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Phenol-Directed C-H Functionalization Zheng Huang, and Jean-Philip Lumb ACS Catal., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.8b04098 • Publication Date (Web): 05 Dec 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on December 5, 2018
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ACS Catalysis
Phenol-Directed C-H Functionalization Zheng Huang, Jean-Philip Lumb*
Department of Chemistry, McGill University, 801 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, QC H3A 0B8, Canada
Abstract: Phenols are important starting materials, intermediates and functional elements of a very broad range of chemicals and materials. They are large volume products of benzene oxidation, and are increasingly available from biomass. Investment into methodologies that improve the efficiency of their use can have both immediate and future impact on chemical upgrading. This review summarizes recent phenol-directed C-H functionalization reactions, which provide efficient increases in molecular complexity. Catalytic methodologies play an increasingly important role in addressing long-standing challenges of chemo- and regioselectivity, setting the stage for increased use of phenols
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in fine-chemical synthesis. We discuss these advances, while underscoring persistent challenges, with the goal of motivating increased interest in this versatile functional group.
KEYWORDS: Phenol, C-H Functionalization, Transition-Metal Catalysis, Oxidation, Selectivity
TOC Graphic:
OH
OH
OH
C2
C3
OH
H H
C-H Functionalization
H
C4
Methods: OH
H
EArS 1,3-Migration C-H Insertion Dearomatization
OH
OH
external readily available building blocks
multi-site
high value products
1. General Introduction
1.1. Occurrence, Synthesis and Classical Functionalization of Phenols
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ACS Catalysis
Phenols are a highly conserved functional group in natural and synthetic chemistry.1-5 Tyrosine is an essential amino acid that plays important roles in the primary function and secondary structure of enzymes, including molecular recognition, electron transfer and catalysis (Figure 1A).6-8 It is also a precursor to co-factors produced by posttranslational oxidation.9-14
Natural products derived from or containing phenols are numerous, and
include hormones, antibiotics, vitamins and neurotransmitters (Figure 1B).1 Ten percent of the top 200 selling pharmaceuticals contain a phenol, and numerous others employ phenols as synthetic intermediates (Figure 1C).15-18 Phenols are also key components of or precursors to materials, including the biopolymers melanin19-21 and lignin,22 as well as synthetic phenol-formaldehyde resins23 and polyphenylene oxides (PPOs)24 (Figure 1D). They are a functional group whose study bridges small and macromolecular chemistry, as well as one- and two-electron reactivity.
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a) Tyrosine and its Post-Translational Derivatives OH
O
Tyr
Tyr
Tyr OH OH
Post Translational Modification
H 2N
O
CO2H tyrosine amino acid
O NHis Cu NHis O
OH2 OH2 NHis Cu His N NHis
Cys H S H R
Copper Amine Oxidase amine dehydrogenation
Galactose Oxidase alcohol dehydrogenation
b) Representative Naturally Occuring Phenols I
H
O
H
I
H
OH
HO
I
Me
O Cl
H
O H
Cl
O O
HO
OH
H 2N
O CO2H
O O
levothyroxine thyroid hormone estradiol estrogen hormone
HO
I
HO
OH
OH
NH2
Me
Me OH
O
OH OH
H N
H N HN
O
CO2H
O
O
H N
N H H2NOC
NHMe
N H
O
iPr
HO NH2 O
HO
OH
OH
vancomycin antibiotic
dopamine neurotransmitter
-tocopherol essential vitamin
OH
c) Representative Phenol-Containing Pharmaceuticals
OH OH
H N
O HO Me
HO O
HN
N
OMe
formoterol asthma controller
OH
R
MeO
HN OH
HO
Me
HO
MeO
OH
OH
representative substructure of lignin
Me
Me
O Me
HN OH
O OH
OH O
N
morphine analgesic
ezetimibe cardiovascular drug
d) Phenol Containing and Phenol Derived Materials
HO
Me
O
F
HO
F
R
polyphenylene oxide (PPO)
R = H or CO2Me representative structure of melanin
Figure 1. Occurrence of Phenols in Biology, Pharmacy and Materials Science.
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ACS Catalysis
Methodologies that selectively functionalize phenols can dramatically alter molecular form and function. Phenols are more electron rich and less aromatic than benzene [Eox phenol = 2.10 V (CH3CN vs Fc/Fc+);25-26 Eox benzene = 2.48 V (CH3CN vs SCN)],27 allowing reactions that proceed by dearomatization to occur at lower activation energies. The physical properties of phenols, including their redox-potential, their acidity and their OH bond-dissociation energies, are dramatically impacted by substituents
(Figure 2),
offering a broad range of reactivity, but one that can limit the scope of methodologies. Phenols have a strong electronic bias for electrophilic aromatic substitution (EArS) at their
ortho- and para-positions;2, 28 however, controlling selectivity between these two positions can be difficult. A steric bias exists for substitution in the para-position, while a statistical preference exists for substitution in the ortho-position. The capability of H-bonding and metal-coordination offers an additional avenue for biasing reactivity to the ortho-position. Phenolates are also nucleophilic on oxygen and participate in a range of C-O bond forming reactions by substitution2 (e.g. Williamson ether synthesis, -allyl chemistry) or cross-coupling reactions29-31 (e.g. Cham-Lam, Buchwald-Hartwig and Ullman Coupling). Phenols are also readily converted into pseudo-halides, and are thus attractive
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electrophiles for traditional cross-coupling platforms.32 They are thus strong directing groups for C-H functionalization, as well as versatile functional handles, from which a broad range of derivatives are readily prepared.
OH
OH
NO2
NO2
OH
OH
O2N
pKa (DMSO)
5.1
NMe2
10.8
18.0
19.8
Eox
2.74 V
2.1 V
0.84 V
BDE
94.7 kcal/mol
90 kcal/mol
80.3 kcal/mol
increasing electron density | decreasing oxidation potential
increasing acidity
Figure 2. Physical Properties of Phenols
Most large-volume and relatively simple phenols are downstream of the Hock Process, which converts benzene and isoprene into phenol and acetone by aerobic oxidation (Figure 3A).33 Production exceeds 106 tons per year, representing a remarkable production velocity of no less than 287 kg per second. A range of substituted derivatives are then readily prepared by Friedel-Crafts reactions, including acid promoted substitution
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ACS Catalysis
of alcohols, substitution of alkyl chlorides, acid promoted addition to olefins or carbonyls, and halogenation. Well-known and highly dispersed examples include butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT) and bisphenol A (BPA).28 More structurally diverse phenols are available from natural resources, and aromatic fractions of depolymerized lignin are increasingly popular targets of integrated bio-refineries (Figure 3B).34-35 Commercially relevant examples include guaiacol and vanillin, although production from benzene is still favored.
Phenols required for fine chemical synthesis can be prepared by a number of
methods, with commonly practiced examples including nucleophilic aromatic substitution or transition metal catalyzed cross coupling (Figure 3C).16-18, 36-37 While common place, many of these conditions require elevated temperatures and strong base, limiting their utility in complex molecule settings. In this context, recent work of Fier and Maloney, developing hydroxide surrogates, is noteworthy, since it has enabled the synthesis of phenols under much milder conditions.16-18 One example is provided in Scheme 1a, in which Ullmann-type hydroxylation of a base-sensitive substrate is made possible by using oxime as a hydroxide equivalent in conjunction with an elegantly optimized Cu-catalyst.17 The strength of the ortho / para electronic bias makes the synthesis of meta-substituted
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phenols more difficult, but recent strategies beginning from non-aromatic precursors have alleviated some of these limitations and provide an interesting blueprint for future development (Figure 3D).38-42 Recent work of Stahl is illustrated in Scheme 1B, in which oxidative coupling of cyclohexanone and an arylboronic acid affords the corresponding
meta-functionalized phenol following aerobic dehydrogenation (Scheme 1b).40 Finally, the synthesis of phenols via direct C-H oxygenation has seen recent development. This is a challenging transformation, because the product of oxygenation is typically more reactive than the starting material. Nevertheless, several conditions have been developed to oxygenate C-H bonds to protected forms of phenols possessing electron withdrawing groups on oxygen. Free phenols can then liberated in a subsequent step (Figure 3E).4345
Recent work of Ritter is illustrated in Scheme 1C, whose of use of bis(methanesulfonyl)
peroxide enables the synthesis of a broad range of phenols following basic deprotection, including a number of heterocyclic derivatives.44
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ACS Catalysis
OH
a) Industrial Synthesis of Phenol | Hock Process H
OH
H+
O2
Me common derivatization via SEAr
HO
OH cresols
bisphenol A
C-H oxidation
benzene petrochemical
cumene
phenol
7 106 tonnes produced in 2003
OH t
OH
OH
t
Bu
Bu
Cl
Me
Cl
BHT
chlorophenols
b) Production of Phenols from Biomass OH
OH
OH
OMe
MeO
OMe
depolymerization
OMe
lignin CHO
O guaiacol
vanillin
d) From Non-aromatic Compounds
c) Hydrolysis of Arylhalides X
O OH
O
OH SNAr or R1
R2
Pd (cat.)
Cs2CO3 R1
e) C-H oxygenation
F
O
R2
R1
R2
O O
EWG
OH
[O] C-H Oxygenation
CO2R
O2
transition-metal catalyzed hydrolysis
H
syringaldehyde
[O] =
cat. Pd(OAc) HNO3, HOAc O2
deprotection
O O
MsO
OMs
O
Figure 3. Standard Methods for the Production of Phenols
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a) Hydroxylation of aryl halide on a complex molecule setting CO2Me N
O
CO2Me CuI (5 mol%)
Boc Ph
N
(2.0 equiv)
Br
Me
N N
Me
b) Synthesis of meta-functionalized phenol
Boc
HO
O
H N
N H O
N
O
OH
PMB 94% yield
O (5 mol%)
Cs2CO3 (2.5 equiv) DMSO (0.2 M) 80 oC, 18 h
O2 (1 atm) [Pd(CH3CN)4](BF4)2 (5 mol%)
O
B(OH)2
N Me
+
OH
N
(5 mol%)
Me
O
NH2
c) Late-stage C-H Oxygenation H N
O
1. NMP, 50 oC, 24 h 2. DMSO, 80 oC, 36 h 1-pot process, 72% yield O
Me
O S
O
O
CF3
S
O
O
Cl
NH2
anthraquinone-2-sulfonate (10 mol%)
O
HFIP, 23 oC 36%
OMs
Me O Cl
OH
H N
O O CF3
LDA THF, - 78 oC
efavirenz
80%
Cl
H N
O O CF3
8-OH-efavirenz
Scheme 1. Representative remarkable examples for Recent Advancements
1.2. Organization of Review
Given their availability, phenols are important starting materials for methodology development. Their functionalization affects many different points of the chemical value chain, and existing transformations that are either non-regioselective or super
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ACS Catalysis
stoichiometric in promoter would be improved by selective, catalytic alternatives. Obtaining high selectivity between ortho and para positions remains challenging, as is the direct preparation of meta substituted phenols by directed C-H functionalization. These opportunities have motivated improvements to the C-H functionalization toolbox, which we survey in this review. We have attempted to catalogue successful examples of direct C-H functionalization reactions that conserve aromaticity, with an emphasis placed on recent examples from the literature. We have limited the number of examples in which products of C-H functionalization are non-aromatic, since the area of oxidative phenolic dearomatization has been surveyed by excellent reviews of Porco46 and Quideau.3,
47
Likewise, more recent, and very elegant bio-catalytic platforms for phenolic dearomatization are not covered, despite their clear impact on the field.48-49 More recently, the isohypsic, or redox neutral, dearomatization of phenols has gained in popularity,50-57 but these examples also go beyond the scope of this work. Recent examples of aryl-ether synthesis,58 either by nucleophilic substitution or cross-coupling, are also not covered. The breadth of phenol-directed C-H functionalization will invariably lead to omissions.
