- Copper-catalyzed cyanation of aryl iodides with α-cyanoacetates via C-CN bond activation
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A Cu(i)-catalyzed cyanation reaction of aryl iodides with α-cyanoacetates is reported herein, which uses α-cyanoacetates as the nontoxic and easy-handling CN source through copper-mediated C-CN bond cleavage. This reaction enables access to aryl nitriles with an array of functional groups on the aromatic ring in good to excellent yields.
- Zhang, Song-Lin,Huang, Lu
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- Open air palladium catalyzed cyanation-the use of PMHS to protect from oxygen
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PMHS (polymethylhydrosiloxane) used in catalytic amounts has a remarkable ability to prevent catalyst poisoning by oxygen contamination during palladium catalyzed cyanation reactions. The procedure is applicable to a wide range of substrates and is so effective that it allows the reactions to be run fully open to the atmosphere.
- Martin, Michael T.,Liu, Bing,Cooley Jr., Bobby E.,Eaddy, John F.
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- Dependence of intramolecular dissociative electron transfer rates on driving force in Donor-Spacer-Acceptor systems
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The voltammetric reduction of a series of phenyl-substituted 4- benzoyloxy-1-methylcyclohexyl bromides has been investigated in DMF. The reduction leads to the cleavage of the C-Br bond. On a thermodynamic ground, the direct reduction of the tertiary C-Br function is easier than that of the selected benzoates by at least 0.5 V. However, since the direct reduction of bromides is affected by a large activation overpotential, the electron is first located in the benzoate moiety. The rate constant for the following exergonic intramolecular dissociative electron transfer was determined by kinetic analysis of the cyclic voltammetry curves. The intermolecular rate constants for the reaction between the radical anions of methyl benzoates and 4-tert-butyl-1-methylcyclohexyl bromide were also determined and found to correlate very well with related literature data pertaining to tert-butyl bromide. The intramolecular rate constants were found to be more sensitive to variation of driving force than the corresponding intermolecular data. This result can be attributed to a shift of the center of the π* orbital of the radical anion donor away from the acceptor moiety, the shift being larger for the most easily reduced donors. The resulting distance increase is therefore envisaged as responsible for a more rapid rate drop, compared to the intermolecular pattern, when smaller driving forces are considered.
- Antonello, Sabrina,Maran, Flavio
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- New method for the synthesis of nitriles from o-arylaldoximes with ZrCl4
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Nitriles were readily synthesized from the corresponding O-phenyl- or O-(p-cyanophenyl)-aldoximes with ZrCl4 in nitromethane or in benzene.
- Tsuji, Chiho,Miyazawa, Etsuko,Sakamoto, Takeshi,Kikugawa, Yasuo
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- A facile and efficient [bmim]N3 catalyzed direct oxidative esterification of arylaldehydes with alcohols
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Task-specific ionic liquid, [bmim]N3 was used as an effective catalyst and reaction medium for the direct oxidative esterification of arylaldehydes with alcohols. The oxidative esterification reaction of a variety of arylaldehydes took place smoothly with some primary and secondary alcohols in [bmim]N3. Satisfactory results were obtained with arylaldehydes containing electron withdrawing groups. Tertiary alcohols did not react under these conditions.
- Valizadeh, Hassan,Ahmadi, Mina
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- Palladium-catalyzed cyanation of aryl and heteroaryl iodides with copper(i) cyanide
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The palladium-catalyzed cyanation of aryl and heteroaryl iodides or bromides using copper(i) cyanide as a cyano group source afforded the corresponding aryl and heteroaryl cyanides in good yields.
- Sakamoto, Takao,Ohsawa, Kazutoshi
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- Cyanation of aromatic/vinylic boronic acids with α-cyanoacetates
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A friendly protocol is reported to achieve cyanation of aromatic and vinylic boronic acids using nontoxic and readily available α-cyanoacetates as a cyano source under aerobic conditions. Many aryl/vinyl boronic acids (as well as some iodides and bromides) are amenable substrates to give aryl nitriles and acrylonitriles. This cyanation method provides a safe and operationally convenient alternative to traditional ones requiring toxic cyanide salts.
- Wang, Xian-Jin,Zhang, Song-Lin
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- Copper-mediated cyanation of aryl halides by activation of benzyl cyanide as the cyanide source
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Aryl nitriles were efficiently synthesized through copper-mediated cyanation of aryl halides using benzyl cyanide as the cyanide source. Aryl halides with various substituents on the aromatic ring afforded the corresponding aryl nitriles in 32-97 % yields (25 examples). This reaction could also be carried on a gram scale by using commercially available reagents. Additionally, a C-H bond oxidation and a C-CN cleavage are proposed to be involved in this cascade process. An efficient, copper-mediated cascade synthesis of aryl nitriles from aryl halides using benzyl cyanide as the cyanide source is described. Compared with traditional copper-mediated cyanation reactions, this approach effectively avoided the use of toxic MCN and low soluble reagents. Furthermore, C-H oxidation and C-CN cleavage are proposed to be involved in this cascade process. Copyright
- Wen, Qiaodong,Jin, Jisong,Mei, Yuncai,Lu, Ping,Wang, Yanguang
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- Copper-mediated cyanation of aryl boronic acids using benzyl cyanide
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An efficient copper-mediated synthesis of aryl nitriles from aryl boronic acids has been achieved using benzyl cyanide as a user-friendly cyanide source. Various aryl boronic acids underwent the reaction smoothly, affording the corresponding aryl nitriles in moderate to good yields. tert-Butyl hydroperoxide (TBHP) was found to be a critical agent facilitating the cyanation reaction.
- Luo, Yan,Wen, Qiaodong,Wu, Zhiyuan,Jin, Jisong,Lu, Ping,Wang, Yanguang
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- Palladium-catalyzed, copper(I)-mediated coupling of boronic acids and benzylthiocyanate. A cyanide-free cyanation of boronic acids
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(Equation Presented) A new method for the synthesis of nitriles is described. As a complement to the classic cyanation of aryl halides using cyanide sources and a transition metal catalyst, the palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling of thiocyanates with boronic acids in the presence of copper(I) thiophene-2-carboxylate (CuTC) affords nitriles in good to excellent yields.
- Zhang, Zhihui,Liebeskind, Lanny S.
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- PHOTOINDUCED ALCOHOLYSIS OF alpha , alpha , alpha -TRIBROMACETOPHENONE TO BENZOYLFORMATE.
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Irradiation of p-substituted alpha , alpha , alpha -tribromoacetophenones (1) in O//2-saturated alcohols (MeOH, prim. and sec. alcohols) afforded a new alcoholysis product, benzoylformate (2), in good yield (75-85%) along with benzoate and radical (reduction) products. Sensitization experiments showed that 2 was derived from the triplet excited 1. Formation of 2 as well as the decomposition rate of 1 were greatly accelerated by oxygen, presumably as a result of the involvement of the normally forbidden S//o yields T//1 transition of 1 due to the oxygen-1 charge transfer complex. Independent synthesis and reaction of possible intermediates in the photoalcoholysis of 1 leading to 2 suggested that 2 was formed from spontaneous (dark) reactions of initial photoalcoholysis product, alpha alpha -dibromo- alpha -alkoxyacetophenone.
