Catalytic Methods for Carbon-carbon and Carbon-nitrogen Bond Formation

Catalytic Methods for Carbon-carbon and Carbon-nitrogen Bond Formation
Author: Stephen David Ramgren
Publisher:
Total Pages: 511
Release: 2014
Genre:
ISBN:

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This dissertation describes the study of metal-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions to construct carbon-carbon and carbon-heteroatom bonds. The key feature of much of this work is the use of inexpensive Ni and Fe catalysts to enable the coupling of unconventional electrophilic substrates, specifically aryl O-sulfamates and O-carbamates. The ability to use O-sulfamates and O-carbamates in catalytic processes is notable, as these substrates are readily derived from phenols and can be used for directed arene functionalization. Chapter one provides a summary of the efforts towards using alcohol-based solvents for the Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling reaction. Emphasis is placed on the cross-coupling of heterocycles, which are commonly encountered in natural product synthesis and in the pharmaceutical sector. Chapters two, three, and four describe carbon-nitrogen bond forming reactions. Chapter two pertains to the nickel-catalyzed amination of sulfamates, which culminated in the synthesis of the antibacterial drug, linezolid. Chapter three covers the amination of aryl O-carbamates and their use in sequential functionalization/site-selective cross-couplings. Chapter four describes a more user-friendly variant of the amination reaction, which relies on a bench-stable Ni(II) precatalyst, rather than a more commonly used Ni(0) precatalyst. Chapters five, six, and seven focus on carbon-carbon bond formation via Fe-, Ni- and Pd-mediated processes. Chapter five pertains to iron-catalyzed couplings of sulfamates and carbamates to generate sp2-sp3 carbon-carbon bonds. This method can be used to assemble sterically-congested frameworks. Chapter six describes the nickel-catalyzed Suzuki-Miyaura reactions of halides and phenol derivatives in `green' solvents, which was applied to the preparative scale assembly of bis(heterocycles) using low nickel catalyst loadings. Chapter seven pertains to the acetylation of arenes using palladium catalysis, which provides a simple and efficient means for the construction of a variety of aryl methyl ketones.

Developments and Applications of Methods for Palladium- and Copper-catalyzed Carbon-nitrogen Bond Formation

Developments and Applications of Methods for Palladium- and Copper-catalyzed Carbon-nitrogen Bond Formation
Author: Jeffrey Chih-Yeh Yang
Publisher:
Total Pages: 467
Release: 2018
Genre:
ISBN:

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The studies presented in this dissertation are aimed at the development and application of methodologies that enable carbon-nitrogen (C-N) bond formation catalyzed by late transition metals such as palladium and copper. The first part of this thesis focuses on the use of palladium catalysis for the construction of a carbon(sp2)-nitrogen bond in the context of a biphasic continuous-flow system (Chapter 1). The second part of this thesis describes the recent developments of copper-hydride (CuH) catalyzed asymmetric hydroamination for the formation of a-chiral carbon(sp3)-nitrogen bonds from olefins. This work includes the application of CuH catalysis to the synthesis of chiral N-alkyl aziridines (Chapter 2), and the discovery and development of novel electrophilic amines to enable CuH-catalyzed asymmetric hydroamination to directly access primary amines (Chapter 3). Part I. Chapter 1. Use of a "Catalytic" Cosolvent, N,N-Dimethyl Octanamide, Allows the Flow Synthesis of Imatinib with no Solvent Switch A general, efficient method for C-N cross-coupling has been developed using N,N-dimethyloctanamide as a cosolvent for biphasic continuous-flow applications. In addition to utilizing a proper co-solvent, the described method harnesses the superior mixing abilities of a stainless-steel powder packed tube reactor to efficiently couple a wide range of aryl/heteroaryl halides and aryl/heteroaryl/alkyl amines in a short period of time (

Advances in Late-Metal Carbon-Nitrogen Bond Formation for the Synthesis of Substituted Heterocycles

Advances in Late-Metal Carbon-Nitrogen Bond Formation for the Synthesis of Substituted Heterocycles
Author: Nicolas Rotta-Loria
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2017
Genre:
ISBN:

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Late-metal catalyzed cross-couplings have emerged as efficient and selective methodologies for the formation of C-C and C-N bonds. The ability to synthesize complex heterocycles from cheap and abundant starting materials is an invaluable asset to the pharmaceutical industry, given that many pharmaceuticals contain at least one heterocyclic component. This reactivity can be achieved by tuning the steric and electronic properties of ancillary ligands to support metal catalysts in the reaction steps leading to the target substrate. The Stradiotto group has developed several state-of-the-art methodologies involving ligands for palladium catalysis, for both C-C and C-N bond-forming reactions. These methodologies can be amalgamated into a multicomponent reaction platform to synthesize more complex products from simple materials. Chapter 1 outlines this concept with the application of a Mor-DalPhos/Pd catalyst in the one-pot synthesis of indoles from acetone and simple amines involving C-C and C-N bond formation. The robust nature of this method can be extended to include benchtop reaction conditions in a one-step, one-pot synthesis of indoles, thus representing a useful synthetic protocol. While palladium provides a powerful tool for C-C and C-N bond formation, the general trend in catalysis has shifted away from the precious metals toward first row metals as economic alternatives. Nickel complexes have recently emerged as excellent catalysts for a number of amination reactions. The ability to utilize ammonia also represents a sought after reaction, due to the widespread availability and synthetic utility of amino-functionalized products. In this regard, Chapter 2 will focus on the development and application of both commercially available and strategically designed ligand classes for the monoarylation of ammonia with substituted heterocycles. Hydrazine represents an important synthon in synthetic chemistry. It is synthesized on multi-ton scale every year and represents an important building block in many industrial processes. Many synthetic challenges arise from using free hydrazine as reactant, which has led to lethargic growth of its application in the field of late-metal catalyzed C-N bond-formation. However, gold-catalyzed methodologies have been developed utilizing NHC ligands to allow for the hydrohydrazination of alkynes with parent hydrazine. Chapter 4 examines the development and application of a series of (PR3)AuCl complexes for use in such transformations, leading to the identification of the first effective phosphine-bound gold complex for use in the hydrohydrazination of alkynes at room temperature.

Biocatalytic Methods for Carbon-nitrogen Bond Formation Via Hemoprotein-catalyzed Group Transfer Reactions

Biocatalytic Methods for Carbon-nitrogen Bond Formation Via Hemoprotein-catalyzed Group Transfer Reactions
Author: Viktoria Steck
Publisher:
Total Pages: 254
Release: 2019
Genre:
ISBN:

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"Our group has recently established that heme-containing proteins, in particular myoglobin and cytochrome P450s, constitute promising biocatalysts for the formation of carbon-nitrogen and carbon-carbon bonds via nitrene and carbene transfer reactions, a class of synthetically valuable transformations not occurring in nature. Building upon this work, a first goal of this research was to improve the scope and efficiency of these nitrene transfer biocatalysts for C-H amination reactions. To this end, we identified a novel, unusual P450-type enzyme named XplA, which catalyzes the intramolecular C-H amination of arylsulfonyl azide substrates with a significant enhancement of activity and chemoselectivity in comparison to other P450s, which efficiency in this reaction is limited by the generation of reduced byproducts. Primary kinetic isotope effect studies revealed that the mechanism proceeds with C-H bond activation as the rate limiting step and provided insights into the competition between productive vs. non-productive nitrene transfer pathways. Furthermore, we discovered that non-heme Rieske dioxygenases are viable C- H amination biocatalysts and explored their potential value in nitrene transfer reactions by means of protein engineering, large scale reactions in a bioreactor, and analysis of their reaction and substrate scope. In a second part, we expanded and modulated the reactivity of myoglobin biocatalysts in carbene transfer reactions. A series of artificial myoglobin-based metalloenzymes containing manganese, iron, cobalt, ruthenium, rhodium and iridium were investigated for cyclopropanation and Y-H (Y = N, S) carbene insertion reactions. Engineered variants containing a ruthenium cofactor were found to be excellent S-Hinsertion catalysts, while variants harboring an iridium cofactor were capable of C-H insertion reactions not supported by the parent protein. Next, we demonstrated how cofactor variation in combination with mutations of the proximal ligand anchoring the metalloporphyrin in the active site pocket drastically influences catalyst chemoselectivity. Specifically, we developed a serine-ligated cobalt-porphyrin variant that favors the more challenging olefin cyclopropanation reaction in the presence of competing functional groups. In contrast, the native protein with a histidine-ligated heme cofactor selectively undergoes the complementary Y-H (Y = N, Si) insertion reaction in the presence of unsaturated bonds. In a further study, we successfully extended the substrate scope of engineered myoglobin 'carbene transferases' for realizing N-H insertion reactions between benzyl- and alkylamines and different diazo precursors, which was previously not reported for other hemoproteins, thereby enabling access to valuable functionalized benzyland alkylamines. Finally, we devised a biocatalytic strategy for the asymmetric synthesis of chiral amines via myoglobin-catalyzed N-H insertion. Achieving high enantioselectivity in carbene-mediated N-H insertion reactions has been notoriously challenging. To this end, reactions involving a combination of evolved myoglobin variants with engineered diazo compounds led to the first report and highest enantioselectivity achieved by a biocatalyst in this reaction to date. In addition, stereodivergent biocatalysts were developed to obtain both mirror-image forms of chiral anilines. Altogether, these studies highlight how protein engineering provides a powerful strategy for expanding the biocatalytic toolbox toward synthetically useful yet challenging abiological biotransformations under environmentally friendly and sustainable conditions"--Pages xi-xii.