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Nevertheless, we hope to have suitably sampled the current literature to provide a meaningful overview of the field that will motivate continued development.
We have organized this review by the position of functionalization (Scheme 2), and treat (1) ortho-, (2) meta-, and (3) para-positions of phenol successively, followed by (4) external functionalization. Phenol-directed C-H functionalization reactions can take a number of different mechanistic forms. We have loosely defined these classes as (1) Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution (EArS), (2) Rearrangement of Aryl Ethers, (3) Transition-Metal Mediated Cross-Coupling and (4) 1- or 2-Electron Oxidation. These categories are not mutually exclusive, and a given transformation may exhibit mechanistic features of more than one class. Nevertheless, this categorization provides a convenient means of organizing transformations within each regiochemical category.
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ACS Catalysis
a) Classification of Phenol-Directed C-H Functionalization by Position OH
OH
C2
C3
OH
OH H C-H functionalization
H H
C4
OH
OH
external
multi-site
OH
H b) Methods and Strategies i) Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution OH
OH
O
ii) 1,3-Migration
H
TM H
O TM
iv) Oxidative Functionalization
OH
O
iii) C-H Insertion
O
O /
/
Scheme 2. Classification of Phenol-Directed C-H Functionalization
2. C2-Functionalization
2.1. Methods based on Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution (EArS)
Historically, C-H functionalization of phenols employing mechanisms of EArS exhibit poor selectivity between ortho- and para-positions in the absence of blocking substituents
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(Figure 4).2 However, recent catalyst development has achieved good to excellent C2selectivity when both C2 and C4 positions are unsubstituted. While detailed mechanistic studies of these catalyst systems are still required, a working model, accounting for their increased levels of ortho-selectivity through bi-functional catalysis, is illustrated in Figure 4. In this scenario, a Lewis-basic functionality on the catalyst activates the phenol towards EArS through hydrogen-bonding, while an electrostatic interaction or a discrete covalent bond positions the electrophile in close proximity of the ortho-position. We believe that this working model provides a convenient means of rationalizing regioselectivity for many of the examples included below in Section 2.
Figure 4. General Model for the Catalytic ortho-Selective Functionalization H-bonding accelerates EArS
OH E E
statistically favored
bifunctional catalyst control
O
H
E electrostactic interaction or covalent bonding
sterically and electronically favored
traditional EArS suffers from poor regioselectivity
B
favors ortho-functionalization
Perhaps the most well established reaction in this area is the catalyst-controlled
ortho-halogenation reaction (Scheme 3), which affords valuable products that can be further functionalized by traditional cross coupling. In 1993, Fujisaki et al. discovered that
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ACS Catalysis
simple secondary amines dramatically increased ortho-selectivity for the bromination of 2-substituted phenols with NBS.59 The selectivity for the generation of 6-bromo-2-cresol improved from ~ 4:1 to > 200:1 in the presence of only 10 mol% of diisopropylamine. In 1995, Sheldon et al. observed a similar amine effect for the ortho-chlorination of phenol with SO2Cl2,60 in which the addition of diisobutylamine was crucial to maintain good selectivity for the generation of 2-chlorophenol. These conditions were further developed by Snider for the synthesis of maldoxin,61 where 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine was found to be a better amine catalyst, albeit with limited substrate scope, with general ortho : para selectivity of ~ 4:1. In 2016, Gustafson et al. developed a thiourea-catalyzed orthochlorination of phenol using N-chlorosuccinimide as the terminal chlorine source, and included 11 examples with overall > 10:1 ortho : para selectivity.62 The authors also demonstrated catalyst-controlled para-selectivity with an alternative thiourea catalyst. More recently, Yeung et al. reported a simple ammonium salt-catalyzed ortho-selective halogenation of phenol.63 In the presence of catalytic amounts of diisopropylammonium chloride, phenols with different substituents can be selectively ortho-chlorinated with 1,3dichloro-5,5-dimethylhydantoin (DCDMH). 3-Substituted phenols possessing a non-
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Lewis basic group (e.g. F); are selective for C6, whereas substituents capable of engaging in H-bonding (e.g. aldehyde or boronic ester) promote chlorination at C2. In addition,
ortho-selenylation could also be achieved with similar ammonium catalysts using a (N(phenylseleno)phthalimide (NPSP) as the electrophilic source of selenium.
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ACS Catalysis
OH
OH H
"
X
R
OH X
"
or
R
R
H ortho-
X para-
major
minor
Fujisaki 1993 OH
OH
NBS (1 equiv)
Me
OH
Me
Br
Me
CH2Cl2, rt, 1h Br without amine: with 10 mol% NHiPr2: Sheldon 1995
75.4
21.1
96.5
0.4
Snider 2014 OH
O
N H
Cl
(7.9 mol%) + SO2Cl2 (1.25 equiv)
OH Cl
N H (1 - 10 mol%) +
79% 66:1 (o:p)
53% 3.7:1 (o:p)
SO2Cl2
1 example
7 examples
F 3C
CF3 OH
OH Ph S
NH NH
CF3
F
S
75% 10:1 (o:p)
N H
N H
73% 16:1 (o:p)
CF3 Gustafson 2016
(10 mol%) +
11 examples
NCS OH
Cl
o' N H
Cl
Cl
OH o Cl
o'
CHO
H
o'
BPin
93% 20:1:0 (o:o':p)
(0.01 - 5 mol%)
OH o Cl F 80% >50:1:0 (o:o':p) OH
64% 15:1:0 (o:o':p) OH
+ I
DCDMH
MeO
Yeung 2018
79%
75% > 50:1 (o:p) O
Cl
SePh
Cl
75 examples
o Cl
N
N
with NPSP O
Cl
O DCDMH
N
SePh
O NPSP
Scheme 3. Catalyst-Controlled ortho-Halogenation
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A remarkable example, demonstrating the potential for catalyst control to effect selective phenol-directed C-H functionalization in a complex molecule setting, was recently reported by Miller’s group, in which site-selective bromination of vancomycin with
N-bromophthalimide was mediated by a small-peptide catalyst (Scheme 4). Using BocAsn(Me2)-DAla-DAla-OH, the team was able to generate 7d-Br as the major product of bromination, and proposed a multi-site hydrogen-bonding network between the substrate and the peptide to account for regiocontrol. In contrast, 7f-Br was formed as the major product of bromination when using excess guanidine as the mediator, underscoring the important role of molecular recognition.
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ACS Catalysis
Me
OH
OH
NH2
Me HO O
H
O
O H
Cl
Me
O
O HN
H
O
H N O
N H H2NOC
O
O H
Cl
O
Cl O
O OH
N H CO2H
O
Cl
HO O
HO
O
O
OH
OH
NH2
Me HO
HO
HO O
H N O
NHMe
N H
OH O
catalyst O
N H CO2H
O iPr
HN N
Br
O
H N O
N H
O
H N
H2NOC
NHMe
N H
O
iPr
Rf HO
O
OH OH
HO
vancomycin
Rd = H, Rf = Br, 7f-Br Rd = Br, Rf = H, 7d-Br Rd = Br, Rf = Br, 7d,f-Br
OH OH Rd
catalyst
conv.%
7f-Br
Boc-Asn(Me2)-DAla-DAla-OH (1 equiv.)
98
1.0
:
7d-Br 14.6
:
7d,f-Br 2.8
guanidine (18 equiv.)
85
12.7
:
1.0
:
10.8
Scheme 4. Catalyst-controlled Site-selective Bromination on Vancomycin
With the development of chiral catalysts, asymmetric EArS reactions of 2-naphthols have recently emerged. One of the most developed systems is the atropo-selective synthesis of biaryl bonds by conjugate addition to para-quinones (Scheme 5).64-66 This process has been catalyzed by chiral Brønsted-acids, chiral amines, as well as chiral cobalt complexes. These methods provide an alternative approach to unsymmetrical BINOLs, which are more commonly prepared by oxidative coupling (see Section 4).
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R2
O
R2
HO O
chiral catalyst
OH
OH
OH atropo-selective biaryl synthesis
R1
i i
Pr i
O
i
HO
HO OH
EtO2C
Pr
O i
Pr
R1
OH
Br MeO
OH
O
OH
P OH
Pr
88% yield 99% e.e.
72% yield 96% e.e.
Pr i
(5 mol%) CH2Cl2, - 78 oC
Pr
21 examples Liu & Tan 2015
H
HO
Br
HO
Br
OH
Cl
HO N
OH
OH
MeO
OH Br
N 82% yield 60% e.e.
(30 mol%) THF, 4 oC - rt
70% yield 80% e.e.
18 examples
Salvio & Bella 2016 HO
O i
Pr
NH i
N
N
O
O
i
Pr
Pr
(10 mol%)
Scheme 5.
MeO2C O HN
i
OMe OH OH
Pr MeO 84% yield 85% e.e.
Co(ClO4)2 · 6H2O (10 mol%)
36 examples, 75 - 95% e.e.
CH2Cl2, - 78 oC
Liu & Feng 2017
Asymmetric Addition of 2-Naphthol to para-Quinone
Recently, organocatalysts capable of synergistic activation of the electrophile and the phenol by H-bonding have emerged. Mechanistically, protons of the thioamide or squaric amide groups are proposed to activate Lewis basic functionalities of the electrophile for 1,2- or 1,4-addition, while a Lewis basic amine activates the phenol by H-
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ACS Catalysis
bonding (Scheme 6).67-69 α-Ketoaldehyde hydrates,67 nitroalkenes68 as well as isatins69 are suitable electrophiles, producing chiral phenols with good control of chirality at the newly formed benzylic position. Methods are currently limited to phenols with strong electron-donating substituents, naphthols or hydroxyindoles, but the process affords an attractive approach for asymmetric ortho-selective C-H functionalization.
OH
OH
H-bonding catalyst
" E
*E
" OH
OH HO
OH
OH
Ph
O
O
Vila & Pedro 2016
Ar
OH
Wang & Zeng 2017
O
Ar
- only 3,5-dimethoxyphenol was shown - Ar = aryl, naphthyl, thiophenyl furanyl - 16 examples up to 98% e.e.
N
OH
Type II
- only hydroxyindoles were shown - 15 examples up to 96% e.e.
O OH
Pedro 2017
N H
common catalyst structure: S
95% e.e.
Bn
O NBn
At least 1 donating group required
NO2 OMe
MeO
O
MeO
up to 99% e.e.
Type I
NO2
OH
Ar
Type I
Ar
mode of action: O
O
ArHN
Q
N ArHN
Q
Type I
Ar =
CF3
S
Type II Ar
N Q= H
F 3C
H
H OMe N H
OMe H N
N E
O
H
N
N
Scheme 6. Organo-Catalytic 1,2- and 1,4-addition
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In 2015, Wang and Tang et al. reported an asymmetric synthesis of dihydrobenzofuranones by EArS with trifluoromethyl-pyruvates (Scheme 7).70 Their method employed Cu(OTf)2 as a catalyst in conjunction with a chiral bisoxazole ligand, displayed good scope in phenol, and was applied to the decagram scale synthesis of an enantio-pure biologically active compound. The method is currently limited by the scope of the electrophilic coupling partner.