- Izawa,Ishiguro,Tomioka
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- Catalytic cyanation of aryl iodides using DMF and ammonium bicarbonate as the combined source of cyanide: A dual role of copper catalysts
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Cu(ii)-catalyzed cyanation of aryl iodides has been developed using DMF and ammonium bicarbonate as the combined source of cyanide. It is assumed that copper is involved both in the generation of CN units from DMF-ammonia and in the cyanation of aryl halides. A range of electron-rich and fused (hetero)aryl iodides underwent cyanation resulting in moderate to good yields.
- Pawar, Amit B.,Chang, Sukbok
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- Aromatics from pyrones: Esters of terephthalic acid and isophthalic acid from methyl coumalate
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The Diels-Alder reaction of methyl coumalate with alkenes bearing electron-withdrawing groups provides terephthalates or isophthalates in good yields, with the regioselectivity depending on the electron-withdrawing group. The reaction of methyl coumalate with the salt of acrylic acid gave only the monoester of isophthalic acid. Density functional theory (B3LYP/6-31 + G(d,p)) computations of the energies of the competing transition states of the para-selective Diels-Alder reactions are in good agreement with experiment. The surprising regioselectivity of methyl coumalate with activated alkenes is attributed to a secondary orbital interaction between the pyrone oxygen and the dienophile LUMO, which switches the regiochemistry expected from simple frontier molecular orbital theory arguments. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2013.
- Kraus, George A.,Pollock III, Gerald R.,Beck, Christie L.,Palmer, Kyle,Winter, Arthur H.
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- Phosphite-catalyzed alkoxycarbonylation of aryl diazonium salts
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In this communication, an interesting phosphite-catalyzed alkoxycarbonylation of aryl diazonium salts has been reported. At room temperature and under CO pressure, moderate to good yields of the desired esters can be produced in the absence of bases or an
- Xu, Jian-Xing,Franke, Robert,Wu, Xiao-Feng
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- Characterization of 2-aryl-1,3,4-oxadiazoles by 15N and 13C NMR spectroscopy
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15N NMR chemical shifts of 2-aryl-1,3,4-oxadiazoles were assigned on the basis of the 1H-15N HMBC experiment. Chemical shifts of the nitrogen and carbon atoms in the oxadiazole ring correlate with the Hammett σ-constants of substituents in the aryl ring (r2 ≥ 0.966 for N atoms). 15N NMR data are a suitable and sensitive means for characterizing long-range electronic substituent effects. Additionally, 13C NMR data for these compounds are presented. Copyright
- Nowak-Wydra, Barbara,Gierczyk, Blazej,Schroeder, Grzegorz
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- Palladium-catalyzed synthesis of nitriles from N-phthaloyl hydrazones
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The Pd-catalyzed transformation of N-phthaloyl hydrazones into nitriles involving the cleavage of an N-N bond is reported. The use of N-heterocyclic carbene as a ligand is essential for the success of the reaction. N-Phthaloyl hydrazones prepared from aromatic aldehydes or cyclobutanones are applicable to this transformation, which gives aryl or alkenyl nitriles, respectively.
- Ano, Yusuke,Chatani, Naoto,Higashino, Masaya,Yamada, Yuki
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supporting information
p. 3799 - 3802
(2022/04/07)
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- Br?nsted acid-catalyzed chlorination of aromatic carboxylic acids
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The chlorination of aromatic carboxylic acids with SOCl2 has been effectively performed by reacting with a Br?nsted acid as the catalyst. Based on this discovery, an efficient catalytic method that is cheaper than traditional catalytic methods was developed. 20 substrates were chlorinated offering excellent yields in a short reaction time. And the SOCl2/Br?nsted acid system has been used in a larger scale preparative reaction. A dual activation mechanism was proposed to prove the irreplaceable system of SOCl2/Br?nsted acid.
- Yu, Zhiqun,Yao, Hongmiao,Xu, Qilin,Liu, Jiming,Le, Xingmao,Ren, Minna
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supporting information
p. 685 - 689
(2021/04/09)
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- Method for preparing methyl 4-cyanobenzoate and method for preparing 4-cyanobenzoic acid
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The invention relates to the field of synthesis, and discloses a method for preparing methyl 4-cyanobenzoate and a method for preparing 4-cyanobenzoic acid. The method for preparing methyl 4-cyanobenzoate comprises the following steps: (1) in the presence of a first alkaline substance, carrying out a first hydrolysis reaction on dimethyl terephthalate to obtain monomethyl terephthalate; (2) subjecting the monomethyl terephthalate to a contact reaction with a chlorination reagent and ammonia water in sequence so as to obtain methyl 4-carbamoylbenzoate; and (3) carrying out a dehydration reaction on the methyl 4-carbamoylbenzoate to obtain the methyl 4-cyanobenzoate. According to the method for preparing the methyl 4-cyanobenzoate and the method for preparing the 4-cyanobenzoic acid, reaction raw materials are cheap and easy to obtain, and the target compounds can be efficiently prepared in an environment-friendly mode through the processes of hydrolysis, ammoniation, dehydration, optional selection and further hydrolysis.
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Paragraph 0066; 0071-0072; 0075; 0080-0081
(2021/06/09)
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- Esterification or Thioesterification of Carboxylic Acids with Alcohols or Thiols Using Amphipathic Monolith-SO3H Resin
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We have developed a method for the esterification of carboxylic acids with alcohols using amphipathic, monolithic-resin bearing sulfonic acid moieties as cation exchange functions (monolith-SO3H). Monolith-SO3H efficiently catalyzed the esterification of aromatic and aliphatic carboxylic acids with various primary and secondary alcohols (1.55.0 equiv) in toluene at 6080 °C without the need to remove water generated during the reaction. The amphipathic property of monolith-SO3H facilitates dehydration due to its capacity for water absorption. This reaction was also applicable to thioesterification, wherein the corresponding thioesters were obtained in excellent yield using only 2.0 equiv of thiol in toluene, although heating at 120 °C was required. Moreover, monolith-SO3H was separable from the reaction mixtures by simple filtration and reused for at least five runs without decreasing the catalytic activity.
