nitroarenes into ortho-aminated and -annulated products is reported. The method operates via the exhaustive deoxygenation of nitroarenes by an organophosphorus catalyst and a mild terminal reductant to access aryl nitrenes, which after ring expansion, are trapped by amine nucleophiles to give dearomatized 2-amino-3H-azepines. Treatment of these ring-expanded intermediates with acyl electrophiles triggers 6π electrocyclization to extrude the nitrogen atom and restore aromaticity of the phenyl ring, which delivers via C-H functionalization 2-aminoanilide and benzimidazole products.


Subject(s)
Amines , Nitrogen , Amination , Catalysis
5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(47): 21443-21447, 2022 11 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36378626

ABSTRACT

Hydride transfer catalysis is shown to be enabled by the nonspectator reactivity of a transition metal-bound low-symmetry tricoordinate phosphorus ligand. Complex 1·[Ru]+, comprising a nontrigonal phosphorus chelate (1, P(N(o-N(2-pyridyl)C6H4)2) and an inert metal fragment ([Ru] = (Me5C5)Ru), reacts with NaBH4 to give a metallohydridophosphorane (1H·[Ru]) by P-H bond formation. Complex 1H·[Ru] is revealed to be a potent hydride donor (ΔG°H-,exp < 41 kcal/mol, ΔG°H-,calc = 38 ± 2 kcal/mol in MeCN). Taken together, the reactivity of the 1·[Ru]+/1H·[Ru] pair comprises a catalytic couple, enabling catalytic hydrodechlorination in which phosphorus is the sole reactive site of hydride transfer.


Subject(s)
Phosphorus , Transition Elements , Ligands , Catalysis , Transition Elements/chemistry , Metals
6.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(44): 20243-20248, 2022 11 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36301929

ABSTRACT

The synthesis and reactivity of an ambiphilic iridium complex IrCl(PPh3)(L1) (1; L1 = P(N(o-N(2-pyridyl)C6H4)2)) featuring a chelating nontrigonal phosphorus triamide ligand is reported. The tandem Lewis basic Ir and Lewis acidic P of 1 achieve a two-site oxidative addition of phenol giving the iridaphenoxyphosphorane species IrHCl(PPh3)(L1OPh) (3'). In contrast, reactions of 1 with benzenethiol and benzeneselenol do not engage L1 and instead proceed via metal-centered oxidative addition of the chalcogen-hydrogen bond. These findings establish metal-ligand cooperation involving nonspectator reactivity of tricoordinate phosphorus ligands.


Subject(s)
Iridium , Phosphorus , Iridium/chemistry , Ligands , Phosphorus/chemistry , Chelating Agents/chemistry , Hydrogen Bonding
7.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(18): 8242-8248, 2022 05 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35499970

ABSTRACT

An organophosphorus-catalyzed C-N bond-forming reductive coupling of nitroalkanes with arylboronic acids and esters is reported. The method shows excellent chemoselectivity for the nitro/boronic acid substrate pair, allowing the synthesis of N-(hetero)arylamines rich in functionalization. The identification of a sterically reduced phosphetane catalyst capable of productive coupling in the P(III)/P(V)═O redox manifold is the key enabling development. Combined experimental kinetics and computational mechanistic studies show that the sterically reduced catalyst affects post-rate-limiting steps to enable the C-N coupling event in preference to deleterious side-paths.


Subject(s)
Boronic Acids , Nitro Compounds , Alkanes , Amines , Catalysis
8.
J Am Chem Soc ; 144(20): 8902-8907, 2022 05 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35549268

ABSTRACT

A catalytic approach to intercept the transient HNO for a chemoselective primary amination of arylboronic acids is reported. A phosphetane-based catalyst operating within PIII/PV═O redox cycling is shown to capture HNO, generated in situ by Nef decomposition of 2-nitropropane, to selectively install the primary amino group at aryl Csp2 centers. The method furnishes versatile primary arylamines from arylboronic acid substrates with the preservation of otherwise reactive functional groups.