O N
O OH
O N
OR
F 3C
TfO
R = Me or Et
O O CF3
Bu
O
CF3 OH
OH
R' = H, 83%, 85% e.e. t Bu, 94%, 94% e.e. OMe, 81%, 95% e.e. Et, 88%, 95% e.e.
OMe 58%, 96% e.e.
74%, 95% e.e. O
O
O
O
O Me
O CF3
OH
R'
CF3 OH
Wang & Tang 2015
O t
O
OTf
(10 mol%)
O
O
O
Cu
CF3
O CF3 OH
OH
CF3 OH
O
Me
O 76%, 97% e.e.
58%, 91% e.e.
75%, 99% e.e.
Scheme 7. Asymmetric Synthesis of Benzofuranones
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ACS Catalysis
In 2017, You et al. reported the asymmetric synthesis of dihydrobenzopyranones by
N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) catalyzed oxidative coupling of phenols and α,β-unsaturated aldehydes (Scheme 8).71 Over 19 examples were included, with enantiomeric excess of up to 97%. Current limitations include poor scope for the -substituent of the aldehyde, and the requirement of an electron-rich phenol with electron donating oxygen or nitrogen substituents in the ortho- or para-position.
Ph
OH
Ph
BF4 N
N N H
R1
O t
t
Bu
Bu
CHO
R2
R1
(10 mol%)
OH
O
19 examples up to 81% yield 85-97% e.e.
You 2017 t
Bu
t
Bu
(1.2 equiv)
O
R2 O
LiHMDS (20 mol%) OMe
OMe
MeO
MeO
O
OMe
O
MeO O
O
Ph
O
O2N
70%, 96% e.e.
O O
50%, 85% e.e.
NMe2
52%, 96% e.e. OMe
O O
Br O
O
MeO
MeO
N
R2
N N *R
R
62%, 92% e.e.
36%, 94% e.e.
R1
Proposed Mechansim:
Ar
O MeO
32%, 92% e.e.
OH
O
MeO O
O
O
-
- 2e | H
H
O
+
Ar N
R2
N
OH O
R1 R2
N
N *R
Ar N N
R
*R
R
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Scheme 8. Chiral NHC-Catalyzed Dihydrobenzopyranone Synthesis
In 2017, Tong et al. reported a chiral phosphine-catalyzed addition of naphthols to allenic esters for the synthesis of dihydrobenzofurans with two adjacent chiral centers (Scheme 9).72 In their proposed mechanism, the phosphine attacks the central carbon of the allene with the loss of the acetate to generate a phosphonium salt, on which the naphthol can than perform a 1,6-addition followed by cyclization.
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ACS Catalysis
OAc
R1
R1
(R)-SITCP (10 mol%)
R2 H
O
R2
K2CO3 PhMe, 0 oC
CO2Et OH
CO2Et
O
Ph
I
O
O
Me
O
Ph Me CO2Et
CO2Et 75% 87% e.e.
CO2Et 94% 92% e.e.
70% > 20:1 d.r.
CO2Et
27% 85% e.e.
Proposed Mechanism:
P
*PR3 =
R
OAc
Ph
OH
*PR3
R
* R 3P
CO2Et
proton transfer R R 3P
O
R H
H
O
CO2Et
* R 3P CO2Et
R
O
O
R
* R 3P
[1,2]-proton shift
O EtO
(R)-SITCP
O
R
OEt
O
R 3P CO2Et
CO2Et
Scheme 9. Chiral Phosphine-Catalyzed Dihydrobenzofuran Synthesis
In limited cases, EArS reactions affording alkylated products can be highly orthoselective for simple phenols lacking multiple substituents. In 2016, a Lewis-acid catalyzed
ortho-selective alkylation of phenols with α-diazoesters was reported by Zhang et al
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Page 26 of 129
(Scheme 10).73 Tris(pentafluorophenyl)borane was found to be the most efficient catalyst, and provided a 75 : 13 ratio of ortho- vs para-functionalized products when using phenol as the substrate. The ratio was further increased to 90 : 8.5 when the α-diazoester was changed from methyl to isopropyl. The author’s proposed a hydrogen-bonding interaction between the -OH of phenol and the fluorine atoms on the tris(pentafluorophenyl)borane catalyst to account for the ortho-selectivity. Over 50 examples were demonstrated, providing ortho-substituted phenols in yields of up to 92%.
OH R1
CO2R2
Ar
OH
(C6F5)3B (5 mol%)
N2
Ar CO2R2
R1
CH2Cl2, rt metal-free
> 50 examples up to 92% OH
Br
Ph
OH
CO2R
Ph CO2iPr
F
OH OH
CO2iPr I
CO2iPr
R = Me, 75/13 (o/p) i Pr, 90/8.5 (o/p)
81% (o/p = 10.3/1)
71% (o/p = 10.1/1)
73% (o/p = 10.4/1) F F
F
F
F F
F O
H Ar
B
F
F F
F F F
N
N CO2R2
F
F F
F
F F
F
F
F
O
H H
B
F
F F F F
Ar
N
F F
F
N CO2R2
hydrogen-bonding directed
Scheme 10. Lewis-Acid Catalyzed ortho-Selective Alkylation with α-Diazoesters
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ACS Catalysis
Finally, a conceptually distinct approach to ortho-arylation involving a pericyclic process is the ortho-CH functionalization of phenols with benzynes, which proceeds via an ene-type mechanism (Scheme 11). Recently, Hoye et al. reported an elegant extension of this protocol by intercepting arynes generated in situ from the thermolysis of triynes.74 Regioselectivity was explained by preferential attack of the nucleophilic carbon of the phenol onto the carbon of the benzyne that possessed the largest internal bond angle. This led to exclusive formation of the 5-arylated indole. The method is relatively broad with regards to the scope of phenol, and can include catechols, resorcinols and hydroquinones, as well as hydroxyindoles. While somewhat limited to electron rich phenols, this work provides a conceptually new approach for the ortho-selective C-H arylation of phenols.
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Me
Page 28 of 129
Me HO
o
DCE, 85 C
H
18 examples 26-77%
NMs
85 oC Me
R
HO Me
Me
R
NMs
tautomerize
138o
R
Me
Me
R
Me
phenol-ene reaction H NMs aryne-intermediate R' =
H
O 117
H
o
NMs
Me HO Me OMe
NMs
HO Me
R'
71% OH
21%
80%
57% NMs
HO Me
OMe
R'
R'
R'
CO2Me
NMs
HO Me
NMs
Me
HO Me
R'
O
OH
NMs
HO Me R'
75%
NH
NMs
68%
Scheme 11. The Phenol-Ene Reaction with Arynes
2.2. Methods Based on Oxygen to Carbon Rearrangements An alternative approach to functionalize the C-H bonds of phenols is by initial O-H functionalization, followed by O to C rearrangement.28, 75 Well-known examples include the Fries rearrangement, which can occur via charge separated, radical or anionic76-77 pathways (Scheme 12). The first two can suffer poor ortho-, para-selectivity, reflecting the delocalization of charge or spin-density throughout the aromatic ring. Nevertheless, their
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ACS Catalysis
utility is exemplified by the Mulzer-Magauer total synthesis of kendomycin,78 in which the natural product’s macrocycle was constructed by an O-C migration via photo-Fries rearrangement.
The anionic rearrangement of aryl sulfonates promoted by strong base
provides an alternative pathway via a non-resonance stabilized arene anion, and is selective for migration of sulfur to the ortho-position.76 This provides a convenient entry into aryl sulfones by thio-Fries rearrangement, albeit under relatively forcing conditions.
a) Cationic Fries Rearrangement R O
d) Recent Application in Mulzer's Kendomycin synthesis
2
R O Lewis-acid
R1
2
OLi R2
OLi
O
O
O
R1
O 2
R O para-
ortho-
O
R2 O
OLi
O
O
O
O O
HO
HO2C
O OMe
OMe h
Photo-Fries
O
R1 R2 O para-
ortho-
OH O
c) Anionic Fries Rearrangement R2 O R
Lactonization
R2
O
h R1
OLi
O
O
b) Radical Fries Rearrangement R2
EDCI DMAP
1
S
R2 O
O
O LDA R
1
S
OLi
O O Li
S
O O
O
O O
HO
R2
R1
O O
HO O kendomycin
HO OMe
ortho-
Scheme 12. Three Types of Mechanisms for the Fries Rearrangement
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Page 30 of 129
The aromatic Claisen rearrangement provides a well-known approach to functionalize the C-H bonds of phenols by O to C rearrangement.79 This can take place via a concerted [3, 3]-sigmatropic rearrangement, in which a closed transition state relays absolute stereochemistry from the allylic ether to the newly formed benzylic stereocenter. In 1998, Trost et al. reported the first example of an asymmetric O-allylation / rearrangement protocol to generate 2-allylphenols bearing benzylic stereocenters with high levels of enantiocontrol (Scheme 13).80 The first step employs well-established conditions for the Pd-catalyzed asymmetric O-allylation of phenols using Trost’s chiral diphosphine ligands. In the second step, a Lewis-acidic europium catalyst (EuFOD) promotes Claisen rearrangement at 50 oC, with good chirality transfer.
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ACS Catalysis
R1
R1
cat. Pd2dba3/L* CH2Cl2, rt
R2 R4O2CO
R3
step 1
R3
Eu(fod)3 CHCl3, 50 oC
R2 O
R3
OH
OH
step 2
R1 R2
R R
R
OH H
O
85% (step 1) 86% (step 2) 93% e.e.
L*=
OCH3
O NH
HN
PPh2 Ph2P OH
OH
Me
OH H
F 88% (step 1) 83% (step 2) 94% e.e.
H3CO H
Me
CHO 83% (step 1) 84% (step 2) 80% e.e.
Me
Me
Me 89% (step 1) 83% (step 2) 91% e.e.
Scheme 13. Asymmetric O-Allylation Followed by 1,3-Migration
It is also possible for the aromatic Claisen rearrangement to proceed via a non-concerted mechanism, in which heterolytic cleavage produces an ion pair. Trauner proposed such a mechanism to account for the ring contraction of (±)-smenochromene D in the course of a synthesis of smenochromene B (Scheme 14).81
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O
Me
OMe
Page 32 of 129
Me
OMe
O
Concerted Claisen Rearangement OH
O Not Observed (±-smenochromene D = (±)-likonide B
likonide A
o-C6H4Cl2, w (95%) Me
Me O
O
OMe
OMe (Z)
OH (E)
O isomerization
ring contraction
Scheme 14. A Non-Concerted 1, 3-Transposition
Related, but non-classical Claisen rearrangements have also recently been reported for the construction of biaryl bonds (Scheme 15). Kurti et al. reported a new synthesis of 2-arylated phenols by acid-catalyzed coupling of phenols and para-quinone ketals.82 Their proposed mechanism involves acid-promoted ketal exchange to provide the allylvinyl ether necessary for aromatic Claisen rearrangement, which generates the corresponding biaryl bond with good ortho-selectivity. The authors reported the synthesis of more than 30 unsymmetrical biaryls in generally high yields. N-Sulfonyl iminoquinone ketals were also shown to be effective coupling partners to provide the corresponding protected anilines. More recently, an asymmetric version of this methodology has
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ACS Catalysis
appeared, catalyzed by chiral phosphoric acids.83 In 2016, Kita et al. demonstrated that a competition existed between substitution on oxygen and substitution on carbon,84 where the latter was favored when using methane sulfonic acid (MeSO3H). The result was direct C-C bond formation at the para-position of the phenol, to provide the corresponding 4aryl phenols. Finally, Kaicharla and Biju showed that the stronger triflic acid (TfOH) promoted cyclization of the initially formed binol, creating an attractive entry into dibenzofurans by dehydration.85
Ar
MeO
R1
MeO
P
O
OH
OH Ar
X X = O or NSO2R''
H
TFA, (PhO)2PO2H or chiral phosphoric acid MeO
Ar = 2,4,6-tri-iPr-Ph chiral phosphoric acid
R2
R1
H+ X
TfOH
MeSO3H
O
MeO
R1
OH
OH
OH
MeO MeO
R2
R2 R1
[3,3] MeO
O
O
(S)-
H
R2
X
acid-promoted cyclization
EArS
R1
MeO R1 OH
XH OH
R2 Kurti and Xu 2016
up to 97% e.e.