- Ichihara, Shuta,Ishida, Moeka,Ito, Ryo,Kato, Ayumu,Monguchi, Yasunari,Nakamura, Shinji,Park, Kwihwan,Sajiki, Hironao,Takada, Hitoshi,Wakayama, Fumika,Yamada, Tsuyoshi,Yamada, Yutaro
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p. 2702 - 2710
(2022/01/19)
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- Recyclable and Reusable Pd(OAc)2/XPhos–SO3Na/PEG-400/H2O System for Cyanation of Aryl Chlorides with Potassium Ferrocyanide
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Pd(OAc)2/XPhos–SO3Na in a mixture of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG-400) and water is shown to be a highly efficient catalyst for the cyanation of aryl chlorides with potassium ferrocyanide. The reaction proceeded smoothly at 100 or 120?oC with K2CO3 or KOAc as base, delivering a variety of aromatic nitriles in good to excellent yields. The isolation of the crude products is facilely performed by extraction with cyclohexane and more importantly, both expensive Pd(OAc)2 and XPhos–SO3Na in PEG-400/H2O system could be easily recycled and reused at least six times without any apparent loss of catalytic efficiency. Graphical Abstract: Palladium-catalyzed cyanation of aryl chlorides with potassium ferrocyanide leading to aryl nitriles by using Pd(OAc)2/XPhos–SO3Na/PEG-400/H2O as a highly efficient and recyclable catalytic system is described.[Figure not available: see fulltext.]
- Cai, Mingzhong,Huang, Bin,Liu, Rong,Xu, Caifeng
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- Visible-Light-Promoted Metal-Free Synthesis of (Hetero)Aromatic Nitriles from C(sp3)?H Bonds**
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The metal-free activation of C(sp3)?H bonds to value-added products is of paramount importance in organic synthesis. We report the use of the commercially available organic dye 2,4,6-triphenylpyrylium tetrafluoroborate (TPP) for the conversion of methylarenes to the corresponding aryl nitriles via a photocatalytic process. Applying this methodology, a variety of cyanobenzenes have been synthesized in good to excellent yield under metal- and cyanide-free conditions. We demonstrate the scope of the method with over 50 examples including late-stage functionalization of drug molecules (celecoxib) and complex structures such as l-menthol, amino acids, and cholesterol derivatives. Furthermore, the presented synthetic protocol is applicable for gram-scale reactions. In addition to methylarenes, selected examples for the cyanation of aldehydes, alcohols and oximes are demonstrated as well. Detailed mechanistic investigations have been carried out using time-resolved luminescence quenching studies, control experiments, and NMR spectroscopy as well as kinetic studies, all supporting the proposed catalytic cycle.
- Murugesan, Kathiravan,Donabauer, Karsten,K?nig, Burkhard
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supporting information
p. 2439 - 2445
(2020/12/07)
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- Efficient nitriding reagent and application thereof
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The invention discloses an efficient nitriding reagent and application thereof, wherein the nitriding reagent comprises nitrogen oxide, an active agent, a reducing agent and an organic solvent. By applying the nitriding reagent, nitrogen-containing compounds such as amide, nitrile and the like can be produced, and the method is simple in condition, low in waste discharge amount and simple in reaction equipment.
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Paragraph 0206-0208
(2021/03/31)
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- A Molecular Iron-Based System for Divergent Bond Activation: Controlling the Reactivity of Aldehydes
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The direct synthesis of amides and nitriles from readily available aldehyde precursors provides access to functional groups of major synthetic utility. To date, most reliable catalytic methods have typically been optimized to supply one product exclusively. Herein, we describe an approach centered on an operationally simple iron-based system that, depending on the reaction conditions, selectively addresses either the C=O or C-H bond of aldehydes. This way, two divergent reaction pathways can be opened to furnish both products in high yields and selectivities under mild reaction conditions. The catalyst system takes advantage of iron's dual reactivity capable of acting as (1) a Lewis acid and (2) a nitrene transfer platform to govern the aldehyde building block. The present transformation offers a rare control over the selectivity on the basis of the iron system's ionic nature. This approach expands the repertoire of protocols for amide and nitrile synthesis and shows that fine adjustments of the catalyst system's molecular environment can supply control over bond activation processes, thus providing easy access to various products from primary building blocks.
- Chatterjee, Basujit,Jena, Soumyashree,Chugh, Vishal,Weyhermüller, Thomas,Werlé, Christophe
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p. 7176 - 7185
(2021/06/30)
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- Electrochemical esterification via oxidative coupling of aldehydes and alcohols
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An electrolytic method for the direct oxidative coupling of aldehydes with alcohols to produce esters is described. Our method involves anodic oxidation in presence of TBAF as supporting electrolyte in an undivided electrochemical cell equipped with graphite electrodes. This method successfully couples a wide range of alcohols to benzaldehydes with yields ranging from 70 to 90%. The protocol is easy to perform at a constant voltage conditions and offers a sustainable alternative over conventional methods.
- Smeyne, Dylan,Verboom, Katherine,Bryan, Maria,LoBue, James,Shaikh, Abid
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supporting information
(2021/03/26)
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- The Highly Effective Cobalt Based Metal–Organic Frameworks Catalyst for One Pot Oxidative Esterification Under Mild Conditions
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The cobalt-based metal organic frameworks (Co-MOFs) catalyst has been prepared with using terephthalic acid and 4,4′-bipyridine as organic linkers by facile solvothermal method for one pot oxidative esterification. The prepared catalyst was pyrolysed at different temperature and then applied for oxidation of aldehyde using molecular oxygen as benign oxidant under mild conditions. The Co-MOFs pyrolysed at 800?°C (denoted as Co-MOFs-800) catalyst exhibited excellent catalytic activity, selectivity and recyclability toward the oxidative esterification of benzaldehydes. Furthermore, it can be reused up to 5 runs without significant loss of activity. Graphic Abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]
- Chindawong, Chakkresit,Mekrattanachai, Pagasukon,Setthaya, Naruemon,Song, Wei Guo,Zhu, Lei
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- Stereoselective synthesis of cyclobutanes by contraction of pyrrolidines
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Here we report a contractive synthesis of multisubstituted cyclobutanes containing multiple stereocenters from readily accessible pyrrolidines using iodonitrene chemistry. Mediated by a nitrogen extrusion process, the stereospecific synthesis of cyclobutanes involves a radical pathway. Unprecedented unsymmetrical spirocyclobutanes were prepared successfully, and a concise, formal synthesis of the cytotoxic natural product piperarborenine B is reported.
- Hui, Chunngai,Brieger, Lukas,Strohmann, Carsten,Antonchick, Andrey P.
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supporting information
p. 18864 - 18870
(2021/11/23)
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- Development and Molecular Understanding of a Pd-Catalyzed Cyanation of Aryl Boronic Acids Enabled by High-Throughput Experimentation and Data Analysis
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A synthetic method for the palladium-catalyzed cyanation of aryl boronic acids using bench stable and non-toxic N-cyanosuccinimide has been developed. High-throughput experimentation facilitated the screen of 90 different ligands and the resultant statistical data analysis identified that ligand σ-donation, π-acidity and sterics are key drivers that govern yield. Categorization into three ligand groups – monophosphines, bisphosphines and miscellaneous – was performed before the analysis. For the monophosphines, the yield of the reaction increases for strong σ-donating, weak π-accepting ligands, with flexible pendant substituents. For the bisphosphines, the yield predominantly correlates with ligand lability. The applicability of the designed reaction to a wider substrate scope was investigated, showing good functional group tolerance in particular with boronic acids bearing electron-withdrawing substituents. This work outlines the development of a novel reaction, coupled with a fast and efficient workflow to gain understanding of the optimal ligand properties for the design of improved palladium cross-coupling catalysts.
