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Wednesday, December 22, 2010
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Chemistry-Proverbs (Important aspects of Chemistry research)
10 seconds labeling a sample saves 30 minutes identifying it later.
Knowing the chemistry of a reaction before running it once is better than running it ten times without knowing anything.
Just because you found it in literature doesn't mean it's correct
The more you learn, the dumber you feel
Troubles overcome are good to tell
One chemist's side product/decomp is another chemists target.
Cleanliness is next to success
The more you get,the more you want
Let it sit, and it goes to sh*&.
Gram in hand is worth two in the flask
Rearrangements happen.
Garbage in, garbage out
If you don't get what you like, try to like what you get.
The more you try the luckier you get.
Change or you will be changed
Too much analysis leads to paralysis
It's not the cage that sings, it's the bird inside.
The flask only falls when you are not there to catch it.
If it is highly colored, you will spill it on yourself.
The worse it smells, the greater chance that it will bump.
Chemistry is trying
The more you give the more you get
An hour a week on basics can yield advanced ideas
Education is the path from cocky arrogance to miserable insecurity
Love your chemistry, chemistry will love you!
The work isn't done until the pigs are fed, watered and ready to fly!
A week in the lab can save you a day in the library.
BOC-Pipirazines WILL foam!
When in doubt, throw it out.
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Iterative Suzuki Miyaura Coupling Reaction
Iterative
Suzuki Miyaura Coupling Reactions
The Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling
reaction of boronic acids is one of the most important and highly utilized
reactions in the organic chemistry toolbox, with applications in polymer
science as well as in the fine chemicals and pharmaceutical industries. However,
many boronic acids are extremely unstable and susceptible to decomposition that
renders them inefficient in coupling reactions or makes long-term storage
difficult.
Iteration (lat. “iterare”=to repeat) is a powerful strategy employed in the biosynthesis of complex molecules. In these controlled iterative reactions, di- and multifunctional building blocks are employed that contain only one reactive functional group (“ON”), while all other groups are unreactive (“OFF”) thereby suppressing uncontrolled polymerization (Scheme 1). After the selective coupling of the reactive group, another, previously unreactive functional group is activated/deprotected (“ON”) and the coupling sequence repeated, thus allowing the efficient formation of defined oligomers from readily available building blocks. This enables even nonexperts to synthesize complex molecules in a short time, and promotes the rapid investigation and application of these compounds in chemistry and biology. An ideal iterative coupling would meet the following criteria:
Iteration (lat. “iterare”=to repeat) is a powerful strategy employed in the biosynthesis of complex molecules. In these controlled iterative reactions, di- and multifunctional building blocks are employed that contain only one reactive functional group (“ON”), while all other groups are unreactive (“OFF”) thereby suppressing uncontrolled polymerization (Scheme 1). After the selective coupling of the reactive group, another, previously unreactive functional group is activated/deprotected (“ON”) and the coupling sequence repeated, thus allowing the efficient formation of defined oligomers from readily available building blocks. This enables even nonexperts to synthesize complex molecules in a short time, and promotes the rapid investigation and application of these compounds in chemistry and biology. An ideal iterative coupling would meet the following criteria:
ü Many
differently substituted building blocks are readily available and inexpensive;
ü Coupling
and activation/deprotection step are high yielding, are tolerant of many
different functional groups, and do not require nor produce toxic compounds;
ü Handling,
separation, and purification are facile;
ü The
iterative coupling sequence is reliable and predictable, which are important
aspects for applications in natural product synthesis and in industry;
ü The
sequence is suitable for solid phase synthesis and automation.
Here you may get the recent literature
on Iterative Suzuki Miyaura Coupling reaction.
Monday, December 6, 2010
Friday, December 3, 2010
Name Reactions in Organic Chemistry
Dear Chemistry lovers,
As a chemist we need to remember at least 100-200 name reactions. You no need to worry to find all name reaction collections. you can easily find from the following sites. These are very nice sites for your name reaction searches.