MeO
O R2 R1
XH Kita 2016
R2 Kaicharla and Biju 2017
Scheme 15. Biaryl Synthesis via 1,3-Migration
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Page 34 of 129
In 2016, Yorimitsu et al. reported a novel synthesis of 2-aryl phenols by cross coupling of phenols and aryl sulfoxides (Scheme 16).86 Similar to the Claisen rearrangement, migration of the aryl sulfonium group from oxygen to the ortho-carbon can proceed via a six-membered transition state. The reaction proceeds at room temperature, and requires only trifluoroacetic anhydride to activate the sulfoxide. More than 35 examples, encompassing both electron rich and electron poor phenols were demonstrated, including a broad scope of aryl and heteroaryl substituted sulfoxides. In cases were the ortho-position of the phenol was blocked, a further 1,2- or 1,3-migration occurred, to produce a 15 to 1 mixture of the meta- and para- substituted products.
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ACS Catalysis
R2
R2
S R1
O OH
R2
S
(CF3CO)2O (1.5 equiv)
R1
S R1
O
OH
o
CH2Cl2, 25 C R3
R3
39 examples up to 97%
R3 Ts N
Ts N
SMe
MeO
S
SMe
SMe SMe
OH
OH
OH
OH MeO
O2N
Bpin 76%
t
Bu
84%
83%
S SMe
Me
TFA (20 mol%)
O
Me
92% Me
Me
25 oC
OH
OH Me Me
S SMe
58%
82% (m/p = 15/1) C3-functionalization
S
SMe
C4-functionalization
Scheme 16. ortho-Aylation of Phenols with Aryl Sulfoxides
In a somewhat related, albeit mechanistically distinct process, Schaus et al. reported a BINOL-catalyzed three-component coupling between phenols, aldehydes and vinyl borates
for
the
synthesis
of
chiral
2-allylphenols
or
2,
4-disubstitued
tetrahydrobenzopyranes (Scheme 17).87 Their proposed mechanism involves a chiral boronate, which co-localizes the phenol, the aldehyde and the vinyl boronic ester within the asymmetric influence of BINOL. The resulting cyclic boronate results from orthoselective C-C bond formation before migration of the vinyl group installs the benzylic stereocenter of the corresponding 2-allyl-phenol. These products can undergo additional
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Page 36 of 129
cyclization to produce the corresponding 2, 4-disubstituted tetrahydrobenzopyranes with excellent enantioselectivity.
R2 R2
R3
R1
CHO
OH
R1 OH
OiPr i
PrO
21 examples 44-100% yield up to 98:2 e.r.
X
B
R3
R2
OH OH R1 X X = Br or I (15 mol%)
R2
R2 O
R1 O
R3 O 6 examples up to 72%, 99:1 e.r.
O
R1
B OR*
R3
O
H
B OR*
R2
R3
R2
R1
R3
R1 O
R3
OH
Scheme 17. Chiral BINOL-Catalyzed ortho-Selective Multi-Component Coupling
A related rearrangement within this category is the migration of aryl groups from phenolate-metal complexes (Scheme 18). Barton introduced Pb (IV)88 and Bi (V)-
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ACS Catalysis
reagents89 for this purpose as early as 1985. More recently, Yamamoto has reported asymmetric variants that employ chiral amine ligands to install biaryl bonds with good atropo-selectivity.90 In general, arylation reactions employing Pb- or I-based reagents91 are selective for ortho-arylation of the phenol. It is noteworthy that these high-valent metals are selective for aryl transfer, since related reagents are well known to oxidize phenols to the corresponding phenoxyl radical or phenoxonium cation, to provide products of phenolic dearomatization (Scheme 18D).3, 46-47
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Page 38 of 129
a) General Concept:
OH Ar R
Ln
OH
Ar-M-X
H
O
base
R
M
[2,3] migration
Ar
mono-aryl OH
O-metallation
R
Ar
Ar
R di-aryl b) Early Discovery
i. Ph3BiCl2 NH
OH Ph
Me2N
ii. heat
t
t
Bu
Bu
OH
82%
OH PhPb(OAc)3 (4 equiv)
NMe2 t
t
Bu
Bu
Barton 1985
Ph
t pyridine Bu CHCl3, 25 oC Barton 1994
c) Atropo-Selective Biaryl Synthesis OH
Pb(OAc)3 R1
R1 N
OH iPr MeO i
Ph Me
Me
H H
Pr
H
H
MeO
68% > 99% d.r. 83% e.e.
Bu
R2
PhMe - 40 to - 20 oC OH Ph
t
64%
OH R2
brucine (6 equiv)
R2
Ph
OMe
N
MeO
82% > 99% d.r. 54% e.e.
O
O brucine
d) I-(III)-Mediated Arylation / Dearomatization OH Me
OPh Me
Ph2ICl (1.3 equiv) t BuOK BuOH, rt
Me
O Me
Me Me
Ph
t
Me
Me 7%
Me 42%
O Me
Me
Me Ph 7%
Scheme 18. The Migration of Aryl Groups From High-Valent Metals
2.3. Methods Based on Transition Metal Catalysis In addition to their strong ortho-, para-directing effects, phenols can serve as good ligands to transition metals through their corresponding phenolates. This has given rise to a number of transition metal catalyzed C-H functionalization reactions. An early
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ACS Catalysis
example comes from Trost and Toste, who reported a Pd-catalyzed addition of phenols to propionic esters to provide the corresponding coumarins (Scheme 19).92-93 This reaction provides an atom-economic way of making coumarins from readily available starting materials, albeit with some limitations in the scope of the phenol, which must have strong meta-donating groups. Two mechanistic pathways have been proposed, both involving a phenolate-bound Pd(II)-hydride. The first invokes a hydro-palladation of the alkyne to afford a vinyl-Pd-(II)-phenolate 19-2, before 1,3-migragtion to the ortho-carbon and reductive elimination provide ortho-vinyl phenol 19-4. Double bond isomerization and lactonization then lead to the coumarin. Alternatively, phenolate-bound Pd-(II)-hydride 191 could isomerize to a C-bound Pd-intermediate 19-5, before carbo- palladation, reductive elimination and tautomerization afford a similar ortho-vinyl phenol en route to the product. More recently, Maiti has reported a related coumarin synthesis by oxidative coupling of phenols and α,β-unsaturated esters.94
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O
R'
OH
Page 40 of 129
Pd2dba3 (cat.) NaOAc
O
HCO2H rt, 16 h
R CO2Et
O
O
O
O O
O
O
R'
R
O
R MeO
O
OMe
MeO
O
R = Ph, 69% CH3, 51%
67%
Me
61%
72%
H O
Pd
CO2Et
O
1,3migration
H Pd
CO2Et
H 19-2 H
19-3
pathway I
O
CO2Et
Pd
H
O
O
H
CO2Et
19-1
19-4 H
pathway II H
O
O
CO2Et
Pd
Pd
CO2Et
1,3migration
H
H 19-6
19-5 OH
R
O
isomerization / cyclization
C-H activation
O
O Pd(OAc)2 (cat.) 1,10-phen
O
MeO
Maiti 2013
Cu(OAc)2 (1 equiv) NaOAc, air 110 oC
R
Scheme 19. Palladium-Catalyzed Coumarin Synthesis from Phenol
A similar vinylation protocol was recently reported by Yi and co-workers, who developed a cationic ruthenium-catalyzed ortho-vinylation of phenols with ketones (Scheme 20).95-96 The reaction proceeds via OH-directed ortho- C-H activation to form an aryl-ruthenium intermediate, which can then undergo a migratory insertion with the enol
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ACS Catalysis
tautomer of the ketone. The cationic ruthenium can then perform a β-elimination to cleave the C-O bond. Subsequent exchange with another equivalent of the starting material liberates the product and closes the catalytic cycle. While both aromatic and aliphatic ketones are tolerated, only electron-rich phenols as well as naphthols have been employed. The reaction between 3,5dimethoxyphenol and an α,β-unsaturated ketone can also produce a dihydrobenzopyrane. OH
R1
R3
R2
OH
Ph
R3
Me
OH
MeO
Me OMe
MeO
OMe
95% OH
R1
1,2-DCE 125 oC
OH
Me OMe
MeO
R2
OH
[Ru] (3 mol%)
O
H
78%
77% (Z:E = 1.4:1)
Ph OH
OH Me OMe
MeO
MeO
OMe 58%
62%
55% OH
H2 [Ru] = Cy3P
Ru H
CO
H R1
BF4
R3 HO
HO
H 2O
HO
R2
R2
R3
HO
[Ru] OH
[Ru]
H
R1
O
R1
HO
R1
R1
R2
OH
R3
[Ru]
R2
R3
OH HO
H
[Ru]
R1 R1
R2
HO
OH R3
HO
[Ru] R3
R2
R1
Me OH H Ph MeO
[Ru] (3 mol%)
O
OMe
Me
O Ph
annulation MeO
OMe
Scheme 20. Cationic Ruthenium-Catalyzed ortho-Vinylation of Phenols
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In 1997, Rawal et al. reported an intramolecular C-H functionalization of phenols by Pd-catalyzed coupling of tethered aryl iodides or bromides (Scheme 21).97 Mechanistically, the reaction hinges on an EArS-type mechanism for C-H functionalization by nucleophilic addition of the phenol or phenolate to the Pd-(II) that forms upon oxidative addition. Optimization efforts led to relatively mild conditions for C-H arylation, consisting of Herrmann’s catalyst and a carbonate base in a polar aprotic solvent at temperatures of 80 – 115 oC. The reaction is typically regioselective for the ortho-position of the phenol, and can produce six-membered rings containing carbon, nitrogen or oxygen in the tether between the two aromatic rings. This strategy was extended by Cuny to the synthesis of aporphine alkaloids and later by Fagnou,98-99 who employed Buchwald’s Pd-pre-catalysts (e.g. XPhos-Pd-G1).100-102 In 2008, Daugulis reported a similar reaction without a transition metal catalyst, however, these conditions require a stronger base (tBuOK), higher temperatures (140 oC) and exhibit diminished regiocontrol.103
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OH OH
OH conditions
X R
1
R
R1
R2
R1
2
n
n n ortho-cyclization major
R2 para-cyclization minor
Ar
Me
OH
Ar
P
O
O
O
O
Pd
OH
Pd P Ar
O
O
Ar
Me Ar = o-tol (5 mol%)
X = Br, 73% (o/p = 3.2/1) t
BuOK (2.5 equiv) 1,4-dioxane, 140 oC
Cs2CO3, DMA, 80 oC
X = I, 97%
Rawal 1997
Daugulis 2008
OH 1st generation
2nd generation
Pd(OAc)2 (20 mol%) PCy3 (40 mol%) Cs2CO3, DMA, 110 oC, 24 h
XPhos-Pd-G1 (5 mol%) Cs2CO3, DMA, 110 oC, 1 h
NTs
56%
X =Br
93%
Cuny 2003 & 2004
aporphine common isoquinoline alkalods core structure
Cuny 2012
O
O
Ln Pd
R1
ortho-palladation
n
Ln Pd
R1
R2
X
H
X
R2 n
Scheme 21. Palladium-Catalyzed Intramolecular Cyclization of Phenols and Aryl Halides
Despite early successes in the intramolecular C-H arylation of phenols, similar conditions are problematic for the intermolecular coupling of phenols and aryl halides (Scheme 22). In 1988, Bois-Choussy reported a photo-induced, transition-metal free arylation of phenoxides via SRN1, albeit with a limited substrate scope and poor ortho- /
para-selectivity.104
In 1999, Miura et al. reported a phenol-directed ortho-arylation of
phenols with aryl bromides catalyzed by Pd(OAc)2 and PPh3;105 however, these reactions
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Page 44 of 129