- De Jesus Silva, Jordan,Bartalucci, Niccolò,Jelier, Benson,Grosslight, Samantha,Gensch, Tobias,Schünemann, Claas,Müller, Bernd,Kamer, Paul C. J.,Copéret, Christophe,Sigman, Matthew S.,Togni, Antonio
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- Nickel-Catalyzed Cyanation of Aryl Thioethers
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A nickel-catalyzed cyanation of aryl thioethers using Zn(CN)2 as a cyanide source has been developed to access functionalized aryl nitriles. The ligand dcype (1,2-bis(dicyclohexylphosphino)ethane) in combination with the base KOAc (potassium acetate) is essential for achieving this transformation efficiently. This reaction involves both a C-S bond activation and a C-C bond formation. The scalability, low catalyst and reagents loadings, and high functional group tolerance have enabled both late-stage derivatization and polymer recycling, demonstrating the reaction's utility across organic chemistry.
- Delcaillau, Tristan,Woenckhaus-Alvarez, Adrian,Morandi, Bill
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supporting information
p. 7018 - 7022
(2021/09/13)
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- Alkali-modified heterogeneous Pd-catalyzed synthesis of acids, amides and esters from aryl halides using formic acid as the CO precursor
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To establish an environmentally friendly green chemical process, we minimized and resolved a significant proportion of waste and hazards associated with conventional organic acids and molecular gases, such as carbon monoxide (CO). Herein, we report a facile and milder reaction procedure, using low temperatures/pressures and shorter reaction time for the carboxyl- and carbonylation of diverse arrays of aryl halides over a newly developed cationic Lewis-acid promoted Pd/Co3O4catalyst. Furthermore, the reaction proceeded in the absence of acid co-catalysts, and anhydrides for CO release. Catalyst reusability was achievedviascalable, safer, and practical reactions that provided moderate to high yields, paving the way for developing a novel environmentally benign method for synthesizing carboxylic acids, amides, and esters.
- Fapojuwo, Dele Peter,Maqunga, Nomathamsanqa Prudence,Meijboom, Reinout,Mogudi, Batsile M.,Molokoane, Pule Petrus,Onisuru, Oluwatayo Racheal,Oseghale, Charles O.
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p. 26937 - 26948
(2021/08/17)
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- Method for preparing carboxylic ester compounds by oxidizing and breaking carbon-carbon bonds of secondary alcohol compounds
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The invention discloses a method for preparing carboxylic ester compounds by oxidizing and breaking carbon-carbon bonds of secondary alcohol compounds. The method comprises the following steps: adding a secondary alcohol compound, an additive and a nitrogen-doped mesoporous carbon loaded monatomic catalyst into a fatty primary alcohol solvent, putting into a pressure container, sealing, introducing oxygen source gas with a certain pressure, controlling the pressure of the oxygen source gas to be 0.1-1 MPa and the reaction temperature to be 80-150 DEG C, and obtaining a product after the reaction to be the carboxylic ester compound. The nitrogen-doped mesoporous carbon-loaded monatomic catalyst adopted by the invention is high in activity, the highest separation yield of the carboxylic ester compound as a reaction product reaches 99%, the method is wide in application range, the reaction conditions are easy to control, the catalyst can be recycled, the post-treatment is simple, and the method is suitable for industrial production.
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Paragraph 0062-0063; 0092
(2021/06/02)
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- Oxidative esterification of alcohols by a single-side organically decorated Anderson-type chrome-based catalyst
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The direct esterification of alcohols with non-noble metal-based catalytic systems faces great challenges. Here, we report a new chrome-based catalyst stabilized by a single pentaerythritol decorated Anderson-type polyoxometalate, [N(C4H9)4]3[CrMo6O18(OH)3C{(OCH2)3CH2OH}], which can realize the efficient transformation from alcohols to esters by H2O2oxidation in good yields and high selectivity without extra organic ligands. A variety of alcohols with different functionalities including some natural products and pharmaceutical intermediates are tolerated in this system. The chrome-based catalyst can be recycled several times and still keep the original configuration and catalytic activity. We also propose a reasonable catalytic mechanism and prove the potential for industrial applications.
- Wang, Jingjing,Jiang, Feng,Tao, Chaofu,Yu, Han,Ruhlmann, Laurent,Wei, Yongge
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supporting information
p. 2652 - 2657
(2021/04/21)
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- N-Heterocyclic Carbene Catalyzed Ester Synthesis from Organic Halides through Incorporation of Oxygen Atoms from Air
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Oxygenation reactions with molecular oxygen (O2) as the oxygen source provides a green and straightforward strategy for the construction of O-containing compounds. Demonstrated here is a novel N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) catalyzed oxidative transformation of simple and readily available organic halides into valuable esters through the incorporation of O-atoms from O2. Mechanistic studies prove that the deoxy Breslow intermediate generated in situ is oxidized to a Breslow intermediate for further transformation by this oxidative protocol. This method broadens the field of NHC catalysis and promotes oxygenation reactions with O2.
- Tan, Hui,Wang, Shen-An,Yan, Zixi,Liu, Jianzhong,Wei, Jialiang,Song, Song,Jiao, Ning
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supporting information
p. 2140 - 2144
(2020/12/01)
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- Decarbonylative Synthesis of Aryl Nitriles from Aromatic Esters and Organocyanides by a Nickel Catalyst
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A decarbonylative cyanation of aromatic esters with aminoacetonitriles in the presence of a nickel catalyst was developed. The key to this reaction was the use of a thiophene-based diphosphine ligand, dcypt, permitting the synthesis of aryl nitrile without the generation of stoichiometric metal- or halogen-containing chemical wastes. A wide range of aromatic esters, including hetarenes and pharmaceutical molecules, can be converted into aryl nitriles.
- Iizumi, Keiichiro,Kurosawa, Miki B.,Isshiki, Ryota,Muto, Kei,Yamaguchi, Junichiro
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supporting information
p. 1555 - 1559
(2020/11/10)
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- CuO-catalyzed conversion of arylacetic acids into aromatic nitriles with K4Fe(CN)6 as the nitrogen source
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Readily available CuO was demonstrated to be effective as the catalyst for the conversion of arylacetic acids to aromatic nitriles with non-toxic and inexpensive K4Fe(CN)6 as the nitrogen source via the complete cleavage of the C[tbnd]N triple bond. The present method allowed a series of arylacetic acids including phenylacetic acids, naphthaleneacetic acids, 2-thiopheneacetic acid and 2-furanacetic acid to be converted into the targeted products in low to high yields.
