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1.
J Org Chem ; 87(22): 15224-15249, 2022 11 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36318089

ABSTRACT

The amino group in aminocarboxylic acids is sufficiently basic to be protonated in strong acids, and consequently, ionization of the carboxylic acid to an acylium ion is blocked due to charge-charge repulsion. Thus, acylation of aromatic compounds is significantly retarded in Friedel-Craft type reactions. We found that Friedel-Crafts acylation with aminocarboxylic acids can proceed smoothly even in a strong Brønsted acid (triflic acid, TfOH) if the Lewis base P4O10 is added. Here we describe the Friedel-Crafts acylation reactions of anthranilic acid and α- to δ-aminocarboxylic acids with benzene derivatives in the presence of P4O10. Non-amino-containing carboxylic acids as well as N-containing heteroaromatic carboxylic acids are available, and α-amino acids can be directly utilized without any protective group. Most substrates afford acylation products in high yields, although some epimerization/racemization may occur. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations suggested that P4O10 neutralizes the protonated amine, converting the N-H covalent bond to a N-hydrogen bond and allowing the carboxylic acid OH functionality to serve as a good leaving group.


Subject(s)
Acids , Lewis Bases , Acylation , Carboxylic Acids , Hydrogen Bonding
2.
Molecules ; 27(18)2022 Sep 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36144714

ABSTRACT

In this review, we discuss Friedel-Crafts-type aromatic amidation and acylation reactions, not exhaustively, but mainly based on our research results. The electrophilic species involved are isocyanate cation and acylium cation, respectively, and both have a common +C=O structure, which can be generated from carboxylic acid functionalities in a strong Brønsted acid. Carbamates substituted with methyl salicylate can be easily ionized to the isocyanate cation upon (di)protonation of the salicylate. Carboxylic acids can be used directly as a source of acylium cations. However, aminocarboxylic acids are inert in acidic media because two positively charged sites, ammonium and acylium cation, will be generated, resulting in energetically unfavorable charge-charge repulsion. Nevertheless, the aromatic acylation of aminocarboxylic acids can be achieved by using tailored phosphoric acid esters as Lewis bases to abrogate the charge-charge repulsion. Both examples tame the superelectrophilic character.


Subject(s)
Ammonium Compounds , Lewis Bases , Acids , Acylation , Carbamates , Carboxylic Acids , Cations/chemistry , Isocyanates/chemistry , Molecular Structure , Organophosphates , Salicylates
3.
Org Biomol Chem ; 16(21): 4013-4020, 2018 05 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29767199

ABSTRACT

Here, we report new methodology for synthesizing 2,3-benzodiazepines and their analogues by means of phosphate-assisted acylation reaction of 1-arylpropan-2-ones with a carboxylic acid followed by hydrazine cyclization in a one-pot two-step manner. An unprotected amino group is tolerated in this reaction. This method provides a direct access to 2,3-benzodiazepines containing aromatic 7,8-dimethoxy and 1-p-aminophenyl groups, which are generally considered important for bioactivity. The presence of 3,4-dimethoxy or 3-methoxy substitution on the benzene ring of the 1-arylpropan-2-one is important for high regioselectivity in the acylation reaction.

4.
Org Biomol Chem ; 15(44): 9398-9407, 2017 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29094123

ABSTRACT

Friedel-Crafts acylation of aromatic compounds with aminocarboxylic acids proceeds efficiently in the presence of a tailored phosphate ester and a strong Brønsted acid, despite the strong charge-charge repulsion associated with acylium ion formation. Here, we investigate the mechanism of this electrophilic aromatic acylation reaction, focusing on how the aminocarboxylic acid is activated by the phosphate ester and how the charge-charge repulsion is overcome. In the first step of the reaction, an acyl phosphate is generated from the aminocarboxylic acid through the intervention of the phosphate ester, which possesses three methyl salicylate ester linkages. The o-methyl salicylates enhance the reactivity of the phosphate ester via a protonation-induced conformational change, thereby overwhelming the charge-charge repulsion associated with the acylium ion formation. Weakening of the resonance interaction in the C(O)-O(P) bond by the lone-pair electrons of the ether oxygen atom of the carboxylic acid functionality contributes to the rapid formation of the acylium ion. Thus, our results show that the formation of aromatic ketones from various carboxylic acids proceeds because the strong leaving ability of the acyl phosphate overwhelms the charge-charge repulsion associated with the formation of the acylium ion. This information will be helpful to improve the design of tailored phosphate reagents.

5.
J Org Chem ; 82(12): 6044-6053, 2017 06 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28557443

ABSTRACT

A superacid-promoted method for the synthesis of 9,9-diarylfluorenes is described. The chemistry involves cyclizations and arylations with biphenyl-substituted heterocyclic ketones and a mechanism is proposed involving superelectrophilic intermediates. The key reactive intermediates-dicationic and trication fluorenyl cations have been observed by low-temperature NMR and the mechanism has been further studied using DFT calculations.