Enantioselective Iridium-catalyzed Carbon–carbon and Carbon–nitrogen Bond Formations

Enantioselective Iridium-catalyzed Carbon–carbon and Carbon–nitrogen Bond Formations
Author: Leyah Ashley Schwartz
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1462
Release: 2020
Genre:
ISBN:

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Formation of new C–C bonds is a mainstay of modern molecule construction, however methods for the asymmetric construction of these scaffolds has been limited by the use of premetalated reagents or the use of catalytic methods that still require the use of stoichiometric metallic reductants. The Krische group’s approach to this bond formation utilizes the concepts of transfer hydrogen and carbonyl addition to form C–C bonds. These processes proceed through the in situ formation of a transient allylmetal species which then undergoes carbonyl addition. The research presented herein describes the development of several methods for the enantioselective construction of new C–C bonds, utilizing allenes to form nucleophilic allylmetal complexes that react with carbonyl electrophiles. Additionally, a method for the enantioselective construction of new C–N bonds is described, utilizing branched allylic acetates to form allylmetal complexes that react in an electrophilic manner with non-redox active primary and secondary amine nucleophiles

TRANSITION METAL-CATALYZED CARBON-CARBON AND CARBON-NITROGEN BOND FORMATION AND ASYMMETRIC CATALYSIS WITH BISOXAZOLIDINE LIGANDS

TRANSITION METAL-CATALYZED CARBON-CARBON AND CARBON-NITROGEN BOND FORMATION AND ASYMMETRIC CATALYSIS WITH BISOXAZOLIDINE LIGANDS
Author: Hanhui Xu
Publisher:
Total Pages: 576
Release: 2012
Genre: Chemistry, Analytic
ISBN:

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Palladium-phosphinous acids and chlorophosphine analogues have attracted increasing interest due to their high catalytic activity in various organic transformations, long shelf-life and facile handling. In this thesis, it is reported that these catalysts are very useful in Negishi cross-couplings of aryl or acyl halides with aliphatic and aromatic organozinc reagents. Similarly, palladium-phosphinous acids were employed in the formation of sterically hindered biaryls exhibiting at least two ortho substituents from aryl halides and aryl Grignard reagents.

Palladium Catalyzed Carbon-nitrogen Bond Formation

Palladium Catalyzed Carbon-nitrogen Bond Formation
Author: Alejandra Domínguez Huerta
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2021
Genre:
ISBN:

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"This thesis describes the design and development of reductive amination methodologies of unactivated carbon-oxygen bonds using palladium on charcoal as a heterogeneous catalyst. The underlying premise is the transformation of starting materials that can be obtained from bio-renewable resources into commodity chemicals. Specifically, 2-cyclohexen-1-one and phenol were used as lignin building-block surrogates for C-N bond formation. The first chapter places the work developed in this thesis both in a global and a scientific context. Its objective is to provide an overview of our societal needs while describing the latest scientific developments related to this thesis topic. Thus, it begins by exploring the United Nation's Sustainable Goals, followed by an overview of petroleum and lignin chemistry, and finishes with a review on amino acid N-modification. In chapter two, the development of a novel methodology for the N-arylation of [alpha]-amino acids using 2-cyclohexen-1-one is described. Palladium on carbon was chosen as the catalyst, and several reaction conditions were explored to obtain optimal yields. This methodology's attractiveness lies in the absence of an aryl halide or protecting group on the 2-cyclohexen-1-one for the N-arylation to proceed. The reaction requires substoichiometric amounts of base and oxygen as the terminal oxidant. Aliphatic amino acids were ideal substrates for the reaction, and cyclohexanone provided the N-biarylated amino acids in good yields (up to 74%). Chapter three describes efforts to improve the harsh conditions required for the N-arylation of [alpha]-amino acids, resulting in the development of a novel methodology for their N-cyclohexylation in water, at room temperature, using phenol as a coupling partner. The reaction successfully achieves N-cyclohexylation for 17 out of the 20 naturally occurring amino acids without racemization with up to quantitative yields. Furthermore, small peptides were also successful substrates for the reaction. The fourth chapter explores the possibility of applying the latter methodology for the formation of one- and two-component peptide staples using tyrosine as a handle. The one component staple was investigated using acetyl-lysine and acetyl-tyrosine, while the two-component staple was investigated using acetylated-tyrosine 2,2'-(ethylenedioxy)bis(ethylamine). While model substrates proved to couple successfully under previously optimized conditions, concentration and characterization proved to be challenging for working with larger peptides. Additional experiments exploring the possibility of using tyrosine amination as a pH responding hydrogel are also described in this chapter. Finally, chapter five explores the possibility of synthesizing diphenylamines from phenol and ammonia formate as a convenient ammonia surrogate. Seventeen different diarylamines were synthesized with palladium on charcoal as the catalyst, with yields ranging from good to excellent. Notably, water and CO2 were the only byproducts generated from this transformation. Triphenylamine was also obtained in combination with the methodology described in Chapter 1"--

Stereoselective Organocatalysis

Stereoselective Organocatalysis
Author: Ramon Rios Torres
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 581
Release: 2013-04-29
Genre: Science
ISBN: 1118604709

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Sets forth an important group of environmentally friendly organic reactions With contributions from leading international experts in organic synthesis, this book presents all the most important methodologies for stereoselective organocatalysis, fully examining both the activation mode as well as the type of bond formed. Clear explanations guide researchers through all the most important methods used to form key chemical bonds, including carbon-carbon (C–C), carbon-nitrogen (C–N), and carbon-halogen (C–X) bonds. Moreover, readers will discover how the use of non-metallic catalysts facilitates a broad range of important reactions that are environmentally friendly and fully meet the standards of green chemistry. Stereoselective Organocatalysis begins with an historical overview and a review of activation modes in asymmetric organocatalysis. The next group of chapters is organized by bond type, making it easy to find bonds according to their applications. The first of these chapters takes a detailed look at the many routes to C–C bond formation. Next, the book covers: Organocatalytic C–N bond formation C–O bond formation C–X bond formation C–S, C–Se, and C–B bond formation Enantioselective organocatalytic reductions Cascade reactions forming both C–C bonds and C–heteroatom bonds The final chapter is devoted to the use of organocatalysis for the synthesis of natural products. All the chapters in the book are extensively referenced, serving as a gateway to the growing body of original research reports and reviews in the field. Based on the most recent findings and practices in organic synthesis, Stereoselective Organocatalysis equips synthetic chemists with a group of organocatalytic reactions that will help them design green reactions and overcome many challenges in organic synthesis.

Chemistry Beyond Chlorine

Chemistry Beyond Chlorine
Author: Pietro Tundo
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 614
Release: 2016-09-17
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3319300733

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Since the industrial revolution, chlorine remains an iconic molecule even though its production by the electrolysis of sodium chloride is extremely energy intensive. The rationale behind this book is to present useful and industrially relevant examples for alternatives to chlorine in synthesis. This multi-authored volume presents numerous contributions from an international spectrum of authors that demonstrate how to facilitate the development of industrially relevant and implementable breakthrough technologies. This volume will interest individuals working in organic synthesis in industry and academia who are working in Green Chemistry and Sustainable Technologies.