- Ren, Yun-Lai,Shen, Zhenpeng,Tian, Xinzhe,Xing, Ai-Ping,Zhao, Zhe
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- Cu2O-Catalyzed Conversion of Benzyl Alcohols Into Aromatic Nitriles via the Complete Cleavage of the C≡N Triple Bond in the Cyanide Anion
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Nitrogen transfer from cyanide anion to an aldehyde is emerging as a promising method for the synthesis of aromatic nitriles. However, this method still suffers from a disadvantage that a use of stoichiometric Cu(II) or Cu(I) salts is required to enable the reaction. As we report herein, we overcame this drawback and developed a catalytic method for nitrogen transfer from cyanide anion to an alcohol via the complete cleavage of the C≡N triple bond using phen/Cu2O as the catalyst. The present condition allowed a series of benzyl alcohols to be smoothly converted into aromatic nitriles in moderate to high yields. In addition, the present method could be extended to the conversion of cinnamic alcohol to 3-phenylacrylonitrile.
- Liu, Wenbo,Tang, Peichen,Zheng, Yi,Ren, Yun-Lai,Tian, Xinzhe,An, Wankai,Zheng, Xianfu,Guo, Yinggang,Shen, Zhenpeng
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p. 3509 - 3513
(2021/10/04)
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- Pd@CeO2-catalyzed cyanation of aryl iodides with K4Fe(CN)6·3H2O under visible light irradiation
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Cyanation of aryl iodides is still challenging work for chemical researchers because of harsh reaction conditions and toxic cyanide sources. Herein, we have developed a new protocol based on the combination of the catalyst Pd@CeO2, nontoxic cyanide source K4[Fe (CN)6]·3H2O, and driving force visible light irradiation. The reaction is operated at relatively moderate temperature (55°C) and exhibits good catalytic efficiency of product aryl nitriles (yields of 89.4%). Moreover, the catalyst Pd@CeO2 possesses good reusability with a slight loss of photocatalytic activity after five consecutive runs. The reaction system based on the above combination shows a wide range of functional group tolerance under the same conditions. Reaction conditions such as temperature, time, the component of catalyst, and solutions are optimized by studying cyanation of 1-iodo-4-nitrobenzene as model reaction. According to these results, the possible mechanism of Pd@CeO2-catalyzed cyanation of aryl iodides under visible light irradiation is proposed based on the influence of visible light on the catalyst and reactant compounds. In all, we provided an environmental and economic method for preparation of aryl nitriles from cyanation of aryl iodides based on the goal of green chemistry for sustainable development.
- Wang, Shengyu,Wang, Jianqiang,Pan, Junyi,Liu, Cheng,Gong, Xubin,Guo, Cheng
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- Highly fluorescent 1,2,4,5-tetrazine derivatives containing 1,3,4-oxadiazole ring conjugated via a 1,4-phenylene linker
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Symmetrical and unsymmetrical 1,2,4,5-tetrazine derivatives containing 1,3,4-oxadiazole ring were obtained in high yields using commercially-available 4-cyanobenzoic acid, hydrazine hydrate and carboxylic acid chlorides. The few-step transformation involved the Pinner reaction and the subsequent mild oxidation of 1,4-dihydro-1,2,4,5-tetrazines using hydrogen peroxide at room temperature. The obtained compounds exhibited luminescent properties and large quantum yields.
- ?wi?tkowski, Marcin,K?dzia, Anna,Kruszyński, Rafa?,Kudelko, Agnieszka
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- HCl·DMPU-assisted one-pot and metal-free conversion of aldehydes to nitriles
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We report an efficient HCl·DMPU assisted one-pot conversion of aldehydes into nitriles. The use of HCl·DMPU as both an acidic source as well as a non-nucleophilic base constitutes an environmentally mild alternative for the preparation of nitriles. Our protocol proceeds smoothly without the use of toxic reagents and metal catalysts. Diverse functionalized aromatic, aliphatic and allylic aldehydes incorporating various functional groups were successfully converted to nitriles in excellent to quantitative yields. This protocol is characterized by a broad substrate scope, mild reaction conditions, and high scalability. This journal is
- Hammond, Gerald B.,Mudshinge, Sagar R.,Potnis, Chinmay S.,Xu, Bo
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supporting information
p. 4161 - 4164
(2020/07/14)
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- Nitromethane as a nitrogen donor in Schmidt-type formation of amides and nitriles
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The Schmidt reaction has been an efficient and widely used synthetic approach to amides and nitriles since its discovery in 1923. However, its application often entails the use of volatile, potentially explosive, and highly toxic azide reagents. Here, we report a sequence whereby triflic anhydride and formic and acetic acids activate the bulk chemical nitromethane to serve as a nitrogen donor in place of azides in Schmidt-like reactions. This protocol further expands the substrate scope to alkynes and simple alkyl benzenes for the preparation of amides and nitriles.
- Jiao, Ning,Liu, Jianzhong,Qiu, Xu,Song, Song,Wei, Jialiang,Wen, Xiaojin,Zhang, Cheng,Zhang, Ziyao
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supporting information
p. 281 - 285
(2020/01/28)
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- Nickel-Catalyzed Transformation of Alkene-Tethered Oxime Ethers to Nitriles by a Traceless Directing Group Strategy
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Nickel-catalyzed transformation of alkene-tethered oxime ethers to nitriles using a traceless directing group strategy has been developed. A series of alkene-tethered oxime ethers derived from benzaldehyde and cinnamyl aldehyde derivatives were converted into the corresponding benzonitriles and cinnamonitriles in 46-98% yields using the nickel catalyst system. Control experiments showed that the alkene group tethered to an oxygen atom on the oximes via one methylene unit plays a key role as a traceless directing group during the catalysis.
- Takahashi, Yoshiyuki,Tsuji, Hiroaki,Kawatsura, Motoi
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p. 2654 - 2665
(2020/02/04)
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- Iron-Promoted Decarboxylation of Arylacetic Acids for the Synthesis of Aromatic Nitriles with Sodium Nitrite as the Nitrogen Source
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A new and effective method was developed for the synthesis of aromatic nitriles from arylacetic acids by using NaNO 2as the nitrogen source and Fe(OTf) 3as the promoter at 50 °C. A series of arylacetic acids underwent this transformation to give the targeted products in yields of 51-90%. Because of the mild conditions, the reaction is compatible with a broad range of functional groups, including ester, carboxy, hydroxy, acetamido, halo, nitro, cyano, methoxy, and even highly reactive formyl groups.
- Shen, Zhenpeng,Liu, Wenbo,Tian, Xinzhe,Zhao, Zhe,Ren, Yun-Lai
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supporting information
p. 1805 - 1808
(2020/11/02)
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- Reductive cyanation of organic chlorides using CO2 and NH3 via Triphos–Ni(I) species
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Cyano-containing compounds constitute important pharmaceuticals, agrochemicals and organic materials. Traditional cyanation methods often rely on the use of toxic metal cyanides which have serious disposal, storage and transportation issues. Therefore, there is an increasing need to develop general and efficient catalytic methods for cyanide-free production of nitriles. Here we report the reductive cyanation of organic chlorides using CO2/NH3 as the electrophilic CN source. The use of tridentate phosphine ligand Triphos allows for the nickel-catalyzed cyanation of a broad array of aryl and aliphatic chlorides to produce the desired nitrile products in good yields, and with excellent functional group tolerance. Cheap and bench-stable urea was also shown as suitable CN source, suggesting promising application potential. Mechanistic studies imply that Triphos-Ni(I) species are responsible for the reductive C-C coupling approach involving isocyanate intermediates. This method expands the application potential of reductive cyanation in the synthesis of functionalized nitrile compounds under cyanide-free conditions, which is valuable for safe synthesis of (isotope-labeled) drugs.