Named Organic Reactions (By Prof. Doug Taber)
Named Organic Reactions (by Prof. Michael Smith)
Named Organic Reactions (by Hilton Evans)
Named Organic Reaction (by Marcus Brackeen)
Organic Chemistry: Structure and Reactivity - Video Class By Peter Vollhardt
Chemistry of Benzylic Compounds
Its a very nice video Class by prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Its a very nice video Class by prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Organic Chemistry: Structure and Reactivity - Video Class By Peter Vollhardt
Amines : Preparation and Reactivity
Its a very nice video Class by prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Its a very nice video Class by prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Organic Chemistry: Structure and Reactivity - Video Class By Peter Vollhardt
Chemistry Of Carboxilic Acids
Its a very nice video Class by prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Its a very nice video Class by prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Organic Chemistry: Structure and Reactivity - Video Class By Peter Vollhardt
Enols. Enolates, Enals, and Enones
Unsaturated Aldehydes and Ketones
Its a very nice video Class by prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Unsaturated Aldehydes and Ketones
Organic Chemistry: Structure and Reactivity - Video Class By Peter Vollhardt
Carbonyl Compounds: Aldehydes and Ketones
Its a very nice video Class by prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Its a very nice video Class by prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Organic Chemistry: Structure and Reactivity - Video Class By Peter Vollhardt
Directing Group Effects in Aromatic Electrophilic Substitution Reactions
Its a very nice video Class by prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Its a very nice video Class by prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Thursday, December 2, 2010
Organic Chemistry: Structure and Reactivity - Video Class By Peter Vollhardt
Electrophilic Aromatic Substitutions
Its a very nice video Class by prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Its a very nice video Class by prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Organic Chemistry: Structure and Reactivity - Video Class By Peter Vollhardt
Benzene and Aromaticity
Its Very Nice Video Class By prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Its Very Nice Video Class By prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Organic Chemistry: Structure and Reactivity - Video Class By Peter Vollhardt
Diels-Alder and Electrocyclic Reactions
Its Very Nice Video Class By prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Its Very Nice Video Class By prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Organic Chemistry: Structure and Reactivity - Video Class By Peter Vollhardt
Delocalized Pi system : Proppenyl and Extended Conjucation
Its Very Nice Video Class By prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Its Very Nice Video Class By prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Organic Chemistry: Structure and Reactivity - Video Class By Peter Vollhardt
Delocalized Pi Systems - Propenyl and Butadiene
Its Very Nice Video Class By prof. Peter Vollhard from Berkeley University. Its a good resource for student as well lecturers.
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Femtosecond laser
Femtosecond laser system
A detailed schematic of the femtosecond laser facility is shown in Figure 1. A femtosecond mode-locked seed beam of 14.5 nm bandwidth, pulse energies in the nanojoule range and repetition rate of 80 MHz is emitted from a Ti:sapphire oscillator pumped by a diode laser. A pulsed Nd:YLF operating at repetition rate of 1 kHz pumps the seed beam through a regenerative amplifier. Using the chirped pulse amplification technique, ultra-short pulses are generated with a FWHM pulse width of about 83 fs, 800 nm wavelength and 1 mJ maximum pulse energy.
A detailed schematic of the femtosecond laser facility is shown in Figure 1. A femtosecond mode-locked seed beam of 14.5 nm bandwidth, pulse energies in the nanojoule range and repetition rate of 80 MHz is emitted from a Ti:sapphire oscillator pumped by a diode laser. A pulsed Nd:YLF operating at repetition rate of 1 kHz pumps the seed beam through a regenerative amplifier. Using the chirped pulse amplification technique, ultra-short pulses are generated with a FWHM pulse width of about 83 fs, 800 nm wavelength and 1 mJ maximum pulse energy.
To more information, read this PPT .
CSIR - Chemistry Study Materials - IV
CSIR and GATE exams are considered as gate way to do Phd in India in various field ranging from biology to engineering ,even foreign university expecting students applying from India to be csir cleared. Candidates are advised to go through the syllabus, Exam Pattern, Sample Papers for better preparation. Here you may get study materials for CSIR Exam paper-II. It is also good for all competitive exams.
CSIR - Chemistry Study Materials - III
CSIR and GATE exams are considered as gate way to do Phd in India in various field ranging from biology to engineering ,even foreign university expecting students applying from India to be csir cleared. Candidates are advised to go through the syllabus, Exam Pattern, Sample Papers for better preparation. Here you may get study materials for CSIR Exam paper-II. It is also good for all competitive exams.
CSIR - Chemistry Study Materials - II
CSIR and GATE exams are considered as gate way to do Phd in India in various field ranging from biology to engineering ,even foreign university expecting students applying from India to be csir cleared. Candidates are advised to go through the syllabus, Exam Pattern, Sample Papers for better preparation. Here you may get study materials for CSIR Exam paper-II. Its also good for all chemistry compettive Exams.