suffer poor chemoselectivity, and could not be stopped after the first C-H functionalization. Instead, products of poly-arylation were observed, resulting from sequential orthodirected and external phenol-directed C-H functionalization. More recently, Daugulis reported a related Ag-catalyzed process, which exhibits higher degrees of selectivity for the mono-arylated product (Scheme 22).106
OH
Ph
Pd(OAc)2 (5 mol%) PPh3 (20 mol%) Ph-Br (8 equiv) Cs2CO3 (8 equiv) o-xylene , refulx
Ph
Ph 58%
Miura 1999
C2-activation
OH
Ph Ph Ln
OH
Ln Pd
OH
Pd
OH
external activation
OH
OH AgOAc, tBuONa
Daugulis 2013
Ph-Cl 1,4-dioxane, 155 oC
OH Ph
78% 1.8 equiv PhCl
Ph
Ph
60% 5 equiv PhCl
Scheme 22. Intermolecular Phenol / Aryl Halide Coupling
To mitigate issues of over arylation, Bedford and co-workers introduced a transient directing group strategy for the Rh-catalyzed ortho-arylation of phenols by employing an
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aryl phosphite co-catalyst (Scheme 23).107-108 The authors propose a fast and reversible exchange between the phosphite co-catalyst and the phenol to create a directing group for ortho-selective C-H arylation. Subsequent exchange of the phosphite with the less sterically encumbered starting phenol releases the directing group to close the catalytic cycle, and provides the ortho-arylated product. The authors have demonstrated a broad scope of both phenol and aryl halide coupling partners, and in 2008, they reported a more practical phosphine chloride co-catalyst.109 A similar strategy was also reported by Oi and Inoue, who employed hexamethylphosphorous triamide (HMPT) as a more readily available co-catalyst.110 More recently, this strategy has also been adopted by Ye for the rapid derivatization of BINOL.111
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Rh-catalyst P(III)-co-catalyst
OH
OH
ArBr R
Ar R
Cs2CO3 or K2CO3 PhMe, 100 oC - reflux
O
Cl
P
N
P N
P
N
R co-catalyst
co-catalyst
co-catalyst
RhCl(PPh3)3
[RhCl(cod)]2
[RhCl(cod)]2
Bedford 2003
Bedford 2008
Oi & Inoue 2003
OH
O
X-PR2
PR2 C-H activation
R
R
Ar Br
exchange R OH
R
oxidative addition
P
O Ar
R
Rh Ln ArBr
R Ln Rh
P
Ar
R Rh
Ln
Ar
R
R
reductive elimination
NMe2
OH
O
OH t
Bu
86%, with PiPr2(OAr) 77%, with PiPr2Cl
OH N
Bu
t
t
Bu
41% with PiPr2(OAr)
83% with PiPr2Cl Ph
OH Ph
OH OH
F 3C 75% with HMPA
Ph
82% with PtBu2Cl
Scheme 23. Rhodium-Catalyzed Intermolecular Coupling of Phenols and Aryl Bromides Mediated by a Transient Directing Group
In addition to ortho-C-H-arylation, significant efforts have been directed to related
ortho- C-H allylation reactions (Scheme 24). Hamada112 as well as Wu and You113
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independently reported the Pd-catalyzed intramolecular asymmetric ortho-allylation of phenols for the synthesis of dihydrophenanthrenes and tetrahydroisoquinolines, respectively. In both cases, Trost’s phosphine ligands for asymmetric allylation were found to be most efficient, giving both good yield and e.e. for the desired products. In the case of intermolecular allylation, Feng and Zhang recently reported a Rh-catalyzed, diastereoselective ortho-allylation of phenols with chiral vinyl aziridines.114 Breit has reported a complementary Rh-catalyzed allylation of phenols with achiral allylic carbonates that employs the chiral DIOP biphosphine to induce moderate levels of enantioselectivity.115 In both of these examples, high selectivity for the branched products was observed. In a related, albeit transition-metal free allylation, Harran reported an intramolecular phenol allylation that provided macrocyclic phenols with interesting pharmaceutical properties.116
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a) Intramolecular Cyclization
b) Intermolecular Coupling R2 N
OCO2Me
R1
Page 48 of 129
cat. Pd2dba3 Trost L*
R4 OH
Hamada 2012
R2
R4
OH
OCO2Me
substrate -controlled
R3
OH
R5
R1
Breit 2016 OH
NBn
Wu & You 2015
NBn
OH
catalyst -controlled
R1
Feng & Zhang 2017
OH
R
R
[Rh(cod)Cl]2 (2.5 mol%) L* (5 mol%)
OH
[Rh(NBD)2](BF4) (5 mol%)
R1 cat. Pd2dba3 Trost L*
MeO2CO
R3
NHR2
R2
OH
OH
R5
R1
Ph
OH
NHNs
n
C5H11
NHTs
OH
MeO O
MeO
O N H PPh2
O
HN
OMe
Me OMe
94%, 71% e.e.
O NH
H
HN
95%, 97% e.e. from 97% e.e. aziridine
Ph2P PPh2
70%, 87% e.e.
Ph2P
O
77%, 97% e.e. from 98% e.e. aziridine
O
PPh2 PPh2
H L* = (S,S)-DIOP
commonly used Trost ligands F
c) Macrocycle Formation OBoc
H
H OH N
F
N
O N H O
H N O
Me
N H OH
N
1) AcOH, H2O
O NH2 O
2) MeSO3H MeNO2, 23 oC (73%)
BocN
O O
HN
Me OH
O
OH
HN
Harran 2015
NH2 O
Scheme 24. ortho- C-H Allylation of Phenol
In 2015, Magauer et al. reported an unusual and conceptually distinct Au-catalyzed
ortho-allylation of phenols (Scheme 25).117 While the method is somewhat limited in scope, it provides a unique mechanistic approach to the ortho-alkylation of phenols.
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ACS Catalysis
H
t
Bu3PAuNTf2 (5 mol%)
OH
Br OH
CH2Cl2 0 - 23 oC 15 examples 13-77% yield
R Br
R
Br
[Au]
elimination
H O Br
Br
[Au]
R isolated intermediate
Br
Br
Br
Br
OH
OH
OH
OH
Cl
TBDPSO 76%
70% (o:p = 2.1:1)
59%
62%
Scheme 25. Gold-Catalyzed ortho-Allylation
Hu recently reported a related asymmetric propargylation of phenols for the synthesis of chiral dihydrobenzofurans (Scheme 26).118 The reaction is believed to proceed via a chiral Cu- allenylidene complex, which is susceptible to EArS. The resulting 2propargylated phenols, which were formed with good enantio- and regioselectivity, underwent a subsequent 5-exo-dig cyclization to provide the final cyclized dibenzofurans.
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SiMe3
Page 50 of 129
Cu(OAc)2·H2O (5 mol%)
H OH
R1
(S)-L (5.5 mol%)
O
i
Pr2NEt (1.2 equiv) MeOH, - 40 oC 26 examples up tp 98%, 96% e.e.
R1 R2
OAc racemic
R2
CuL* CuL*
CuL*
ligand-induced facial selective addition
CuL* R1
OH
R1
R1 OAc
chiral copper allenylidene complex
R2 F 3C
Ph
CF3
Ph O
O
O N
OH 52%, 91% e.e.
82%, 80% e.e.
PPh2 92%, 93% e.e.
N
L*
Scheme 26. Synthesis of Dihydrobenzofurans via ortho-Propargylation
Recently, Wang et al. reported a Cu-catalyzed ortho-aminomethylation of phenols employing potassium amino-methyl-borontrifluoride (Scheme 27).119 Their conditions utilized a simple Cu(OAc)2 catalyst, sodium acetate as a base and air as the terminal oxidant. These conditions exhibited broad scope in the phenol, which can include a range of substitution patterns, including both electron-rich and electron-deficient substituents. The amine-coupling partner is generally limited to cyclic secondary amines, whereas acyclic derivatives did not perform well. The method was applied to the synthesis of serine hydrolase inhibitor analogues. In a conceptually related example, Patureau and co-
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ACS Catalysis
workers have demonstrated a cross dehydrogenative coupling of phenols and methyl amines to provide similar products.120
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OH Cu(OAc)2·H2O (5 mol%)
H
R1 KF3B
O
NaOAc·3H2O (3 equiv)
N
R2
R3
Cu(II) R1 N R2
OH
N
BF3K
PhMe, 80 oC 38 examples 21 - 98%
OH
R3 R1
R1
OH
OH
N
N O
OMe
N O
Cl 81%
MeO2C 96%
OH
NHBoc
OH
O
N
N
O NO2
62%
58%
OH N
N NBoc
CO2Et
R2
96%
NBoc 71% (after O-methylation) serine hydrolase inhibitor analogues
Scheme 27. ortho-Aminomethylation of Phenol
2.4. Methods Based on Phenol-Directed C-H Insertion While the directed insertion of transition metals into C-H bonds has provided many powerful, complexity-generating tools, phenols remain underutilized directing groups for this family of reactions. An important exception is the Ir-catalyzed hydroxy directed orthoborylation protocol of phenols reported by Maleczka, Singleton and Smith (Scheme 28).121 The authors attribute high ortho-selectivity to an electrostatic attraction between the substrate and the bipyridyl ligand, which was enhanced by using the ethylene glycolate on boron instead of the more commonly employed and sterically encumbered
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ACS Catalysis
pinacolate. Hartwig has developed an alternative and complementary silyl-directed orthoborylation from the corresponding silanes of phenols (See Scheme 29).122 In this case, the Ir catalyst is placed in close proximity to the ortho-position of the silyl ether by initial insertion into the Si-H bond.
i. [Ir(cod)(OMe)] (1.5 mol%) dtbpy (3 mol%) NEt3, PhMe, 80 oC
OH O
O
H
B
B
Bpin
ii. pinacol
O
O
OH
R
R OH
OH
OH
Bpin
Bpin
Me
Bpin
EtO2C
F 50%
65%
OH Bpin
56%
73% OH
OH
OH Bpin
OH
Bpin
Bpin MeO
Bpin
Cl
MeO 80%
60%
t
67%
73%
Bpin
Bu N
N
t
Bu
O O
Bpin
Ir H
Bpin
B O
O
O
O =
B
B O
O
B O
proposed model: Directed by Electrostatics
Bpin
Beg
less C2-selective
more C2-selective
Scheme 28. Ir-Catalyzed ortho-Selective Borylation of Phenol
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Et O
OH
[Ir(cod)Cl]2 (0.5 mol%)
H
Et2SiH2, PhH R
Page 54 of 129
Et Si
Et
H
[Ir(cod)Cl]2 (1 mol%) dtbpy (2 mol%) HBpin (5 mol%)
H
O
OH MeO
BF3K
96%
R
OH Cl
BF3K
89%
OH BF3K
100%
OH
OH
Ph
86% BF3K
O
t
Bu
O 82%
N t
Bu
94%
Bpin
Bu N
Ir H
BF3K
OH
BF3K
BF3K
t
BF3K
KHF2
R
OH
Me
OH
H BPin
B2pin2 (1 equiv) THF, 80 oC
R
Et Si
79%
t
Bpin SiEt2
N
O
t
Bu
t
Bpin
Bu
silyl-directed borylation
N
Bpin
Bu
Bpin
Ir H
SiEt2 O
N t
N
Bu
Ir Bpin
H SiEt2 O
Scheme 29. ortho-Borylation of Phenol with a Silyl Directing Group
A conceptually related, albeit mechanistically distinct, ortho-borylation of phenols was reported by Vedejs et al. in 2013 (Scheme 30).123 In this case, a stepwise C2borylation of phenols occurred by an addition to chloro-diisopropyl-phosphine, before the addition of borane. Subsequent C-B bond formation occurred by an EArS type mechanism, requiring strong acid and elevated temperatures to promote the extrusion of H2. Subsequent work up using KHF2 afforded the corresponding products as their stable potassium trifluoroborate salts.
