The cores of many types of polymers, ligands, natural products, and pharmaceuticals contain biaryl or substituted aromatic structures, and efficient methods of synthesizing these structures are crucial to the work of a broad spectrum of organic chemists. Recently, Pd-catalyzed carbon-carbon bond-forming processes, particularly the Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling reaction (SMC), have risen in popularity for this purpose. The SMC has many advantages over other methods for constructing these moieties, including mild conditions, high tolerance toward functional groups, the commercial availability and stability of its reagents, and the ease of handling and separating byproducts from its reaction mixtures. Until 1998, most catalysts for the SMC employed triarylphosphine ligands. More recently, new bulky and electron-rich phosphine ligands, which can dramatically improve the efficiency and selectivity of such cross-coupling reactions, have been introduced. In the course of our studies on carbon-nitrogen bond-forming reactions, we found that the use of electron-rich and bulky phosphines enhanced the rate of both the oxidative addition and reductive elimination processes; this was the beginning of our development of a new family of ligands, the dialkylbiarylphosphines L1-L12. These ligands can be used for a wide variety of palladium-catalyzed carbon-carbon, carbon-nitrogen, and carbon-oxygen bond-forming processes as well as serving as supporting ligands for a number of other reactions. The enhanced reactivity of these catalysts has expanded the scope of cross-coupling partners that can be employed in the SMC. With use of such dialkylbiarylphosphine ligands, the coupling of unactivated aryl chlorides, aryl tosylates, heteroaryl systems, and very hindered substrate combinations have become routine. The utility of these ligands has been successfully demonstrated in a wide number of synthetic applications, including industrially relevant processes. In this Account, we provide an overview of the use and impact of dialkylbiarylphosphine ligands in the SMC. We discuss our studies on the mechanistic framework of the reaction, which have allowed us to rationally modify the ligand structures in order to tune their properties. We also describe selected applications in the synthesis of natural products and new materials to illustrate the utility of these dialkylbiarylphosphine ligands in various "real-world" synthetic applications.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2645945 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ar800036s | DOI Listing |
J Am Chem Soc
October 2024
Department of Chemistry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, United States.
Despite the prevalence of N-heteroarenes in small-molecule pharmaceuticals, Pd-catalyzed C-N cross-coupling reactions of aryl halides and amines containing these rings remain challenging due to their ability to displace the supporting ligand via coordination to the metal center. To address this limitation, we report the development of a highly robust Pd catalyst supported by a new dialkylbiarylphosphine ligand, FPhos. The FPhos-supported catalyst effectively resists N-heteroarene-mediated catalyst deactivation to readily promote C-N coupling between a wide variety of Lewis-basic aryl halides and secondary amines, including densely functionalized pharmaceuticals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
December 2020
Cherry L. Emerson Center for Scientific Computation, and Department of Chemistry, Emory University, 1521 Dickey Drive, Atlanta, Georgia 30322, United States.
Density functional theory was employed in order to elucidate the mechanism and factors that lead to the observed regioselectivity in the dialkylbiarylphosphine (Phos)/Pd-catalyzed C-C cleavage/cross-coupling of an -fused bicyclo α-hydroxy-β-lactam, . We have identified that (a) a complex [()(CsCO)]-PdL(PhBr) forms prior to a ""; (b) Cs-carbonate (rather than a halide) deprotonates the alcohol substrate in the lowest energy pathway en route to Pd-alcoholate formation; (c) reactions using Phos ligands bearing OCF and OCFH substituents on the "B"-ring are predicted to be selective toward proximal ring opening of ; (d) steric repulsion between the bottom "B"-ring of the Phos ligand and the piperidine moiety of controls the regioselectivity of the C-C cleavage followed by cross-coupling; and (e) the α- vs β-selective functionalization of the piperidine moiety in is influenced by the bulkiness of the R-substituent of the coupling partner. These studies will aid in the design of selective functionalizations of the piperidine moiety in .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Macro Lett
September 2020
Department of Chemistry, Carnegie Mellon University, 4400 Fifth Avenue, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213-2567, United States.
Electron-deficient (n-type) conjugated materials are commonly prepared via step-growth methods with limited control over the molecular weight and molecular weight distribution of the resulting polymers. In this communication, we demonstrate that Pd-dialkylbiarylphosphine catalysts enable the chain-growth polymerization of benzo[1,2,3]triazole using Suzuki-Miyaura coupling with molecular weight control and modest molecular weight distributions ( ∼ 1.2-1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrganometallics
September 2017
Hylleraas Centre for Quantum Molecular Sciences, Department of Chemistry, University of Oslo, P.O. Box 1033, Blindern, Oslo 0315, Norway.
Aryl sulfamates are valuable electrophiles for cross-coupling reactions because they can easily be synthesized from phenols and can act as directing groups for C-H bond functionalization prior to cross-coupling. Recently, it was demonstrated that (1-Bu-Indenyl)Pd(XPhos)Cl (XPhos = 2-dicyclohexylphosphino-2',4',6'-triisopropylbiphenyl) is a highly active precatalyst for room-temperature Suzuki-Miyaura couplings of a variety of aryl sulfamates. Herein, we report an in-depth computational investigation into the mechanism of Suzuki-Miyaura reactions with aryl sulfamates using an XPhos-ligated palladium catalyst.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
October 2017
Department of Material Chemistry, Graduate School of Engineering, Kyoto University, Katsura, Nishikyo-ku, Kyoto, 615-8510, Japan.
The Buchwald-Hartwig amination of nitroarenes was achieved for the first time by using palladium catalysts bearing dialkyl(biaryl)phosphine ligands. These cross-coupling reactions of nitroarenes with diarylamines, arylamines, and alkylamines afforded the corresponding substituted arylamines. A catalytic cycle involving the oxidative addition of the Ar-NO bond to palladium(0) followed by nitrite/amine exchange is proposed based on a stoichiometric reaction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!