Subject(s)
Amines , Boronic Acids , Amination , Amines/chemistry , Boronic Acids/chemistry , Catalysis , Molecular Structure
9.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(36): 14464-14469, 2021 09 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34473484

ABSTRACT

An organophosphorus-catalyzed method for the synthesis of unsymmetrical hydrazines by cross-selective intermolecular N-N reductive coupling is reported. This method employs a small ring phosphacycle (phosphetane) catalyst together with hydrosilane as the terminal reductant to drive reductive coupling of nitroarenes and anilines with good chemoselectivity and functional group tolerance. Mechanistic investigations support an autotandem catalytic reaction cascade in which the organophosphorus catalyst drives two sequential and mechanistically distinct reduction events via PIII/PV═O cycling in order to furnish the target N-N bond.


Subject(s)
Aniline Compounds/chemistry , Hydrazines/chemical synthesis , Nitrobenzenes/chemistry , Catalysis , Indazoles/chemical synthesis , Organophosphorus Compounds/chemistry , Oxidation-Reduction
10.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(36): 14487-14494, 2021 09 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34478308

ABSTRACT

An organophosphorus (PIII/PV redox) catalyzed method for the three-component condensation of amines, carboxylic acids, and pyridine N-oxides to generate 2-amidopyridines via serial dehydration is reported. Whereas amide synthesis and functionalization usually occur under divergent reaction conditions, here a phosphetane catalyst (together with a mild bromenium oxidant and terminal hydrosilane reductant) is shown to drive both steps chemoselectively in an auto-tandem catalytic cascade. The ability to both prepare and functionalize amides under the action of a single organocatalytic reactive intermediate enables new possibilities for the efficient and modular preparation of medicinal targets.


Subject(s)
Amides/chemical synthesis , Pyridines/chemical synthesis , Amines/chemistry , Carboxylic Acids/chemistry , Catalysis , Cyclic N-Oxides/chemistry , Organophosphorus Compounds/chemistry , Oxidation-Reduction
11.
Trends Chem ; 3(1): 72-73, 2021 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33681749
12.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(4): 1699-1721, 2021 02 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33464903

ABSTRACT

A growing number of organopnictogen redox catalytic methods have emerged-especially within the past 10 years-that leverage the plentiful reversible two-electron redox chemistry within Group 15. The goal of this Perspective is to provide readers the context to understand the dramatic developments in organopnictogen catalysis over the past decade with an eye toward future development. An exposition of the fundamental differences in the atomic structure and bonding of the pnictogens, and thus the molecular electronic structure of organopnictogen compounds, is presented to establish the backdrop against which organopnictogen redox reactivity-and ultimately catalysis-is framed. A deep appreciation of these underlying periodic principles informs an understanding of the differing modes of organopnictogen redox catalysis and evokes the key challenges to the field moving forward. We close by addressing forward-looking directions likely to animate this area in the years to come. What new catalytic manifolds can be developed through creative catalyst and reaction design that take advantage of the intrinsic redox reactivity of the pnictogens to drive new discoveries in catalysis?


Subject(s)
Organic Chemicals/chemistry , Catalysis , Molecular Structure , Oxidation-Reduction
13.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(51): 21285-21291, 2020 Dec 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33306370

ABSTRACT

Insertion of a tricoordinate phosphorus ligand into late metal-carbon bonds is reported. Metalation of a P^P-chelating ligand (L1), composed of a nontrigonal phosphorous (i.e., P(III)) triamide moiety, P(N(o-N(Ar)C6H4)2, tethered by a phenylene linker to a -PiPr2 anchor, with group 10 complexes L2M(Me)Cl (M = Ni, Pd) results in insertion of the nontrigonal phosphorus site into the metal-methyl bond. The stable methylmetallophosphorane compounds thus formed are characterized spectroscopically and crystallographically. Metalation of L1 with (cod)PtII(Me)(Cl) does not lead to a metallophosphorane but rather to the standard bisphosphine chelate (κ2-L1)Pt(Me)(Cl). These divergent reactivities within group 10 are rationalized by reference to periodic variation in M-C bond enthalpies.