CSIR - Chemistry Study Materials - I
CSIR - Chemistry Study Materials for Paper-II
CSIR and GATE exams are considered as gate way to do Phd in India in various field ranging from biology to engineering ,even foreign university expecting students applying from India to be csir cleared. Candidates are advised to go through the syllabus, Exam Pattern, Sample Papers for better preparation. Here you may get study materials for CSIR Exam paper-II.
Synthesis of (Diacetoxyiodo)benzene
(Diacetoxyiodo)benzene; Large-Scale Synthesis:
K2S2O8 (100 mmol) was slowly added portion-wise over 20 min to a stirred solution of an iodobenzene (5.10 g, 25 mmol) in AcOH (125 mL) with concd H2SO4 (100 mmol) at r.t. (25 °C), and the mixture was stirred at r.t. for 4 h. The solution was then concentrated to half its volume by evaporation of AcOH under reduced pressure, and H2O (100 mL) was added. The precipitate formed was collected by filtration, washed with H2O (200 mL), and dried in air. A second crop of product was obtained by extraction of the filtrate with CH2Cl2 (3 × 25 mL); the combined extracts were dried over anhyd Na2SO4, filtered, and concentrated under reduced pressure. The combined crude products were purified by recrystallization from AcOH–hexane; yield: 7.15 g (88.7%).
Reference:
Synthesis 2005, No. 12, 1932–1934
Synthesis of Palladium tetrakis(triphenylphosphine)
Chemicals Used
Palladium dichloride (1g, 1 equiv.) Triphenylphosphine (7.4g, 5 equiv.) Dimethylsulphoxide (distilled, 12mL/mmol, 68mL) Hydrazine hydrate (1.1mL, 4 equiv.)
Procedure
Palladium chloride is placed in a 3 necked round bottomed flask which is fitted with a thermometer and a filter stick attached to a second inverted 3 necked round bottomed flask. DMSO is added, followed by triphenylphosphine. The mixture is heated to 140C using an oil bath with stirring in order to dissolve all the solid (a small amount of solid does not seem to dissolve). The oil bath is then removed and the mixture stirred for a further 15 minutes. Hydrazine hydrate is rapidly added causing evolution of nitrogen. The resulting dark solution is immediately cooled with a water bath until crystallisation begins to occur (~125C) at which point it is allowed to cool without external cooling. Once the mixture has reached room temperature, the apparatus is inverted in order to filter and the solid is washed succesively with absolute ethanol (2 x 10 mL) and dry ether (2 x 10 mL) (this is achieved by adding the solvent from a syringe through a side arm). The resulting yellow solid is then dried under vacuum for 3-4 hours.
Note:
All glassware should be oven or flame dried prior to use, and the entire procedure should be carried out under nitrogen. If care is taken in the preparation, the material should have a bench life of many months (>8), and should be stored under nitrogen in a freezer. 5-6g of catalyst is atttainable starting from 1g palladium dichloride. Analysis of the compound is not really required; if it's a yellow solid, it should work (although melting point determination should give a decomposition point of 115C, but this has not been checked)! On exposure to air, the material will slowly turn orange, this seems to be a result of reaction with water.
Reference:
D.R Coulson, Inorganic Syntheses XIII, p.121
Thursday, November 25, 2010
Iron-catalyzed oxidative homo-coupling of indoles via C–H cleavage
Iron-catalyzed oxidative homo-coupling of indoles via C–H cleavage
The authors, Tianmin Niu and Yuhong Zhang from Zhejiang University, peoples republic of China reported a cheap Fe catalysed Oxidativecoupling of N-H indoles. Its a new method for the homo-coupling of indoles has been developed by the use of FeCl3 as catalyst and molecular oxygen as the only oxidant. The protocol provides a practical and straightforward approach toward 3,3′-biindolyls.
For original Article:
doi:10.1016/j.tetlet.2010.10.088
The authors, Tianmin Niu and Yuhong Zhang from Zhejiang University, peoples republic of China reported a cheap Fe catalysed Oxidativecoupling of N-H indoles. Its a new method for the homo-coupling of indoles has been developed by the use of FeCl3 as catalyst and molecular oxygen as the only oxidant. The protocol provides a practical and straightforward approach toward 3,3′-biindolyls.