- Dong, Yanan,Li, Yuehui,Yang, Peiju,Zhao, Shizhen
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- Nitrile Synthesis by Aerobic Oxidation of Primary Amines and in situ Generated Imines from Aldehydes and Ammonium Salt with Grubbs Catalyst
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Herein, a Grubbs-catalyzed route for the synthesis of nitriles via the aerobic oxidation of primary amines is reported. This reaction accommodates a variety of substrates, including simple primary amines, sterically hindered β,β-disubstituted amines, allylamine, benzylamines, and α-amino esters. Reaction compatibility with various functionalities is also noted, particularly with alkenes, alkynes, halogens, esters, silyl ethers, and free hydroxyl groups. The nitriles were also synthesized via the oxidation of imines generated from aldehydes and NH4OAc in situ. (Figure presented.).
- Utsumi, Tatsuki,Noda, Kenta,Kawauchi, Daichi,Ueda, Hirofumi,Tokuyama, Hidetoshi
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p. 3583 - 3588
(2020/08/05)
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- Discovery of carboxyl-containing biaryl ureas as potent RORγt inverse agonists
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GSK805 (1) is a potent RORγt inverse agonist, but a drawback of 1 is its low solubility, leading to a limited absorption in high doses. We have explored detailed structure-activity relationship on the amide linker, biaryl and arylsulfonyl moieties of 1 trying to improve solubility while maintaining RORγt activity. As a result, a novel series of carboxyl-containing biaryl urea derivatives was discovered as potent RORγt inverse agonists with improved drug-like properties. Compound 3i showed potent RORγt inhibitory activity and subtype selectivity with an IC50 of 63.8 nM in RORγ FRET assay and 85 nM in cell-based RORγ-GAL4 promotor reporter assay. Reasonable inhibitory activity of 3i was also achieved in mouse Th17 cell differentiation assay (76percent inhibition at 0.3 μM). Moreover, 3i had greatly improved aqueous solubility at pH 7.4 compared to 1, exhibited decent mouse PK profile and demonstrated some in vivo efficacy in an imiquimod-induced psoriasis mice model.
- Sun, Nannan,Huang, Yafei,Yu, Mingcheng,Zhao, Yunpeng,Chen, Ji-An,Zhu, Chenyu,Song, Meiqi,Guo, Huimin,Xie, Qiong,Wang, Yonghui
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- Methoxylation of Acyl Fluorides with Tris(2,4,6-trimethoxyphenyl)phosphine via C-OMe Bond Cleavage under Metal-Free Conditions
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Acyl fluorides are subjected to methoxylation with tris(2,4,6-trimethoxyphenyl)phosphine (TMPP) to afford the corresponding methyl esters in good to excellent yields. This transformation is featured by C(sp2)-OMe bond cleavage under metal-free conditions. Unprecedented utilization of TMPP as a methoxylating agent realized the installation of an OMe group into the desired products.
- Ishida, Takumi,Nishihara, Yasushi,Wang, Xiu,Wang, Zhenhua
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p. 7526 - 7533
(2020/06/27)
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- Organophotoredox assisted cyanation of bromoarenes: via silyl-radical-mediated bromine abstraction
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The insertion of a nitrile (-CN) group into arenes through the direct functionalization of the C(sp2)-Br bond is a challenging reaction. Herein, we report an organophotoredox method for the cyanation of aryl bromides using the organic photoredox catalyst 4CzIPN and tosyl cyanide (TsCN) as the nitrile source. A photogenerated silyl radical, via a single electron transfer (SET) mechanism, was employed to abstract bromine from aryl bromide to provide an aryl radical, which was concomitantly intercepted by TsCN to afford the aromatic nitrile. A range of substrates containing electron-donating and -withdrawing groups was demonstrated to undergo cyanation at room temperature in good yields.
- Shah, Sk. Sheriff,Shee, Maniklal,Singh, N. D. Pradeep
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supporting information
p. 4240 - 4243
(2020/04/22)
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- Acyl Cyanides as Bifunctional Reagent: Application in Copper-Catalyzed Cyanoamidation and Cyanoesterification Reaction
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Cu-catalyzed domino decyanation and cyanation reaction of acyl cyanides with amines or alcohols have been developed. The cyano sources were generated in situ via C-CN cleavage yielding the corresponding cyano substituted amides or esters in moderate to excellent yields. This approach features a cheap copper catalyst, domino decyanation and cyanation reaction, readily available starting materials, broad substrate scope, operational simplicity, and the potential for further transformation of the cyano group.
- Chen, Zhengwang,Wen, Xiaowei,Zheng, Weiping,He, Ruolan,Chen, Dou,Cao, Dingsheng,Long, Lipeng,Ye, Min
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p. 5691 - 5701
(2020/04/10)
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- Photocatalytic Conversion of Benzyl Alcohols/Methyl Arenes to Aryl Nitriles via H-Abstraction by Azide Radical
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This report presents the visible-light-assisted synthesis of aryl nitriles from easily accessible alcohols or methyl arenes in the presence of O2. Organic photoredox catalyst, 4CzIPN (1,2,3,5-tetrakis(carbazol-9-yl)-4,6-dicyanobenzene), induces single electron transfer (SET) from azide N3? and generates azide radical N3?.The photogenerated N3? abstracts H atom from α-C?H bond of benzylic system, which provides aldehyde and hydrazoic acid (HN3) in situ. This reaction subsequently forms azido alcohol intermediate that transforms into nitrile with the assistance of triflic acid (Br?nsted acid). A range of alcohols and methyl arenes successfully underwent cyanation at room temperature with good to excellent yields and showed good functional group tolerance.
- Shee, Maniklal,Shah, Sk. Sheriff,Singh, N. D. Pradeep
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supporting information
p. 14070 - 14074
(2020/10/12)
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- Atomically Dispersed Ru on Manganese Oxide Catalyst Boosts Oxidative Cyanation
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There is a strong incentive for environmentally benign and sustainable production of organic nitriles to avoid the use of toxic cyanides. Here we report that manganese oxide nanorod-supported single-site Ru catalysts are active, selective, and stable for oxidative cyanation of various alcohols to give the corresponding nitriles with molecular oxygen and ammonia as the reactants. The very low amount of Ru (0.1 wt %) with atomic dispersion boosts the catalytic performance of manganese oxides. Experimental and theoretical results show how the Ru sites enhance the ammonia resistance of the catalyst, bolstering its performance in alcohol dehydrogenation and oxygen activation, the key steps in the oxidative cyanation. This investigation demonstrates the high efficiency of a single-site Ru catalyst for nitrile production.