14.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(38): 16188-16193, 2020 09 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32909747

ABSTRACT

A synthetic cycle for aryl C-F substitution comprising oxidative addition, ligand metathesis, and reductive elimination at a Cs-symmetric phosphorus triamide (1, P{N[o-NMe-C6H4]2}) is reported. Reaction of 1 with perfluoroarenes (ArF-F) results in C-F oxidative addition, yielding fluorophosphoranes 1·[F][ArF]. The P-fluoro substituent is exchanged for hydride by treatment with DIBAL-H, generating hydridophosphoranes 1·[H][ArF]. Heating of 1·[H][ArF] regenerates 1 by C-H reductive elimination of ArF-H, where experimental and computational studies establish a concerted but highly asynchronous mechanism. The results provide well-characterized examples of the full triad of elementary mechanistic aryl C-X substitution steps at a single main-group site.

15.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(38): 16205-16210, 2020 09 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32886500

ABSTRACT

The direct reductive N-arylation of nitromethane by organophosphorus-catalyzed reductive C-N coupling with arylboronic acid derivatives is reported. This method operates by the action of a small ring organophosphorus-based catalyst (1,2,2,3,4,4-hexamethylphosphetane P-oxide) together with a mild terminal reductant hydrosilane to drive the selective installation of the methylamino group to (hetero)aromatic boronic acids and esters. This method also provides for a unified synthetic approach to isotopically labeled N-methylanilines from various stable isotopologues of nitromethane (i.e., CD3NO2, CH315NO2, and 13CH3NO2), revealing this easy-to-handle compound as a versatile precursor for the direct installation of the methylamino group.


Subject(s)
Amines/chemical synthesis , Boronic Acids/chemistry , Esters/chemistry , Methane/analogs & derivatives , Nitroparaffins/chemistry , Organophosphorus Compounds/chemistry , Amination , Amines/chemistry , Catalysis , Methane/chemistry , Molecular Structure , Oxidation-Reduction
16.
Science ; 369(6505)2020 08 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32792370

ABSTRACT

Numerous redox transformations that are essential to life are catalyzed by metalloenzymes that feature Earth-abundant metals. In contrast, platinum-group metals have been the cornerstone of many industrial catalytic reactions for decades, providing high activity, thermal stability, and tolerance to chemical poisons. We assert that nature's blueprint provides the fundamental principles for vastly expanding the use of abundant metals in catalysis. We highlight the key physical properties of abundant metals that distinguish them from precious metals, and we look to nature to understand how the inherent attributes of abundant metals can be embraced to produce highly efficient catalysts for reactions crucial to the sustainable production and transformation of fuels and chemicals.

17.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(14): 6786-6799, 2020 04 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32178514

ABSTRACT

Experimental, spectroscopic, and computational studies are reported that provide an evidence-based mechanistic description of an intermolecular reductive C-N coupling of nitroarenes and arylboronic acids catalyzed by a redox-active main-group catalyst (1,2,2,3,4,4-hexamethylphosphetane P-oxide, i.e., 1·[O]). The central observations include the following: (1) catalytic reduction of 1·[O] to PIII phosphetane 1 is kinetically fast under conditions of catalysis; (2) phosphetane 1 represents the catalytic resting state as observed by 31P NMR spectroscopy; (3) there are no long-lived nitroarene partial-reduction intermediates observable by 15N NMR spectroscopy; (4) the reaction is sensitive to solvent dielectric, performing best in moderately polar solvents (viz. cyclopentylmethyl ether); and (5) the reaction is largely insensitive with respect to common hydrosilane reductants. On the basis of the foregoing studies, new modified catalytic conditions are described that expand the reaction scope and provide for mild temperatures (T ≥ 60 °C), low catalyst loadings (≥2 mol%), and innocuous terminal reductants (polymethylhydrosiloxane). DFT calculations define a two-stage deoxygenation sequence for the reductive C-N coupling. The initial deoxygenation involves a rate-determining step that consists of a (3+1) cheletropic addition between the nitroarene substrate and phosphetane 1; energy decomposition techniques highlight the biphilic character of the phosphetane in this step. Although kinetically invisible, the second deoxygenation stage is implicated as the critical C-N product-forming event, in which a postulated oxazaphosphirane intermediate is diverted from arylnitrene dissociation toward heterolytic ring opening with the arylboronic acid; the resulting dipolar intermediate evolves by antiperiplanar 1,2-migration of the organoboron residue to nitrogen, resulting in displacement of 1·[O] and formation of the target C-N coupling product upon in situ hydrolysis. The method thus described constitutes a mechanistically well-defined and operationally robust main-group complement to the current workhorse transition-metal-based methods for catalytic intermolecular C-N coupling.