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ACS Catalysis
OH
i
H
Pr2PCl NEt3
O
PiPr2 H
OH
i. BH3·THF
BF3K
o
ii. Tf2NH, 140 C iii. KHF2
R
R
R
OH BF3K
Me
OH
OH
OH
BF3K
BF3K
BF3K
Cl 75%
88%
56%
34%
Scheme 30. Phosphorous-Directed ortho-Borylation
Because of their poor directing abilities, phenols are typically modified with an appended directing group in order to promote ortho-selective C-H insertion (Scheme 31).124-136 In recent years, a range of groups for this relay-direction have been introduced, including silyl, acyl, 2-pyridyl and carboxylate groups, and the most common catalysts are Ru, Rh, Pd and Pt. While the majority of examples install 2-aryl or 2-vinyl substituents, it is also possible to install oxygen or silicon heteroatoms. While this approach suffers poor atom and step economies, due to the installation and removal of directing groups, they provide important inroads into metal-mediated C-H insertion for substrates possessing the unique electronic properties of phenols and their ether derivatives.
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OH
DG
O installation
O
Page 56 of 129
DG
C-H activation
OH FG deprotection
FG
O
O DG =
Me
N
O
cat. [Pd]
Ar
Ar-H Na2S2O8 Dong 2010
Me
O
R O
cat. [Rh]
O
R'
NMe2
NMe2
O
NMe2
H
R' Cu(OAc)2 Fu & Liu 2011
R
O
OPiv
DG = Bu
OPiv
cat. [Pd] Ar2IOTf
H
t
R
Ar
R
Fu & Liu 2010
R
cat. [Pd] DG =
O
CO2K
CO2H
O
CO2Et
CO2H
H
Yu 2013
CO2Et
R
KHCO3 O2
R t
DG =
Bu
t
t
Bu
Bu Si
cat. [Pd]
OH
PhI(OAc)2
Gevorgyan 2011 Bu
Bu
R
Si
cat. [Pd]
OH
OPy
O
R
N
Si
OH R'
R
OPy
cat. [Ru] / MesCO2H K2CO3
H
Bu
Bu
Ag(OAc) Li2CO3
R
t
t
R'
H
DG =
Bu
t
t
O
t
O Si O
Ar R
Ar-Br Ackermann 2012 cat. [Ru] / Cu(OAc)2 air
R2
OPy H H
R1
CONHtBu
R1
CONHtBu Me
O DG =
Lan & You 2018
R2
OPy
OAc H
Me Jeon 2016
R1
cat. [Ir] / [Rh]
O
O SiEt2
H2SiEt2
R1
Scheme 31. Directing Group Strategies for ortho-Selective C-H Insertion
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ACS Catalysis
2.5. Methods Based on Oxidative Coupling The oxidative homo coupling of phenols is an industrially relevant C-H functionalization that is used to produce 2, 2′- and 4, 4′-biphenols (Scheme 32).137 Since the oxidative coupling of phenol itself is not selective, the process requires tert-butylation to block ortho- or para-positions, as needed.138 Cu-catalyzed aerobic coupling of the resulting 2, 4- or 2,6-di-tert-butyl phenols affords the corresponding diphenoquinones, which can be reduced to the corresponding bi-phenols by a variety of methods. Removal of the tert-butyl groups affords the corresponding biphenols along with iso-butylene, which can be recovered and reused.
O OH
OH
Al(OPh)3
t
t
Bu
t
Bu
OH
Bu
OH t
t
Bu
Bu
t
t
Bu
Bu
O
Al(OPh)3
reduction t
t
Bu
OH
t
Bu
cat. [Cu] O2
Bu
OH
Scheme 32. Industrial Synthesis of 4, 4′-Biphenols
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While significant effort to control the chemo- and regioselectivity of phenolic oxidative coupling reactions has led to certain advances, the majority require blocking substituents to ensure high degrees of regioselectivity. This underscores the well-known challenges of controlling free phenoxyl radicals, which form easily under oxidizing conditions, and undergo non-selective C-C coupling at either ortho- or para-positions with 2nd order rate constants that can approach the diffusion limit (~108 M1s1 in benzene) (Scheme 33).139 In light of these challenges, work of Kozlowski,140-142 Pappo143-148 and Waldvogel149-151 places the state of the art into context, since they have provided the first examples of an oxidative cross coupling reaction between two, non-identical phenols. To avoid freeradicals, Kozlowski and Pappo confine electron transfer to the inner coordination sphere of a Cr-(IV) or Fe-(IV)-phenolate, generating only catalytic quantities of a metal-(III)phenoxy radical that remains within the metal’s coordination sphere. Selectivity is determined by preferential coordination of one phenol to the metal catalyst, so that radical capture occurs between a metal-bound phenoxyl radical and a non-associated partner. Kozlowski differentiates phenols by the steric demands of their ortho-substituents, requiring relatively encumbered 2,6-di-substituted phenols to be the non-associating
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ACS Catalysis
substrate.142 Pappo, on the other hand, discriminates phenols by their relative affinity for an Fe-(III)-porphyrin, which appears to favor phenols with higher oxidation potentials and lower global nucleophilicities in hexafluoroisopropoanol.146 This requires at least one methoxy group on the weaker of the two associating phenols, suggesting an important role for the strongly hydrogen bonding solvent. Waldvogel and Pappo have also demonstrated selectivity for radical-based couplings between phenols with different redox potentials and global nucleophilicities, relying on electrochemical and Fe-mediated oxidations, respectively. While each of these methods makes an important advance, they continue to struggle with phenols that have multiple sites available for coupling, and isolated yields are frequently less than 60%. In addition to these transition-metal mediated or electrochemical conditions, Kita has reported a hypervalent iodine-catalyzed process.152 This system requires phenols with electron-donating substituents, as well as blocking groups, to ensure high degrees of site-selectivity. The prevalence of biphenols in natural products has led to recent applications in total synthesis. Examples include Quideau’s asymmetric synthesis of ()-vescalin,153 Baran’s synthesis of acrylomycin
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Page 60 of 129
derivatives,154 and Kozlowski’s atropo-selective total synthesis of (S)-bisoranjidiol,155 and chaetoglobin A.156
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ACS Catalysis
HO
a) Oxidative Phenolic Coupling K = 6.3 x 108 M-1s-1 (Benzene)
O
O OH
O
O -
1e |1H
K = 6.4 x 109 M-1s-1 (H2O) Rate of Diffusion in H2O
O
+
OH homo-coupling
EDG
O phenoxy radical EDG EDG = OH, OMe, NMe2, etc. b) Cr-Catalyzed Cross-coupling Between Phenols
c) Fe-Catalyzed Cross-Coupling Between Phenols OH
OH Me
O2 (1 atm) 1,2-DCE, 50 - 85 oC
Me
BuOOH (1.1 equiv) HFIP, rt
OH Me
iPr Cy
Cy
N tBu
t
OH Me
iPr 1 equiv.
Cy
N
tBu
O Cl O
OH tBu
2 equiv.
Cr Cl Me
O Ln
N Ph
H
H
tBu
Ln
tBu
Me
iPr
OH
HO
Fe O
Cr (III) - phenoxy radical
OMe 77%
Ph
Me Cr (IV) - phenolate
tBu
N
tautomerization
Cr Cl
Me
radical-phenol coupling
iPr
iPr
OMe 1 equiv.
OH
Me
Me
Cl Fe
N
tBu
O tBu
O
O
HO
N
Cr (IV) Ln
Ln
Ph
HO
2 Cr (III)
tBu
Me
Ph
Me OH 74%
Cy
(5 mol%)
Cr Cl
(1 mol%)
Me 2-3 equiv.
Cr
Me
Ln
OH cross-coupling
OMe
Me
O
tBu
Me
OMe
Fe-phenoxy / Me free phenoxy coupling
H-atom abstraction
Fe (IV) - oxyl radical
Me
O
O
Fe
O
H
H
tBu
Me
OMe
OH d) Electrochemical Oxidative Coupling of Phenols
e) Hypervalent Iodine-Catalyzed Cross Coupling OH
O
MeO
O O
OH
OMe
OH
R
R
O
74% homo-coupling
Ar-I = OMe
R-O
OMe
MeO
H+
OMe
90%
OAc
boron-doped diamond (BDD) anode
Ar
I
2,6-dimethoxy Ar OAc phenol MeO
I
O AcOH
OMe
Ar-I
OAc Me
I
OMe
OMe R-OH
MeO
MeO
MeO
OMe OH
OMe
AcOH HFIP, rt
OMe
OH O
OH
MeO
Ar-I (10 mol%) 18-crown-6 Oxone
AcOH
47%
cross-coupling
Oxone
AcOH
f) Applications to Complex Molecules
OH
Cu(MeCN)4(PF6) (2 equiv) TMEDA (2 equiv) O2, MeCN 60%, 5 g scale
OH OH
HO
O
HO CuCl2 (5 equiv) (-)-sparteine (20 equiv) 68%
O O O O O S R
OH HO
OH OH OH (-)-Vescalin
HO
OH
OH
O N
Me H
HO
OH O O
OH CuCl2 (5 equiv) bispidine (20 equiv) 41%
Boc
N Me
H N
HN
OH
CO2Me O
O Me Acrylomycin A2 core
N
Cu
H I
OH (10 mol%) O2, 40 oC 62%, 87% e.e.