- Gates, Bruce C.,Guan, Erjia,Meng, Xiangju,Wang, Chengtao,Wang, Hai,Wang, Liang,Wang, Sai,Xiao, Feng-Shou,Xu, Dongyang,Xu, Hua,Yang, Bo,Zhang, Jian
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p. 6299 - 6308
(2020/07/21)
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- Dehydrogenation of Primary Alkyl Azides to Nitriles Catalyzed by Pincer Iridium/Ruthenium Complexes
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Pincer metal complexes exhibit superior catalytic activity in the dehydrogenation of plain alkanes, but find limited application in the dehydrogenation of functionalized organic molecules. Starting from easily accessible primary alkyl azides, here we report an efficient dehydrogenation of azides to nitriles using pincer iridium or ruthenium complexes as the catalysts. This method offers a route to cyanide-free preparation of nitriles without carbon chain elongation and without the use of strong oxidants. Both benzyl and linear aliphatic azides can be dehydrogenated with tert-butylethylene as the hydrogen acceptor to afford nitriles in moderate to high yields. Various functional groups can be tolerated, and the H?C?C?H bond dehydrogenation does not occur for linear alkyl azide substrates. Furthermore, the pincer Ir catalytic system was found to catalyze the direct azide dehydrogenation without the use of a sacrificial hydrogen acceptor.
- Gan, Lan,Jia, Xiangqing,Fang, Huaquan,Liu, Guixia,Huang, Zheng
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p. 3661 - 3665
(2020/06/02)
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- SAR Studies on Aromatic Acylhydrazone-Based Inhibitors of Fungal Sphingolipid Synthesis as Next-Generation Antifungal Agents
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Recently, the fungal sphingolipid glucosylceramide (GlcCer) synthesis has emerged as a highly promising new target for drug discovery of next-generation antifungal agents, and we found two aromatic acylhydrazones as effective inhibitors of GlcCer synthesis based on HTP screening. In the present work, we have designed libraries of new aromatic acylhydrazones, evaluated their antifungal activities (MIC80 and time-kill profile) against C. neoformans, and performed an extensive SAR study, which led to the identification of five promising lead compounds, exhibiting excellent fungicidal activities with very large selectivity index. Moreover, two compounds demonstrated broad spectrum antifungal activity against six other clinically relevant fungal strains. These five lead compounds were examined for their synergism/cooperativity with five clinical drugs against seven fungal strains, and very encouraging results were obtained; e.g., the combination of all five lead compounds with voriconazole exhibited either synergistic or additive effect to all seven fungal strains.
- Del Poeta, Maurizio,Haranahalli, Krupanandan,Lazzarini, Cristina,Mallamo, John,McCarthy, J. Brian,Ojima, Iwao,Pathiranage, Senuri,Sun, Yi,Zambito, Julia
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- Visible-light-driven catalytic oxidation of aldehydes and alcohols to nitriles by 4-acetamido-tempo using ammonium carbamate as a nitrogen source
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A mild and efficient route to prepare nitriles from aldehydes by combining photoredox catalysis with oxoammonium cations is reported. The reaction is performed using ammonium carbamate as the nitrogen source. The practicality of the method is increased by the extension of the dual catalytic system to one-pot two-step conversion of alcohols to nitriles.
- Nandi, Jyoti,Leadbeater, Nicholas E.
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supporting information
p. 9182 - 9186
(2019/11/05)
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- Sulfuryl Fluoride Mediated Conversion of Aldehydes to Nitriles
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Aliphatic, aromatic, and heteroaromatic aldehydes were readily converted to corresponding nitriles in a one-pot reaction sequence with hydroxylamine and sulfuryl fluoride. The reaction proceeds at room temperature, does not require metal catalysts and special precautions, and produces nitriles in excellent yields. It is compatible with a variety of functional groups, can be performed in aqueous and organic solvents, and is readily scalable to multigram quantities. Mild conditions and high selectivity of the reaction enabled the construction of polyfunctional probes containing nitrile, alkyne, azide, and fluorosulfate groups for further orthogonal derivatization.
- Gurjar, Jitendra,Bater, Jorick,Fokin, Valery V.
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supporting information
p. 1906 - 1909
(2019/01/24)
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- Cascade Process for Direct Transformation of Aldehydes (RCHO) to Nitriles (RCN) Using Inorganic Reagents NH2OH/Na2CO3/SO2F2 in DMSO
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A simple, mild, and practical process for direct conversion of aldehydes to nitriles was developed feathering a wide substrate scope and great functional group tolerability (52 examples, over 90% yield in most cases) using inorganic reagents (NH2OH/Na2CO3/SO2F2) in DMSO. This method allows for transformations of readily available, inexpensive, and abundant aldehydes to highly valuable nitriles in a pot, atom, and step-economical manner without transition metals. This protocol will serve as a robust tool for the installation of cyano-moieties to complicated molecules.
- Fang, Wan-Yin,Qin, Hua-Li
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p. 5803 - 5812
(2019/05/14)
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- A Transition-Metal-Free One-Pot Cascade Process for Transformation of Primary Alcohols (RCH2OH) to Nitriles (RCN) Mediated by SO2F2
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A new transition-metal-free one-pot cascade process for the direct conversion of alcohols to nitriles was developed without introducing an “additional carbon atom”. This protocol allows transformations of readily available, inexpensive, and abundant alcohols to highly valuable nitriles.
- Jiang, Ying,Sun, Bing,Fang, Wan-Yin,Qin, Hua-Li
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p. 3190 - 3194
(2019/05/21)
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- SO 2 F 2 -Promoted Dehydration of Aldoximes: A Rapid and Simple Access to Nitriles
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A rapid, simple and mild process for the dehydration of aldoximes to give the corresponding nitriles, which utilizes SO 2 F 2 as an efficient reagent, has been developed. A variety of (hetero)arene, alkene, alkyne and aliphatic aldoximes proceeded with high efficiency to afford nitriles in excellent to quantitative yields with great functional group compatibilities in acetonitrile under ambient conditions. Furthermore, an eco-friendly synthetic protocol to access nitriles from aldehydes with ortho -, meta - and para -nitrile groups was also described in aqueous methanol by using inorganic base Na 2 CO 3, and a one-pot synthetic strategy to generate nitriles from aldehydes was proved to be feasible.
- Ding, Chengrong,Mei, Guangyao,Wang, Haibo,Zhang, Guofu,Zhao, Yiyong
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p. 1484 - 1488
(2019/07/15)
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- Aldehydes as potential acylating reagents for oxidative esterification by inorganic ligand-supported iron catalysis
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The oxidative esterification of various aldehydes with alcohols could be achieved by a heterogeneous iron(iii) catalyst supported on a ring-like POM inorganic ligand under mild conditions, affording the corresponding esters, including several drug molecules and natural products, in high yields. ESI-MS and control experiments demonstrated that POM-FeV(O) was the active catalytic species and the plausible mechanism was presented. More importantly, the 6th run of the iron catalyst recycles shows only a slight decrease in the yield.
