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The development of palladium-catalyzed fluorination with biaryl monophosphine ligands has faced two important problems that limit its application for bromoarenes: the formation of regioisomers and insufficient catalysis for heteroaryl substrates as bromothiophene derivatives. Overcoming these problems requires more ligand design. In this work, reliable theoretical calculations were used to elucidate important ligand features necessary for achieving more rate acceleration and selectivity. These features include increasing the ligand-substrate repulsion and creating a negative charge in the space around the fluoride ion bonded to the palladium. The investigated L5 ligand presents these features, and the calculations predict that this ligand completely suppresses the regioisomer formation in the difficult case of 4-bromoanisole. In addition, the free energy barriers are decreased by 2-3 kcal mol-1 in comparison with the catalysis involving the AlPhos ligand. Thus, the present study points out a direction for new developments in palladium-catalyzed fluorination.
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The applications of fluorinated molecules in chemical biology are rapidly expanding driven by the unique properties of C-F bonds, leading to increased interest in methodologies for controlled introduction of this atom. In this study, we present the first method for late-stage fluorination of tyrosine residues in proteins. Our results demonstrate that electrophilic fluorination using Selectfluor, a stable and non-toxic reagent, offers a straightforward and cost-effective method for labeling Cyanovirin-N (CVN), a 101-amino-acid lectin with effective antiviral activity. Uni- and bidimensional 1H, 13C and 19F NMR analyses, along with mass spectrometry, revealed chemoselective fluorination of the three tyrosine residues in CVN without affecting its overall structure or mannose-binding affinity. Additionally, we observed that other aromatic amino acids, such as tryptophan, phenylalanine, and histidine, are not fluorinated using this method. These findings advance our understanding of protein fluorination and its applications in studying structure, dynamics, and interactions, as well as other biological utilities.
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Mono- and few-layer hexagonal AlN (h-AlN) has emerged as an alternative "beyond graphene" and "beyond h-BN" 2D material, especially in the context of its verification in ultra-high vacuum Scanning Tunneling Microscopy and Molecular-beam Epitaxy (MBE) experiments. However, graphitic-like AlN has only been recently obtained using a scalable and semiconductor-technology-related synthesis techniques, such as metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD), which involves a hydrogen-rich environment. Motivated by these recent experimental findings, in the present work, we carried out ab initio calculations to investigate the hydrogenation of h-AlN monolayers in a variety of functionalization configurations. We also investigated the fluorination of h-AlN monolayers in different decoration configurations. We find that a remarkable span of bandgap variation in h-AlN, from metallic properties to nar-row-bandgap semiconductor, and to wide-bandgap semiconductor can be achieved by its hy-drogenation and fluorination. Exciting application prospects may also arise from the findings that H and F decoration of h-AlN can render some such configurations magnetic. We complemented this modelling picture by disclosing a viable experimental strategy for the fluorination of h-AlN.
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The reactivity of the fluoride ion towards alkyl halides is highly dependent on the solvating environment. In polar aprotic solvents with large counter-ions is highly reactive and produces substantial E2 product, whereas in polar protic solvents leads to slow kinetics and high selectivity for SN2 reactions. The use of a more complex environment with stoichiometric addition of tert-butanol to acetonitrile solvent is able to module the reactivity and selectivity of tetrabutylammonium fluoride (TBAF). In the present work, we have performed a detailed theoretical analysis of this complex reaction system by density functional theory, continuum solvation model, and including explicit tert-butanol molecules. A kinetic model based on the free energy profile was also used to predict the reactivity and selectivity. The results indicated that the TBAF(tert-butanol) complex plays the key role to increase the SN2 selectivity, whereas higher aggregates are not relevant. The E2 product is formed exclusively via free TBAF, because the solvating tert-butanol in the TBAF(tert-butanol) complex inhibits the E2 pathway. Our analysis suggests that diols or tetraols could produce an improved selectivity.
Assuntos
Halogenação , terc-Butil Álcool , Flúor , Cinética , SolventesRESUMO
We report counter-intuitive axial preferences in non-stereochemically biased, selectively fluorinated methoxycyclohexanes. These pseudo-anomeric effects are apparent when electronegative CF2 groups are placed at the C-2, C-4 and C-6 positions of the cyclohexane ring to render the C-3/5 axial hydrogen atoms electropositive. The electrostatic interaction between these axial hydrogen atoms and the -OMe oxygen is stabilising. The effect is explored using high-level ab initio and DFT calculations in the framework of NBO, QTAIM and NCI analysis across a range of derivatives, and experimentally (19 F{1 H}-NMR at -80 °C) for some illustrative examples. The effect is significant in energy terms for a weak interaction, and illustrates a new stereoelectronic aspect attributed to selective fluorine substitution in organic chemistry.
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The generation of fluorinated essential oils as a source of bioactive compounds is described. Most of the components of the natural mixtures were altered, leading to the discovery of a new fluorinated tyrosinase inhibitor.