Me OH
O
(S)-Bisoranjidiol
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Scheme 33. Biaryl Formation via Oxidative Phenolic Coupling
The oxidative cross coupling of phenols and olefins has also been extensively developed, resulting in the concise synthesis of dihydrobenzofurans or benzofurans via a formal [3+2] cycloaddition (Scheme 34). In 2013, Lei reported the first example of FeCl3catalyzed coupling between phenols and styrene derivatives with DDQ as the terminal oxidant.157 Since then, many research groups including those of Wang,158 Pappo159, Yoon160 and Chiba161 have developed transition-metal free, photochemical or electrochemical methods.94, 162-163 In 2016, Xia et al. applied this type of transformation to the total synthesis of (+)-decursivine, in which the key step involves an Fe-mediated intramolecular [3+2] oxidative cyclization to form the key [8.5]-ring system of the natural product.164 In addition, Canesi reported a related [3+2] cycloaddition between phenols and arenes in which the authors noted a stabilizing effect of a para-sulfone substituent on the phenol.165 They attributed its beneficial effects to a favorable n-π* interaction. The resulting cyclohexadiene product could then be re-aromatized with acid to produce 2arylphenols as the final product.
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ACS Catalysis
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R4
OH R1
R2
R3
R
O
oxidant
O
R2 R1
[3+2]
R4
R
R3 or
R
R a) Conditions Ph O
Ph
O
O
O
Me
Me
Me
OMe cat. Ru(bpz)3(PF6)2 visible light (NH4)2S2O8
OMe
cat. FeCl3 / DTBP
OMe cat. FeCl3 / DDQ
Ar
Ph
Ph
DDQ Wang 2017
Pappo 2013
Lei 2013
Yoon 2014 O
O
Ph
O O
OMe NO2
LiTFSI/MeNO2 electro-oxidation
BF3 Et2O DDQ
cat. Pd(OAc)2 Cu(OAc)2
Dong & Zhou 2017
Maiti 2013
Chiba 2017 b) Synthesis of (+)-Decursivine
O O
O
O
O
O
DDQ FeCl3
O
NCbz
HO
R2 N
H
R1
H
HFIP 66%
CO2Me
Xia 2016
N H
N H R1 = CO2Me, R2 = Cbz steps
R1 = H, R2 = H (+)-decursivine
c) With Arenes
X
OH
R
O X PhI(OAc)2
H
R PhO2S
X = H or I
O R
S
O
PhO2S
X=I TFA
OH
X
O
stablized by n-* interaction
R
PhO2S
Scheme 34. Oxidative Coupling Between Phenols and Olefins
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ACS Catalysis
In addition to olefins, the pyrrole rings of indoles can also couple with phenols in a similar fashion (Scheme 35). Danishefsky was the first to demonstrate this transformation in 2006 during a biomimetic total synthesis of pharlarine.166 These authors observed an oxidative coupling between 3,4-dimethoxyphenol and indole 35-1 mediated by phenyliodo-trifluoroacetate (PIFA). The regio-selectivity of this process was further studied by Vincent, who developed complementary conditions to access the two possible regioisomeric products of oxidative coupling.167-168 Similar phenol-indole coupling reactions have subsequently been applied to the synthesis of natural products including a biomimetic synthesis of azonazine by Yao,169 and Vincent’s synthesis of the voacalgine A core.170 Nicolaou et al. applied a similar transformation to the total synthesis of haplophytine171-172 and Harran et al. developed both chemical and electrochemical oxidations to produce the macrocyclic core of diazonamide and related biologically active molecules.173
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R R
R3
R O
R2
[3+2]
N
or N
R2
N
OH
R1
R2
R1 R1 both common core structures in indole alkaloids
a) Initial Study
b) Selective Generation of Two Regio-isomers
OMe
OMe
MeO
MeO
R
N
O
E
Danishefsky 2006
35-1
E
N
N H
R2
Ac
R2
N
Vincent 2012
FeCl3 DDQ
R3
FeCl3 OH
50 - 86%
R
R3 O
R3
oxidation
E = CO2Me O N
R
R
R3
PIFA OH
N H
R3 O
R3
oxidant
R2
24 - 99%
OH
N
27 - 62%
N
Ac
C2-unsubstitution required
Vincent 2014
Ac
H
Ac
c) Applications in Complex Molecule Synthesis O
H O
H Me
N
H
Me
NH PIDA TFE
O
H
N
MeO
NH
OMe
CF3
O
NIS O O
12% + 16% ent
N H
OH
CF3
N
O
biomimetic oxidative cyclization
H
OH
N H
26%
N H
N
R2 CO2Me
N
R1
O
O
R1HN
R2 CO2Me
R1 = OAc, R2 = Cbz R1 = H, R2 = CO2Me
R1
N H
R3 O
O
R4
R4
O N
N
HN
R3
PIFA 23%
N
R1HN
OH
OH
N H
R2 N
HN
N
OH
H
Voacalgine A core
(+)-Azonazine precursor
CO2Me
O
O N
AgBF4 SnCl4
O
N H
HO R2 CO2Me
NH
Generation 1: PhI(OAc)2 R1 = ArSO2, R2 = iPr, R3 = CO2Me, R4 = 7-Br Generation 2: electrochemical oxidation
Precursor for Haplophytine
R1 = Cbz, R2 = tBu R4 = 5-F
O
20 - 25% ~ 3:1 d.r. Core of Diazonamide-based Drug Candidates
O 35%, d.r. = 2.7:1
R3 = N
H
OH
Scheme 35. Oxidative Coupling Between Phenols and Indoles
More recently, a concise biomimetic total synthesis of bipleiophyline was reported by Poupon, Evanno and Vincent (Scheme 36).174 Two sequential oxidative coupling reactions between 3-carboxylic acid catechol and the indole natural product
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ACS Catalysis
pleiocarpamine, consisting of 1,4- or 1,6-additions to the oxidized ortho-quinone afforded the natural product along biosynthetic lines.
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H
N
Page 68 of 129
H HCO2
N OH MeO2C O
OH HO
H
CO2H
Ag2O
O
O
HO
Me
pleiocarpamine formate salt
CO2H
N
O Me
O H N
O
H
N Me
O H
Ag2O
H
N
CO2Me
1,4-addition
CO2Me N
21%
N
O
voacalgine A
H Me
H
CO2Me OH N
O
O
H
N Me
O N
H HCO2
N
H N
N
H CO2Me
bipleiophylline
MeO2C
H
Me
pleiocarpamine formate salt 1,6-addition 3% over 2 steps, one pot
Scheme 36. Total Synthesis of bipleiophyline
In addition to double bonds, the triple bonds of alkynes can be used in oxidative cross coupling reactions with phenols to provide the corresponding benzofurans (Scheme 37). Many transition-metal catalysts have been developed for this process, including Rh, Pd, Cu, Au and Zn based systems.175-180 It can be difficult to control regiochemistry when using non-symmetric alkynes, and aryl substituents on the alkyne are better tolerated than alkyl substituents. A related, transition-metal free oxidative coupling has also been
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ACS Catalysis
reported by Dong and Zhou;181 however, the method is currently limited to 2-naphthols and aryl substituted terminal acetylenes to produce 2-arylated naphthofurans.
OH
R1
R1
H
oxidant
R2
[3+2]
R2
R
O
R Ar
1
R
O
1
R1
O
O
Ar2
R2
R
Ar
R
R
cat. [Cp*Rh(MeCN)3](SbF6)2 Cu(OTf)2 AgPF6, 120 oC
R1, R2 = alkyl or aryl
R1 = alkyl or aryl
cat. Pd2dba3 AgOAc 130 oC
cat. Cu(OTf)2 ZnCl2, O2 120 oC
Shi 2013
Sahoo 2013
Jiang 2013
Ar
Ar
O
O Ar
Ar
R
R
R
cat. Au(PPh3)Cl / AgSbF6 O2, 100 oC Guo 2016
R1 O
BF3·Et2O DDQ 80 oC Dong & Zhou 2016
R1 = alkyl or aryl ZnCl2 140 oC Satyanarayana 2017
Scheme 37. Oxidative Coupling Between Phenols and Alkynes
Enolizable ketones are also suitable coupling partners for oxidative cross coupling with phenols (Scheme 38). Li et al. reported an early example of this transformation in 2009,182 which described an oxidative coupling between phenols and β-ketoesters to afford the corresponding benzofuran using FeCl3 as a catalyst and di-tert-butyl peroxide
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Page 70 of 129
(DTBP) as the terminal oxidant. Pappo has continued to refine these conditions for the synthesis of dihydrofurans, including efforts to induce asymmetry.148, 183-184 In addition, a related transition-metal-free dihydrobenzofuranone synthesis mediated by I2 was reported by Wu in 2014.185
OH
OH
O
O
oxidant R3
R2
R2
R2
O
R3
R3
or
H
R1
R
R HO
Ph
OMe
O
O
OMe
OEt CO2Me
O
cat. FeCl3·6 H2O (tBuO)2, 100 oC Li 2009 OH
O OMe
cat. FeCl3·6 H2O 2,2'-bpy or 1,10-phen
O
Fe(ClO4)3 (10 mol%) 1,10-phen (10 mol%)
(tBuO)2, 70 oC Pappo 2012
Ph
O O
Me HO O L* =
O O
I2, DMSO, 100 oC Wu 2014
(tBuO)2 TFE/HFIP (1:1) rt - 40 oC Pappo 2015
O O
O P OH
Fe(ClO4)3 (5 mol%) L* (15 mol%) CaCO3 (15 mol%) (tBuO)2, 50 oC Pappo 2017
Scheme 38. Oxidative Coupling of Phenols and Ketones
The ortho-oxygenation of phenols is an important subclass of phenolic oxidations that is practiced on both small and large scales (Scheme 39). The industrial production
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ACS Catalysis
of catechol and hydroquinone derives from the oxidation of phenol with H2O2 in the presence of an acid or metal catalyst.28 Product ratios range from 2 - 4 : 1 in favor of the catechol, but the oxidation must be stopped at short conversion, in order to avoid over oxidation of the catechol or hydroquinone products, and product mixtures must be separated by distillation. A mechanistically distinct ortho-oxygenation of phenols is catalyzed by the enzyme tyrosinase, which activates O2 as a characteristic di-Cu(II)-µ,η2,η2peroxo to achieve complete
selectivity
for
the
corresponding
ortho-quinone.186
Mechanistically, oxygenation is believed to take place from a discrete phenolatecoordinated intermediate, from which oxygen atom transfer occurs by way of an EArStype mechanism. Many biomimetic Cu-complexes, emulating the unique coordination sphere of the enzyme have been reported, but few have recapitulated the enzyme’s catalytic activity.187-190 In 2014, Lumb and co-workers demonstrated that a remarkably simple catalytic system, consisting of simple 3o amines and Cu(PF6)(CH3CN)4, could mediate selective ortho-oxygenation.191-192 A more robust and functional group tolerant system employing N,N′-di-tert-butyl-ethylene diamine as a ligand to Cu was developed contemporaneously,191,
193-194
and recently applied to the total synthesis of
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Page 72 of 129
dehydronornuciferine.195 In the key step, a regioselective ortho-oxygenation triggers additional dehydrogenation, to provide ortho-quinone 39-1 as a single product in high yield. A conceptually related oxygenation can also be conducted with hypervalent iodine. In 2002, Pettus and co-workers demonstrated that IBX successfully delivered orthoquinones from the corresponding phenols across a relatively broad scope.196 In subsequent studies, Quideau and co-workers introduced SIBX197 as a safer alternative to IBX, and in 2012, Uyanik and co-workers described a related process using IBS.198
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ACS Catalysis
a) Industrial Synthesis of Catechol OH
OH
OH OH
acid or metal catalyst H2O2
OH catechol hydroquinone 1.5 - 4.1 : 1 ration separated by distillation