6.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 53(9): 1482-1485, 2017 Jan 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28084492

ABSTRACT

We describe the chemoselective conversion of carboxylic acids to functional aromatic ketones promoted by a tailored organophosphate ester in the presence of a Brønsted acid. The protonated phosphate ester reacts with the carboxylic acid to form acyl phosphate, which reacts with benzenes to give aromatic ketones, probably through the acylium ion or its equivalent. The reaction time is short even at room temperature, and the reaction is compatible with various other functional groups, including amines, olefins, esters, amides and nitriles.

7.
Chemistry ; 23(11): 2566-2570, 2017 Feb 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28072909

ABSTRACT

A series of 9-fluorenyl cations has been studied and it is shown that increasing charge on a heterocyclic substituent group enhances the anti-aromatic character of the carbocation system. Similarly, a series of dibenzosuberenyl cations has been studied and increasing charge on a substituent group is shown to enhance aromatic character in the carbocation system. These studies include the direct observations of dicationic and tricationic species using stable-ion conditions and low temperature NMR. The structures of these ions were further characterized using DFT calculations, confirming that highly charged organic ions may exhibit unusual distributions of π-electrons and delocalization of electrons in 4n or 4n+2 π-systems.

8.
Org Biomol Chem ; 14(5): 1680-93, 2016 Feb 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26699842

ABSTRACT

While some sequential electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions, known as tandem/domino/cascade reactions, have been reported for the construction of aromatic single skeletons, one of the most interesting and challenging possibilities remains the one-pot build-up of a complex aromatic molecule from multiple starting components, i.e., ultimately multi-component electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions. In this work, we show how tuning of the leaving group ability of phenolate derivatives from carbamates and esters provides a way to successively generate multiple unmasked electrophiles in a controlled manner in one pot, simply by varying the temperature. Here, we demonstrate the autonomous formation of up to three bonds in one pot and formation of two bonds arising from a three-component electrophilic aromatic substitution reaction. This result provides a proof-of-concept of our strategy applicable for the self-directed construction of complex aromatic structures from multiple simple molecules, which can be a potential avenue to realize multi-component electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions.

9.
Chem Asian J ; 9(10): 2995-3004, 2014 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25138062

ABSTRACT

Carbamates have been used as precursors of isocyanates, but heating in the presence of strong acids is required because cleavage of the C-O bond in carbamates is energy-demanding even in acid media. Direct amidation of aromatic compounds by isocyanate cations generated at room temperature from carbamoyl salicylates in trifluoromethanesulfonic acid (TfOH) was examined. Carbamates with ortho-salicylate as an ether group (carbamoyl salicylates) showed dramatically accelerated O-C bond dissociation in TfOH, which resulted in facile generation of the isocyanate cation. These chemoselective intermolecular aromatic amidation reactions proceeded even at room temperature and showed good compatibility with other electrophilic functionalities and high discrimination between N-monosubstituted carbamate and N,N-disubstituted carbamate. The reaction rates of secondary and tertiary amide formation were markedly different, and this difference was utilized to achieve successive (tandem) amidation reactions of molecules with an N-monosubstituted carbamate and an N,N-disubstituted carbamate with two kinds of aromatic compounds.


Subject(s)
Acids/chemistry , Amides/chemistry , Carbamates/chemistry , Isocyanates/chemistry , Cations
10.
Chemistry ; 20(28): 8682-90, 2014 Jul 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24920101

ABSTRACT

We found that phenethylcarbamates that bear ortho-salicylate as an ether group (carbamoyl salicylates) dramatically accelerate OC bond dissociation in strong acid to facilitate generation of isocyanate cation (N-protonated isocyanates), which undergo subsequent intramolecular aromatic electrophilic cyclization to give dihydroisoquinolones. To generate isocyanate cations from carbamates in acidic media as electrophiles for aromatic substitution, protonation at the ether oxygen, the least basic heteroatom, is essential to promote CO bond cleavage. However, the carbonyl oxygen of carbamates, the most basic site, is protonated exclusively in strong acids. We found that the protonation site can be shifted to an alternative basic atom by linking methyl salicylate to the ether oxygen of carbamate. The methyl ester oxygen ortho to the phenolic (ether) oxygen of salicylate is as basic as the carbamate carbonyl oxygen, and we found that monoprotonation at the methyl ester oxygen in strong acid resulted in the formation of an intramolecular cationic hydrogen bond (>CO(+) H⋅⋅⋅O<) with the phenolic ether oxygen. This facilitates OC bond dissociation of phenethylcarbamates, thereby promoting isocyanate cation formation. In contrast, superacid-mediated diprotonation at the methyl ester oxygen of the salicylate and the carbonyl oxygen of the carbamate afforded a rather stable dication, which did not readily undergo CO bond dissociation. This is an unprecedented and unknown case in which the monocation has greater reactivity than the dication.


Subject(s)
Cations/chemistry , Isocyanates/chemistry , Carbamates , Cyclization , Models, Molecular , Molecular Structure
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