For original Article:
doi:10.1016/j.tetlet.2010.10.088
Friday, November 12, 2010
Transition Metal Free C-H Activation and C-C Bond Formation – Is that Really Metal Free?
Transition metal catalysed direct
arylation of aromatic C-H bonds is emerging as a valuable and efficient
alternative to traditional cross-coupling in the construction of biaryl
compounds. Selective functionalization of aromatic C–H bonds is now an important
aspect of this rather general field due to the universal existence of aromatic
functionalities in nature and the synthetic world. ‘Fenton’ chemistry and Friedel–Crafts reactions
are early examples of transformations of aryl C–H bonds to different
functionalities.
Many reports have demonstrated that
direct arylation of heterocycles, arenes with directing groups, and
electron-deficient arenes(1-7). As well a completely unactivated arene, benzene
has been directly arylated by a few efficient transition-metal-catalyzed methods
(8-12).
In 2003, Leadbeater et.al,. reported
a transition metal free Suzuki coupling reaction in water using sodium
carbonate as a base(13-14)(Scheme-1). Later, the same group reported the
transition metal free sonogashira type reaction (15)(Scheme-2). After that they
discovered that the reaction was in fact metal-mediated — by palladium
contaminants of as little as 50 ppb that were present in the sodium carbonate base
used. In 2009, Buchwald reported that iron catalysed cross coupling reaction
has been done by copper catalyst which is an impurity in Iron source(16).
Scheme-1 |
Scheme-2 |
In 2008, Daugulis, reported transition-metal-free,
base-mediated intramolecular arylation of phenols with aryl halides. The sp2 C-H
bond functionalization occurs via a benzyne intermediate. At this point, a phenolate
activating group is essential for the arylation(17)(Scheme-3). In the same
time, Itami et al. reported a transition metal free direct C-H arylation electron
deficient nitrogen heterocycles using haloarenes. As well, they also reported a
transition-metal-free systems for the cross coupling reactions of nitrogen
heteroaromatics and alkanes (18-19)(Scheme-4). Itami et al. proposed a radical
pathway for the sole KOBut promoted direct arylation of
electron-deficient nitrogen heterocycles with aryl iodides.
Scheme-3 |
Scheme-4 |
Recently, the most notable examples are three ‘transition
matal free’ methods for pereparing biaryls by C-H activation.
Now, these reports getting a lot
of attention, and a lot of raised eyebrows. The authors claim that they can
couple aryl iodides with unfunctionalized aromatic compounds with
nitrogen bidentate ligands as catalysts - and no transition metals at
all - just potassium or sodium t-butoxide as base. Organic chemists
will recognize that this is a very unusual reaction indeed, since carbon-carbon
bonds between aryl groups are not supposed to be so easy to form. This
reaction, in fact, would suggest that a lot of the palladium-catalyzed work is
some sort of odd detour to get to a process that happens fairly easily anyway.
The authors suggest that since
they're using iodides that a free radical mechanism is operating. Addition of
radical scavengers, they say, shuts the reaction down. The fact that they don't
get regioisomers, that rules out another possible mechanism through benzyne
intermediates.
Scheme-5 |
The authors Liu, W.; as well Sun,
C.L.; mentioned that, In order to eliminate the possibility of the presence of
trace transition metal elements in the commercially available potassium tert-butoxide
that would potentially affect our investigation, they purified the KOBut by
sublimation prior to their examination. Almost the same results were obtained
between the nonpurified and purified base.
Could trace amounts of transition
metal have contaminated the experiment? 'Obviously this is one of the most
important factors,' says Lei. 'We have checked the contamination of trace
amounts of transition metals by ICP [inductively coupled plasma atomic emission
spectroscopy] and excluded the involvement of small amounts of transition
metals in this transformation.'
Commenting on the work, Carsten
Bolm, an organic synthesis expert
from Aachen University in Germany, says, 'To be able to
prepare cross-coupling products without the use of transition metals is an
important scientific advance. Although at the present stage the substrate
scope is by far too limited to make the process synthetically attractive, the
findings illustrate that new reaction paths in direct C-H arylations are still
to be discovered, and as such this work will be highly stimulating to the
community.'
References:
1. McGlacken, G. P.; Bateman, L. M. Chem. Soc. Rev.
2009, 38, 2447–2464.
2. Daugulis, O.; Do, H. Q.; Shabashov, D. Acc. Chem. Res.
2009, 42, 1074–1086.