- Yu, Han,Wang, Jingjing,Wu, Zhikang,Zhao, Qixin,Dan, Demin,Han, Sheng,Tang, Jiangjiang,Wei, Yongge
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supporting information
p. 4550 - 4554
(2019/08/21)
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- Woody species: A new bio-based material for dual Ca/Mg catalysis with remarkable Lewis acidity properties
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Advances in green catalysis have promoted the development of ecocatalysis encountered in most of the main transformations of organic chemistry. Taking advantage of the remarkable capacity of certain plants to hyperaccumulate transition metals into shoots or roots, we have addressed the direct use of metals derived from contaminated plant wastes as supported Lewis acid catalysts, coupling agents, oxidative and reducing catalysts in green chemistry. This approach constituted the first example of chemical catalyst based on phytotechnologies. Herein, we show that the concept can be extended to common and abundant plant species that are surprisingly appropriated for chemical catalysis. We present that willow, birch, plane and linden trees can be used to produce bio-based and original Lewis acid catalysts. The catalytic potential of these species will be illustrated through two representative transformations, acetalisation and oxidative esterification. Thanks to their original polymetallic composition, ecocatalysts provided better results compared to classical metal chlorides such as MgCl2, CaCl2 or ZnCl2. This illustrates the interest of the ecocatalysis and is incorporated within the green and sustainable chemistry concept.
- Deyris, Pierre-Alexandre,Adler, Pauline,Petit, Eddy,Legrand, Yves-Marie,Grison, Claude
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p. 3133 - 3142
(2019/06/18)
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- Electrocarboxylation of halobenzonitriles: An environmentally friendly synthesis of phthalate derivatives
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This manuscript presents an efficient approach for producing high valuable compounds using CO2 as building block. The methodology employed is based on electrochemical techniques, which allow performing eco-friendly chemistry solutions and maintaining the aim of offering a potential long-term strategy for reducing the CO2 emissions in the atmosphere, while obtaining useful compounds, such as aromatic acids and phthalate derivatives. This work describes the electrochemical reduction behavior of 4-halobenzonitrile compounds using Glassy Carbon and Silver as cathodes under inert and carbon dioxide atmosphere. Controlled potential electrolysis of 4-halobenzonitriles under CO2 allows obtaining, in very good yields, the corresponding mono- and di-carboxylated organic compounds in CO2-saturated solutions of dimethylformamide containing 0.1 M of tetrabutylammonium tetrafluoroborate. Electro-catalytic effects are seen when Ag is used a cathode, which give very high yields, especially as regards di-carboxylated products. The methodology offers a new “green” route for the synthesis of different phthalate derivatives, which can be potentially used for making plastic polymers in a more environmentally friendly way.
- Reche, Irene,Mena, Silvia,Gallardo, Iluminada,Guirado, Gonzalo
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- Nickel-Catalyzed Decarbonylative Cyanation of Acyl Chlorides
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Ni-catalyzed decarbonylative cyanation of acyl chlorides with trimethylsilyl cyanide has been achieved. This transformation is applicable to the synthesis of an array of nitrile compounds bearing a wide range of functional groups under neutral conditions. The step-by-step experimental studies revealed that the reaction sequences of the present catalytic reaction are oxidative addition, transmetalation, decarbonylation, and reductive elimination.
- Wang, Zhenhua,Wang, Xiu,Ura, Yasuyuki,Nishihara, Yasushi
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supporting information
p. 6779 - 6784
(2019/08/26)
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- Method for preparing nitrile
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The invention provides a method for preparing nitrile. Aldoxime carboxylic ester is used as a reactant to prepare a nitrile compound. The aldoxime carboxylic ester can be completely converted into corresponding nitrile under common catalysis of ferric salt and phenol within a few minutes. The method for preparing the nitrile has the advantages of gentle reaction conditions, simple and easy-to-getused reagents, cheap and environment-friendly catalyst, wide substrate application range, simple operation, rapid reaction and the like.
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Paragraph 0015
(2019/06/13)
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- Iron and Phenol Co-Catalysis for Rapid Synthesis of Nitriles under Mild Conditions
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A mild, scalable, high yielding, and rapid route to access diverse nitriles from aldehyde oxime esters enabled by iron(III) and phenol co-catalysis has been developed. The reaction was performed at room temperature to give nitriles in excellent yield within minutes. Mechanistic studies show that the reaction may proceed through a radical process in which benzoyl aldehyde oxime is not only a substrate, but also an ancillary ligand to support iron salt in the promotion of the transformation.
- Meng, Hong,Gao, Sen,Luo, Meiming,Zeng, Xiaoming
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p. 4617 - 4623
(2019/07/15)
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- Triphenylbismuth Dichloride-Mediated Conversion of Thioamides to Nitriles
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Thioamides were efficiently converted to nitriles using the pentavalent triphenylbismuth dichloride in combination with triethylamine. The reaction involved the dehydrosulfurization of primary thioamides to afford substituted aromatic or aliphatic nitriles in good to excellent yields. The process was also successfully extended to the synthesis of cyanamides starting from the corresponding thioureas and of thiocyanates from dithiocarbamates.
- Gopi, Elumalai,Gravel, Edmond,Doris, Eric
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supporting information
p. 4043 - 4045
(2019/06/24)
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- Palladium-Catalyzed Late-Stage Direct Arene Cyanation
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Methods for direct benzonitrile synthesis are sparse, despite the versatility of cyano groups in organic synthesis and the importance of benzonitriles for the dye, agrochemical, and pharmaceutical industries. We report the first general late-stage aryl C–H cyanation with broad substrate scope and functional-group tolerance. The reaction is enabled by a dual-ligand combination of quinoxaline and an amino acid-derived ligand. The method is applicable to direct cyanation of several marketed small-molecule drugs, common pharmacophores, and organic dyes. Benzonitriles are some of the most versatile building blocks for organic synthesis, in particular in the pharmaceutical industry, but general methods to make them by direct C–H functionalization are unknown. In this issue of Chem, Ritter and coworkers describe a late-stage aryl C–H cyanation with broad substrate scope and functional-group tolerance, enabled by a palladium-dual-ligand catalyst system. The reaction may serve for the late-stage modification of drug candidates. Aryl nitriles constitute an important class of organic compounds that are widely found in natural products, pharmaceuticals, agricultural chemicals, dyes, and materials. Moreover, nitriles are versatile building blocks to access numerous other important molecular structure groups. However, no general method for direct aromatic C–H cyanation is known. All approaches to date require either an appropriate directing group or reactive electron-rich substrates, such as indoles, which limit their synthetic applications. Here we describe an undirected, palladium-catalyzed late-stage aryl C–H cyanation reaction for the synthesis of complex aryl nitriles that would otherwise be more challenging to produce. The wide substrate scope and good functional-group tolerance of this reaction provide direct and quick access to structural diversity for pharmaceutical and agrochemical development.
- Zhao, Da,Xu, Peng,Ritter, Tobias
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supporting information
p. 97 - 107
(2019/01/21)
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