25079-96-3Relevant articles and documents
Decarboxylative Ritter-Type Amination by Cooperative Iodine (I/III)─Boron Lewis Acid Catalysis
Narobe, Rok,Murugesan, Kathiravan,Schmid, Simon,K?nig, Burkhard
, p. 809 - 817 (2022/01/15)
Recent years have witnessed important progress in synthetic strategies exploiting the reactivity of carbocations via photochemical or electrochemical methods. Yet, most of the developed methods are limited in their scope to certain stabilized positions in molecules. Herein, we report a metal-free system based on the iodine (I/III) catalytic manifold, which gives access to carbenium ion intermediates also on electronically disfavored benzylic positions. The unusually high reactivity of the system stems from a complexation of iodine (III) intermediates with BF3. The synthetic utility of our decarboxylative Ritter-type amination protocol has been demonstrated by the functionalization of benzylic as well as aliphatic carboxylic acids, including late-stage modification of different pharmaceutical molecules. Notably, the amination of ketoprofen was performed on a gram scale. Detailed mechanistic investigations by kinetic analysis and control experiments suggest two mechanistic pathways.
Acetonitrile and benzonitrile as versatile amino sources in copper-catalyzed mild electrochemical C-H amidation reactions
Budnikova, Yulia,Kononov, Alexander,Rizvanov, Ildar,Strekalova, Sofia
, p. 37540 - 37543 (2021/12/07)
A mild, efficient electrochemical approach to the site-selective direct C-H amidation of benzene and its derivatives with acetonitrile and benzonitrile has been developed. It has been shown that joint electrochemical oxidation of various arenes in the presence of a copper salt as a catalyst and nitriles leads to the formation of N-phenylacetamide from benzene and N-benzylacetamides from benzyl derivatives (up to 78% yield). A favorable feature of the process is mild conditions (room temperature, ambient pressure, no strong oxidants) that meet the criteria of green chemistry.
Reductive Amidation without an External Hydrogen Source Using Rhodium on Carbon Matrix as a Catalyst
Tsygankov, Alexey A.,Makarova, Maria,Afanasyev, Oleg I.,Kashin, Alexey S.,Naumkin, Alexander V.,Loginov, Dmitry A.,Chusov, Denis
, p. 112 - 117 (2019/11/28)
An efficient method for preparation of secondary amides from primary amides and aldehydes using rhodium on carbon matrix as catalyst was developed. The method does not require any external hydrogen source and carbon monoxide is used as a reducing agent. The most active rhodium catalysts were characterized by BET, TEM and XPS techniques. Unexpectedly, it was found that heterogeneous rhodium on carbon matrix works as precatalyst for homogenous active species due to leaching of rhodium to the solution. Various secondary amides were synthesized and checked for antifungal activity. 4-Methoxy-N-(4-methoxybenzyl)benzamide demonstrated promising activity against Rhizoctonia Solani.