3. Fagnou, K. & Lautens, M. Chem. Rev. 2003,103, 169–196 .
3. Kuninobu, Y., Nishina, Y., Takeuchi, T. & Takai, K. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2007 , 46, 6518–6520.
4. Lersch, M. & Tilset, M. Chem. Rev. 2005, 105, 2471–2526.
5. Li, Z., Brouwer, C. & He, C. Chem. Rev. 2008, 108, 3239–3265.
6. Chen, X., Hao, X.-S., Goodhue, C. E. & Yu, J.-Q. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2006, 128, 6790–6791.
7. Gandeepan, P.; Parthasarathy, K.; Cheng, C.-H. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2010, 132, 8569.
8. Fujita, K.;
Nonogawa, M.; Yamaguchi, R. Chem. Commun. 2004, 1926– 1927.
9. Lafrance, M.;
Fagnou, K. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2006, 128, 16496– 164.
10. Kobayashi, O.; Uraguchi, D.; Yamakawa, T. Org. Lett. 2009,
11, 2679–2682.
11. Vallee, F.;
Mousseau, J. J.; Charette, A. B. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2010, 132,
1514–1516.
12. Liu, W.; Cao, H.;
Lei, A. Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. 2010, 49, 2004–2008.
13. Leadbeater, N. E. & Marco, M. Angew. Chem. Int.
Ed. 42, 1407–1409 (2003).
14. Leadbeater, N. E. & Marco, M. J. Org. Chem.2003
68, 5660–5667.
15. Leadbeater, N. E., Marco, M. &Tominack, B. J. Org.
Lett. 2003, 5, 3919–3922.
16. Buchwald, S. L. & Bolm, C. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2009,
48, 5586–5587.
17. Bajracharya, G. B.; Daugulis, O. Org. Lett. 2008,
10, 4625–4628.
18. Yanagisawa, S.; Ueda, K.; Taniguchi, T.; Itami, K. Org.
Lett. 2008, 10, 4673–4676.
19. Deng, G. J.; Ueda, K.; Yanagisawa, S.; Itami, K.; Li, C.
J. Chem. Eur. J. 2009, 15, 333–337.
20. Valle, F., Mousseau, J. J. & Charette, A. B. J.
Am. Chem. Soc. 2010, 132, 1514–1516.
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Palladium Catalyzed Cross Coupling Reactions
General Introduction:
Palladium catalyzed cross coupling reactions:
In general, palladium-catalyzed
cross couplings is that two molecules are assembled on the metal via the
formation of metal-carbon bonds. In this way the carbon atoms bound to
palladium are brought very close to one another. In the next step they couple
to one another and this leads to the formation of a new carbon-carbon single
bond. Thus, palladium catalysis has gained widespread use in industrial and
academic synthetic chemistry laboratories as a powerful methodology for the
formation of C-C and C-Heteroatom bonds.
There are many palladium
catalyzed coupling reactions are developed with various coupling partners.
1. SUZUKI-MIYAURA
2. STILLE
3. NEGISHI
4. KUMADA
5. HIYAMA
6. SONOGASHIRA
7. HECK
8. BUCHWALD-HARTWIG
9. CYANATION
10. CARBONYLATION
Most palladium catalysed reactions are believed to follow a
similar catalytic cycle.
The Suzuki-Miyaura coupling
In 1979, A. Suzuki and N. Miyaura
reported the stereoselective synthesis of arylated (E)-alkenes by the
reaction of 1- alkenylboranes with aryl halides in the presence of a palladium
catalyst. The palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling reaction between organoboron
compounds and organic halides or triflates provides a powerful and general
method for the formation of carbon-carbon bonds known as the Suzuki
cross-coupling.
There are several advantages to
this method:
1) mild reaction conditions;
2) commercial availability of
many boronic acids;
3) the inorganic by-products are easily
removed from the reaction mixture, making the reaction suitable for industrial
processes;
4) boronic acids are environmentally
safer and much less toxic than organostannanes (see Stille coupling);
5) starting materials tolerate a wide
variety of functional groups, and they are unaffected by water;
6) the coupling is generally stereo-
and regioselective;
7) sp3-hybridized alkyl
boranes can also be coupled by the B-alkyl Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling.