18.
Chem Sci ; 12(3): 1031-1037, 2020 Nov 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34163869

ABSTRACT

A nontrigonal phosphorus triamide (1, P{N[o-NMe-C6H4]2}) is shown to catalyze C-H borylation of electron-rich heteroarenes with pinacolborane (HBpin) in the presence of a mild chloroalkane reagent. C-H borylation proceeds for a range of electron-rich heterocycles including pyrroles, indoles, and thiophenes of varied substitution. Mechanistic studies implicate an initial P-N cooperative activation of HBpin by 1 to give P-hydrido diazaphospholene 2, which is diverted by Atherton-Todd oxidation with chloroalkane to generate P-chloro diazaphospholene 3. DFT calculations suggest subsequent oxidation of pinacolborane by 3 generates chloropinacolborane (ClBpin) as a transient electrophilic borylating species, consistent with observed substituent effects and regiochemical outcomes. These results illustrate the targeted diversion of established reaction pathways in organophosphorus catalysis to enable a new mode of main group-catalyzed C-H borylation.

19.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 59(11): 4505-4510, 2020 03 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31869510

ABSTRACT

An organocatalytic method for the modular synthesis of diverse N-aryl and N-alkyl azaheterocycles (indoles, oxindoles, benzimidazoles, and quinoxalinediones) is reported. The method employs a small-ring organophosphorus-based catalyst (1,2,2,3,4,4-hexamethylphosphetane P-oxide) and a hydrosilane reductant to drive the conversion of ortho-functionalized nitroarenes into azaheterocycles through sequential intermolecular reductive C-N cross coupling with boronic acids, followed by intramolecular cyclization. This method enables the rapid construction of azaheterocycles from readily available building blocks, including a regiospecific approach to N-substituted benzimidazoles and quinoxalinediones.


Subject(s)
Benzimidazoles/chemical synthesis , Organophosphorus Compounds/chemistry , Quinoxalines/chemical synthesis , Boronic Acids/chemistry , Catalysis , Cyclization , Molecular Structure , Oxidation-Reduction , Silanes/chemistry
20.
Chem Sci ; 10(30): 7177-7182, 2019 Aug 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31588285

ABSTRACT

The synthesis and catalytic reactivity of a class of water-tolerant cationic phosphorus-based Lewis acids is reported. Corrole-based phosphorus(v) cations of the type [ArP(cor)][B(C6F5)4] (Ar = C6H5, 3,5-(CF3)2C6H3; cor = 5,10,15-(C6H5)3corrolato3-, 5,10,15-(C6F5)3corrolato3-) were synthesized and characterized by NMR and X-ray diffraction. The visible electronic absorption spectra of these cationic phosphacorroles depend strongly on the coordination environment at phosphorus, and their Lewis acidities are quantified by spectrophotometric titrations. DFT analyses establish that the character of the P-acceptor orbital comprises P-N antibonding interactions in the basal plane of the phosphacorrole. Consequently, the cationic phosphacorroles display unprecedented stability to water and alcohols while remaining highly active and robust Lewis acid catalysts for carbonyl hydrosilylation, Csp3 -H bond functionalization, and carbohydrate deoxygenation reactions.

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