1381888-25-0Relevant articles and documents
Copper-catalyzed hydrodefluorination of fluoroarenes by copper hydride intermediates
Lv, Hongbin,Cai, Yuan-Bo,Zhang, Jun-Long
, p. 3203 - 3207 (2013)
Breaking bad: Efficient copper-catalyzed C-F bond activation has been achieved by replacing fluorine with hydrogen. A copper hydride is proposed as the active intermediate, which proceeds through a nucleophilic attack on the fluorocarbon, as determined by experimental and theoretical results (see structure; C gray, H white, Cu light red, F light blue; distances in ?).
π-π Interaction assisted hydrodefluorination of perfluoroarenes by gold hydride: A case of synergistic effect on C-F bond activation
Lv, Hongbin,Zhan, Jin-Hui,Cai, Yuan-Bo,Yu, Yi,Wang, Bingwu,Zhang, Jun-Long
, p. 16216 - 16227,12 (2012)
Synergistic effect is prevalent in natural metalloenzymes in activating small molecules, and the success has inspired the development of artificial catalysts capable of unprecedented organic transformations. In this work, we found that the attractive π-π interaction between organic additives (as electron-donors) and the perfluorinated arenes (as electron acceptors) is effective in gold hydride catalyzed activation of C-F bonds, specifically hydrodefluorination (HDF) of perfluoroarenes catalyzed by the Sadighi's gold hydrides [(NHC)AuH] (NHC = N-heterocyclic carbene). Although a weak interaction between [(NHC)AuH] and perfluoroarenes was observed from 1H NMR and UV-vis spectroscopies, low reactivity of [(NHC)AuH] toward HDF was found. In contrast, in the presence of p-N,N-dimethylaminopyridine (DMAP), the HDF of perfluoroarenes with silanes can be efficiently catalyzed by [(NHC)AuH], resulting in mainly the para-hydrodefluorinated products with up to 90% yield and 9 turnovers. The yield of the reaction increases with the more electron-withdrawing groups and degree of fluorination on the arenes, and the HDF reaction also tolerates different function groups (such as formyl, alkynyl, ketone, ester, and carboxylate groups), without reduction or hydrogenation of these function groups. To reveal the role of DMAP in the reactions, the possible π-π interaction between DMAP and perfluoroarenes was suggested by UV-vis spectral titrations, 1H NMR spectroscopic studies, and DFT calculations. Moreover, 1H and 19F-NMR studies show that this π-π interaction promotes hydrogen transfer from [(NHC)AuH] to pyridyl N atom, resulting in C-F bond cleavage. The interpretation of π-π interaction assisted C-F activation is supported by the reduced activation barriers in the presence of DMAP (31.6 kcal/mol) than that in the absence of DMAP (40.8 kcal/mol) for this reaction. An analysis of the charge distribution and transition state geometries indicate that this HDF process is controlled by the π-π interaction between DMAP and perfluoroarenes, accompanied with the changes of partial atomic charges.
Catalytic C-F bond activation of perfluoroarenes by tricoordinated gold(I) complexes
Zhan, Jin-Hui,Lv, Hongbin,Yu, Yi,Zhang, Jun-Long
experimental part, p. 1529 - 1541 (2012/07/14)
We report the first example of gold catalyzing C-F bond activation for perfluoroarenes in the presence of silanes. Tricoordinated gold(I) complexes supported by Xantphos-type ligands, such as Xantphos and tBuXantphos ligands, exhibit efficacy in the hydrodefluorination (HDF) of various types of perfluoroarenes. For [tBuXantphosAu(AuCl2)], the highest turnover number is up to 1000 in the HDF of pentafluoronitrobenzene with diphenylsilane. An examination of functional group tolerance shows the orthogonality of this gold(I) catalytic protocol to ketone, ester, carboxylate, alkynyl, alkenyl and amide groups, suggesting its potential application in chemoselective C-F activations. Mechanistic studies show that the equilibrium between tetracoordinated [L2Au]+ and [LAu]+ is important for the reactivity of gold catalysts, which is dependent on the sterically bulky group of Xantphos-type ligands. Furthermore, computational studies for the possible reaction pathways suggest that direct oxidative addition of C-F bonds by gold(I) cation might be the key step during these catalytic reactions. Copyright