Mechanism:
References
1. Galardon,E.; Ramdeehul, S.; Brown, J.M.; Cowley, A.; Hii,
K.K.; Jutand, A.; Angew. Chem, Int. Ed. 2002 41, 1760-1763
2. Tolman, C. A. Chem. Rev., 1977, 77, 313–348
3. For a review see: Hillier, A.C.; Grasa, G. A.; Viciu,
M.S.; Lee, H. M.; Yang, C; Nolan, S. P. J. Organomet. Chem. 2002,
69-82
Stille coupling
The Pd(0)-catalyzed coupling
reaction between an organostannane and an organic electrophile to form a new
C-C sigma bond is known as the Stille cross coupling. The Stille reaction is an
extremely versatile alternative to the Suzuki reaction. It replaces the
organoboron reagents with organostannanes. As the tin bears four organic functional
groups, understanding the rates of transmetallation of each group is important.
Relative rate of transmetallation: Alkynyl > vinyl > aryl > allyl ~
benzyl >> alkyl
The reaction also has the
advantage that it is run under neutral conditions making it even more tolerant
of different functional groups than the Suzuki reaction.The precursor organotin
compounds have many advantages because they:
1) are tolerate a wide variety of
functional groups;
2) are not sensitive to moisture
or oxygen unlike other reactive organometallic compounds; and
3) are easily prepared, isolated, and stored.
The main disadvantages are their
toxicity and the difficulty to remove the traces of tin by-products from the
reaction mixture.
Mechanism:
References
1. Jung, D; Shimogawa, H.; Kwon, Y.; Mao, Q.; Sato, S.-I.
Kamisuki, S.; Kigoshi, H.; Uesugi, M. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2009, 131,
4774-4782.
2. van Niel, M. B.; Wilson, K.; Adkins, C. H.; Atack, J. R.;
Castro, J. L.; Clarke, D. E.; Fletcher, S.; Gerhard, U.; Mackey, M. M.; Malpas,
S.; Maubach, K.; Newman, R.; O’Connor,
D.; Pillai, G. V.; Simpson, P. B.; Thomas, S. R.; MacLoed, A. M. J. Med.
Chem. 2005, 48, 6004-6011.
3. Giri, R.; Maugel, N; Li, J.J; Wang, D.-H.; Breazzano, S.
P.; Saunders, L. B.; Yu J.-O. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2007, 129,
3510-3511.
4. Molander, G.A.; Canturk, B. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2009;
48; 9240-9261
Stille-Kelly coupling.
The Pd-catalyzed intramolecular
biaryl coupling of aryl halides or aryl triflates in the presence of
distannanes is known as the Stille-Kelly coupling.
Mechanism:
Reference:
Yue, W. S.; Li, J. J. Org.Lett.
2002, 13, 2201-2204.
Negishi coupling
The Negishi coupling utilises
organo-zinc reagents as starting materials to cross couple with organohalides
and equivalents. The method is compatible with a good range of functional
groups on the organohalide including ketones, esters, amines and nitriles. The
organo-zinc reagent can be prepared in situ by a variety of
methodologies, such as transmetallation of the corresponding organo-lithium or
Grignard reagent, or via oxidative addition of activated Zn(0) to an organohalide.
Mechanism:
Reference:
1) Krasovskiy, A.; Krasovskaya, V.; Knochel, P. Angew.
Chem. Int. Ed. 2006, 45, 2958-2961.
2) Prasad, A. S. B.; Stevenson, T. M.; Citineni, J. R.;
Nyzam, V.; Knochel, P. Tetrahedron 1997, 53, 7237-7254
Kumada coupling
The cross coupling of
organohalides with Grignard reagents is known as the Kumada coupling. Although it suffers from a limited tolerance of
different functional groups, the higher reactivity and basicity of the Grignard
reagent allows viable reactions to take place under mild conditions.
The Mechanism is similar as Negishi coupling.
Reference:
1) Anastasia, L., Negishi, E.-i. Palladium-catalyzed
aryl-aryl coupling. Handbook of Organopalladium Chemistry for Organic
Synthesis 2002, 1, 311-334.
2) Anctil, E. J. G., Snieckus, V. The directed ortho
metalation-cross coupling symbiosis. Regioselective methodologies for biaryls
and heterobiaryls. Deployment in aromatic and heteroaromatic natural product
synthesis. J. Organomet. Chem. 2002,
653, 150-160.
3) Banno, T., Hayakawa, Y., Umeno, M. Some applications of
the Grignard cross-coupling reaction in the industrial field. J. Organomet.
Chem. 2002, 653, 288-291.
4) Hayashi, T. Palladium-catalyzed asymmetric cross-coupling.
