69010-90-8Relevant articles and documents
Copper-Catalyzed Ullmann-Type Coupling and Decarboxylation Cascade of Arylhalides with Malonates to Access α-Aryl Esters
Cheng, Fei,Chen, Tao,Huang, Yin-Qiu,Li, Jia-Wei,Zhou, Chen,Xiao, Xiao,Chen, Fen-Er
, p. 115 - 120 (2022/01/04)
We have developed a high-efficiency and practical Cu-catalyzed cross-coupling to directly construct versatile α-aryl-esters by utilizing readily available aryl bromides (or chlorides) and malonates. These gram-scale approaches occur with turnovers of up to 1560 and are smoothly conducted by the usage of a low catalyst loading, a new available ligand, and a green solvent. A variety of functional groups are tolerated, and the application occurs with α-aryl-esters to access nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) on the gram scale.
Synthesis of oxalamides by acceptorless dehydrogenative coupling of ethylene glycol and amines and the reverse hydrogenation catalyzed by ruthenium
Ben-David, Yehoshoa,Diskin-Posner, Yael,Milstein, David,Zhou, Quan-Quan,Zou, You-Quan
, p. 7188 - 7193 (2020/07/23)
A sustainable, new synthesis of oxalamides, by acceptorless dehydrogenative coupling of ethylene glycol with amines, generating H2, homogeneously catalyzed by a ruthenium pincer complex, is presented. The reverse hydrogenation reaction is also accomplished using the same catalyst. A plausible reaction mechanism is proposed based on stoichiometric reactions, NMR studies, X-ray crystallography as well as observation of plausible intermediates.
Copper(I) Oxide/N,N′-Bis[(2-furyl)methyl]oxalamide-Catalyzed Coupling of (Hetero)aryl Halides and Nitrogen Heterocycles at Low Catalytic Loading
Pawar, Govind Goroba,Wu, Haibo,De, Subhadip,Ma, Dawei
supporting information, p. 1631 - 1636 (2017/05/22)
An easily prepared oxalic diamide is a powerful ligand for the copper-catalyzed coupling of aryl halides with nitrogen heterocycles. Only 1–2 mol% each of copper(I) oxide and N,N′-bis[(2-furyl)methyl]oxalamide (BFMO) are needed to form N-arylation products under mild conditions. More than 10 different types of nitrogen heterocycles are compatible with these conditions, thereby giving the corresponding N-arylation products. (Figure presented.).