Handbook of Organopalladium Chemistry for Organic Synthesis 2002, 1, 791- 806.
Hiyama coupling
The Hiyama Coupling is the
palladium-catalyzed C-C bond formation between aryl, alkenyl, or alkyl halides
or pseudohalides and organosilanes. This reaction is comparable to the Suzuki
Coupling and also requires an activating agent such as fluoride ion or a base.
Mechanism:
Crucial for the success of the
Hiyama Coupling is the polarization of the Si-C bond. Activation of the silane
with base or fluoride ions (TASF, TBAF) leading to a pentavalent silicon
compound is a first necessary step. The use of a silanol as the organosilane is
one recent method that has managed to negate the requirement for the reaction
to contain fluoride as an activator. This has helped to enlarge the substrate
scope available to organic chemists.
Reference:
1) Li, J.-H.; Deng, W.-J.; Liu,
Y.-X. Synthesis 2005, 3039-3044.
2) For a recent review on
silanols in the Hiyama coupling see: Denmark, S. E.; Regens, C. S. Acc.
Chem. Res. 2008, 41, 1486-1499.
Sonogashira coupling
The Sonogashira reaction offers
an extremely useful route into aryl- and alkenyl-alkynes. The alkyne moiety is
usually introduced via its copper salt. This is generated in situ from
a Cu(I) salt, such as CuI or CuCN, and a terminal alkyne in the presence of an
amine base. Recent improvements in this reaction have led to the development of
copper and amine free couplings.
The general features of the
reaction are:
1) the coupling can usually be
conducted at or slightly above room temperature, and this is a major advantage
over the forcing conditions required for the alternative Castro-Stephens
coupling;
2) the handling of the
shock-sensitive/explosive copper acetylides is avoided by the use of a
catalytic amounts of copper(I) salt;
3) the copper(I) salt can be the
commercially available CuI or CuBr and are usually applied in 0.5-5 mol% with
respect to the halide or alkyne;
4) the best palladium catalysts
are Pd(PPh3)2Cl2 or Pd(PPh3)4;
5) the solvents and the reagents
do not need to be rigorously dried. However, a thorough deoxygenation is
essential to maintain the activity of the Pd-catalyst;
6) often the base serves as the
solvent but occasionally a co-solvent is used;
7) the reaction works well on
both very small and large scale (>100g);
8) the coupling is
stereospecific; the stereochemical information of the substrates is preserved
in the products;
9) the order of reactivity for
the aryl and vinyl halides is I ≈ OTf > Br >> Cl;
10) the difference between the
reaction rates of iodides and bromides allows selective coupling with the
iodides in the presence of bromides;
11) almost all functional groups are
tolerated on the aromatic and vinyl halide substrates.
Mechanism:
The mechanism of the Sonogashira
cross-coupling follows the expected oxidative addition-reductive
elimination pathway. However, the structure of the catalytically active species
and the precise role of the CuI catalyst is unknown. The reaction commences
with the generation of a coordinatively unsaturated Pd(0) species from a Pd(II)
complex by reduction with the alkyne substrate or with an added phosphine
ligand. The Pd(0) then undergoes oxidative addition with the aryl or vinyl
halide followed by transmetallation by the copper(I)-acetylide. Reductive
elimination affords the coupled product and the regeneration of the catalyst
completes the catalytic cycle.
References
1) Cassar, L. J. Organomet. Chem. 1975, 93, 253-257.
2) Dieck, H. A., Heck, F. R. J.
Organomet. Chem. 1975, 93, 259-263.
3) Sonogashira, K., Tohda, Y., Hagihara, N. Tetrahedron Lett. 1975,
4467-4470.
4) Thorand, S.; Krause, N. J. Org. Chem. 1998,
63, 8551-8553.
5) Liang, Y.; Xie, Y.-X.; Li, J.-H. J. Org.
Chem. 2006, 71, 379-380.
6) Schiedel, M.-S., Briehn, C.
A., Bauerle, P. C-C J. Organomet. Chem. 2002, 653, 200-208.
Heck reaction
In the early 1970s, T. Mizoroki and R.F. Heck independently
discovered that aryl, benzyl and styryl halides react with olefinic compounds
at elevated temperatures in the presence of a hindered amine base and catalytic
amount of Pd(0) to form aryl-, benzyl-, and styryl-substituted olefins. Today,
the palladium-catalyzed arylation or alkenylation of olefins is referred to as
the Heck
reaction. Since its discovery, the Heck reaction has become one of
the most widely used catalytic carbon-carbon bond forming tools in organic
synthesis.
The Heck reaction follows a
slightly different pathway to other palladium catalysed couplings. For
intermolecular reactions with monosubstituted olefins, the olefin insertion
step is usually directed by steric hindrance. This intermediate then undergoes β-hydride
elimination under thermodynamically controlled conditions, leading to
preferential formation of the E product.
Reference:
1) Heck, R. F. J. Am. Chem.
Soc. 1968, 90, 5518- 5526.
2) Mizoroki, T., Mori, K., Ozaki,
A. Bull. Chem. Soc. Jpn. 1971,
44, 581.
3) Heck, R. F., Nolley, J. P.,
Jr. J. Org. Chem. 1972, 37, 2320-2322.
4) Shibasaki, M., Miyazaki, F.
Asymmetric Heck reactions. in Handbook of Organopalladium Chemistry for
Organic Synthesis (eds. Negishi, E.-i.,De Meijere, A.), 1, 1283-1315
(Wiley-Interscience, New York, 2002).
5) Dounay, A. B., Overman, L. E. Chem. Rev. 2003,
103, 2945-2963.
6) Braese, S., de Meijere, A.
Cross-coupling of organic halides with alkenes: The Heck reaction. Metal-Catalyzed
Cross-Coupling Reactions (2nd Edition) 2004, 1, 217-315.
Buchwald-Hartwig
coupling
Palladium catalysis has also been expanded to the formation of C-N
bonds. In 1995 Buchwald and Hartwig independently reported the palladium
catalysed coupling of aryl halides with amine nucleophiles in the presence of
stoichiometric amounts of base.
Mechanism:
The first step in the catalytic cycle is the oxidative addition of Pd(0)
to the aryl halide (or sulfonate). In the second step the Pd(II)-aryl amide can
be formed either by direct displacement of the halide (or sulfonate) by the
amide via a Pd(II)- alkoxide intermediate. Finally, reductive
elimination results in the formation of the desired C-N bond and the Pd(0) catalyst
is regenerated. Below is the catalytic cycle for the formation of an arylamine.
References
1) a) Guram, A. S.; Rennels, R. A.; Buchwald, S.
L. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 1995, 34, 1348-1350. b) Louie, J.; Hartwig, J.
F. Tetrahedron Lett. 1995, 36, 3609-3612.
2). Hillier, A.C.;
Grasa, G. A.; Viciu, M.S.; Lee, H. M.; Yang, C; Nolan, S. P. J. Organomet.
Chem. 2002, 69-82.
3) Shen, Q.; Hartwig, J. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2006,
128, 10028-10029.
Palladium catalysed cyanation
The palladium catalysed cyanation of aromatic halides offers a
convenient alternative to the Rosemund-Von Braun reaction, which often employs
harsh reaction conditions and can have a labour intensive workup. As the
cyanide nucleophile is a strong σ-donor and can poison the catalyst, it is necessary
to keep its concentration low during the reaction. To achieve this Zn(CN)2 is often
employed as the cyanide source as its solubility in DMF (a common solvent for
this reaction) is limited.
An alternative, non-toxic, source of cyanide has also been reported. K4[Fe(CN)6]
can be used in combination with palladium catalysts to synthesise aryl nitriles
from their corresponding halides.
Reference:
1) Schareina, T.;
Zapf, A.; Beller, M. Chem. Comm. 2004, 1388-1389
2) Weissman, S. A.;
Zewge, D.; Chen, C. J. Org. Chem. 2005, 70, 1508-1510
Palladium catalysed
carbonylation
As with most palladium mediated C-C bond forming reactions palladium
catalysed carbonylation is compatible with a range of functional groups. This
gives it significant advantages over standard organolithium and Grignard
chemistry for the synthesis of aryl aldehydes, acids, esters and amides.
References
1) Beller, M.; Magerlein, W.; Indolese, A. F.; Fischer C. Synthesis,
2001, 1098-1110.
2) Kumar K.; Zapf, A.; Michalik, D; Tillack, A.; Heinrich,
T.; Bottcher, H.; Arlt, M.; Beller, M. Org. Lett., 2004, 6, 7-10.
3) Ashfield, L.; Barnard, C. F. J.; Org. Process Res. Dev., 2007, 11, 39-43.
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