large excess stop at low conversion b) Biomimetic Oxidation OH
O
tyrosinase mimicry
OH reduction
O
R
OH R
R or I (V) reagents O
O
OH
I
OH
Ln
I O
(IBX)
O (IBS)
O
Cu
O
Ln
O
--peroxy-dinucleo
O
copper complex tyrosinase mimicry
S O
Cu
c) Mechanism of Atom Transfer OH
Ln
Cu
O O
H Cu
H
Ln
Bu
NH
Ln =
Bu
N
Bu
Cu
t
O
H
N t
Bu
Bu
HN
N
Cu
O
t
t
H
O
Bu
t
t
N
H
DBED
EArS tBu O
H O
N
dissociation O
Cu
N
tBu
H
O Cu (II) semi-quinone radical complex d) Recent Examples OH
[Cu(MeCN)4](PF6) (8 mol%) NEt3 (50 mol%)
t
Bu
Bu
O
CH2Cl2, O2, rt 4 Å M.S. ligandless condition
t
Bu
OH
O t
smaller substituent
t Bu 95%
O
[Cu(MeCN)4](PF6) (8 mol%) DBED (15 mol%)
Me
CH2Cl2, O2, rt
t
Bu
O Bu
regio-selective oxygenation OH
71%
O [Cu(MeCN)4](PF6) (20 mol%) DBED (40 mol%)
Me
t
OMe
O
MeO
CH2Cl2, O2, rt N Boc
dehydrogenated
N Boc 39-1 not isolated
N H 70% over 3-steps dehydronomuciferine
Scheme 39. ortho-Oxygenation of Phenol
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Page 74 of 129
The related synthesis of hydroquinone can be accomplished by para-hydroxylation of phenol (Scheme 40), although competitive catechol formation is often observed. Many catalytic systems have been developed in order to increase regio-selectivity for the 4position.28 Most notably, para-oxygenation of phenol can be conducted using O2 as the terminal oxidant with a salcomine catalyst, in which case para-quinones are produced preferentially.199
OH
OH
O
para-oxygenation R
or
R
R
OH heterogeneous catalyst + H2O2
O N O
Co
N O
+ O2
Scheme 40. para-Oxygenation of Phenol
The ortho-amination of phenols is an additional sub-class of phenolic oxidations that is widely practiced on both small and large scales. The corresponding 2-aminophenols are versatile synthetic intermediates, and important precursors to a broad range of medicinally relevant heterocycles (Scheme 41). Traditionally, the ortho-amination of
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ACS Catalysis
phenols is carried out in a two-step sequence, requiring nitration with HNO3 before reduction of the corresponding ortho-nitro-phenol.200 Recent advances have focused on direct amination that can bypass the intermediate nitro-arene, occurring via different mechanisms for C-N bond formation that can include oxidative coupling, EArS, or photoinduced coupling. In 2006, Jorgensen demonstrated an asymmetric ortho-amination of 2naphthols with diazo coupling partners, mediated by an organocatalyst and electrostatic interactions.201 In 2008, Luo demonstrated the ortho-amination of 2-naphthols with substituted hydrazines, taking advantage of a conceptually distinct C-N bond formation.202 More direct, oxidative C-N coupling reactions employing amines were reported by Patureau203 in 2015 and Xia204 in 2016, in which the nitrogen center is believed to be oxidized to the corresponding N-centered radical.205-206 In general, most of these methods are limited to naphthols or phenols with para-substitution, and the nitrogen coupling partner can be limited in scope. An alternative strategy, employing a 1-pot, sequential process consisting of ortho-oxygenation followed by amine condensation was reported by Lumb and co-workers.194, 207-208 Condensation onto the more electrophilic carbonyl of the ortho-quinone triggers re-aromatization via a [1,5]-hydrogen atom shift. This protocol
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Page 76 of 129
has been used for the synthesis of 2-aminophenols, 2-diazophenols, 2-pyrrolylphenols, as well as benzoxazole and benzoxazinone heterocycles. While versatile, the method suffers from a limited scope in the phenol, since most reported cases employ phenols with relatively pronounced electronic or steric bias.
OH
OH R1
N
R1
conditions
R2
N
R2
X R
R
a) Traditional Approach
c) Concerted Amination OH
OH
OH
R
Ph
NH2
reduction R
R
OH
OH
NO2
HNO3
R NO2
O
O
H
Br 94%
Luo 2008
S d) EArS-type Amination
cueme + O2
CF3
N H
OH
CF3
90% 88% e.e.
67% o-/p- = 57/43
H
Boc N
N
HO
H
Boc NH2
HO
NR*3
N H
O N H
N
OH
chiral amine
MeO SO42-
S
OH
S
MeO
N
e) Amine Condensation on orho-Quinones H
N
O
OH
69%
H
OH
Xia 2017 Ar2
OH
S
S
Xia 2016
N H
PC, (NH4)2K2O8 blue LED -
-e |H
Ar1
N
OH
R
Ph
Ar2
OR
Ph
Ar2
O
BF4
O
R1
N
R2
OH
N
OBz R
R1
R
OH R2
N
R
N
[1,5]-H shift
R1 N
N
R2
OH N R
Ar
OH N
N R
OH
O R
R [Fe]
N R
R' R' N
FeCl3
H
condensation
O
Ph
O
OR
Luo 2016
O R
H
PC =
Ar1
limited to para-oxygen substituted phenols
R
orthooxygenation
O
See Scheme 37 for more details
(Ar-OH)
+
N
OH
Boc
N
Jorgensen 2006
S N
SO4
NH2
N
Boc
OH
N
h
N
OH
OH
S2O82-
N
NH2
F 3C
H
Boc
Boc
*NR3
Patureau 2015
Ar1
OH
80 oC limited to naphthols and quinolinols
b) Radical Amination
NH2
Me
Br
NH2
NH2
N
OH
R
R
R1, R2 = alkyl
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ACS Catalysis
Scheme 41. ortho-Amination of Phenol
A mechanistically distinct protocol for the perfluoroalkylation of phenols was recently reported by Melchiorre (Scheme 42)209
involving the excited state of the phenoxide
anion, which is generated by visible light photo-excitation. While only moderate levels of
ortho- / para-selectivity, as well as mono- and di-functionalization were observed for electron deficient phenols, the method does provide a non-traditional approach to C-H functionalization via a radical mechanism under redox-neutral conditions.
NH Me2N
OH RF
R
OH
NMe2
(2.5 equiv)
I
R
MeCN, 25 oC 23 W CFL
OH
RF
OH
MeO2C
C6F13
C6F13
OH C6F13
C6F13
CHO
50%
C6F13
40%
OH
O
30% *
O
RF
R
R
R
R RF
chain propagation O
H+ work-up
R
O
R RF
O
I
h
base
O
O
Me
RF
R RF
RF
I
I
I
O RF R
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Scheme 42. Perfluoroalkylation of Phenol Using Visible Light Photo-redox
3. C3-Functionalization The meta functionalization of phenol is challenging because C3 and C5 are not electronically activated, nor are they easily accessible via chelate assisted metalation. As a result, examples of meta-C-H functionalization are limited. In 2013, Yu et al. reported a stepwise approach for meta-olefination by the incorporation of a nitrile template for remote, directed C-H activation (Scheme 43).128 The method achieved remarkably high selectivity for the meta position, with ratios of up to 98:2, favoring meta functionalization of over
ortho or para. Phenols with ortho-, meta- or para-substituents were compatible, although a relatively limited scope of substituents was demonstrated. While α,β-unsaturated esters were the best coupling partners, substituted styrenes could also be used to provide moderate yields of the vinyl-substituted products. In 2016, the same group also developed a meta-functionalization of phenol derivatives using a consecutive ortho- C-H activation strategy.210 With the pyridyl directing group installed on the oxygen atom of the phenol starting material, an ortho- C-H palladation can occur with Pd(OAc)2, followed by migratory insertion into the double bond of norbornene, which set the stage for a secondary C-H activation of the meta- C-H bond of the original phenol molecule. A final oxidative addition into the aryl iodide on the Pd(II) intermediate
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followed by reductive elimination affords the final product. Yields of up to 91% were reported for 12 substrates.
R cat. Pd(OAc)2 / Ac-Gly-OH
OH
R
OH
R
AgOAc, HFIP, 90 oC
H
R
Yu 2013 T
O
i. installation of template
O
iii. removal of template
T
O
ii. directedmeta-arylation
O
R
R H
R
T
O
T
O Me
O
O
NC
CO2Et
CO2Et
60% m:others = 95;5
O
T
O
T
O
Me
Br
O
O
CO2Et
PO(OEt)2
OMe
77% m:others = 87:13
83% m:others = 89:11
O
Ar-I, Norbornene AgOAc
R
CF3
36%
cat. Pd(OAc)2/L
DG
O
NC
86% m:others = 98:2
T
O
N
T=
DG
R
Yu 2016
H
Ar Me
O
DG
DG =
DG Pd
N
OAc
L=
H
Ar N
DG
O
H
R H
O
H
R
NHAc
R
O
DG O
O
H
R
Pd L n OAc
H
Pd L n
O
DG
Pd L n I
OH DG
H
H
DG I
Cl MeO2C
O
Ar
Ar
O 53%
81%
Ar OMe
Ar-I
58%
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Scheme 43. Directed meta-Functionalization of Phenol
In 2014, Larrosa et al. reported a one-pot meta-functionalization procedure using carboxylate as a traceless directing group (Scheme 44).211 Their strategy installs a carboxylate at C2 by a Kolbe-Schmitt reaction, prior to carboxylate directed C-H arylation.
In situ Ag promoted decarboxylation then provided the formal product of a meta-arylation. Both electron-rich and electron-deficient phenols were tolerated, and exclusive formation of the meta-functionalized products was observed. The conditions do require relatively harsh conditions for the carboxylation, which must be conducted at high pressures of CO2 and elevated reaction temperatures.
OH
OH
KOH, CO2 (25 atm) 190 oC, 2h, then
H R
R
ArI, PEPPSI-IPr (2 mol%) Ag2CO3 AcOH, 130 oC, 16 h
H
Ar
OH
i. orthocarboxylation
OH CO2H
ii. directedortho-arylation
CO2H
R
iii. decarboxylation
R
H or para-carboxylic acid OH
Ar
OH
OH
R = OMe, 63% F, 46% Cl, 65% R Ph, 56% CHO, 50% NO2, 54%
Cl N 48%
Cl
R
Me
R = Me, 75% MeO, 25% Me OCF3, 69% Br, 60%
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ACS Catalysis
Scheme 44. meta-Functionalization of Phenol with a Traceless Directing Group
Whereas the meta-position of phenols is not electronically activated, the corresponding de-aromatized quinone ketal becomes electrophilic at this position. This allows nucleophilic addition followed by elimination to restore aromaticity, and provides a conceptually distinct approach to meta-functionalization. This mode of reactivity was described as early as 1907 during biochemical investigations on the oxidative metabolism of tyrosine to homogentisic acid.212 In 1952, Witkop and Goodwin described related rearrangements during Pb(OAc)4-mediated Wesley oxidations of para-cresol.213 Subsequent studies have dramatically improved synthetic utility, and modern methods now employ hypervalent iodine (PIDA) in MeOH to create the initial quinone ketal (Scheme 45).214-220 Subsequent conjugate addition of nucleophiles, including indoles, enolates or aryl radicals followed by re-aromatization via the elimination of MeOH provide the corresponding meta-functionalized products.
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O
Page 82 of 129
O OMe
R
OMe
R
MeO
OMe
OH
OH
O
Nu-H
PhI(OAc)2 R
nucleophile
MeOH
1,4-addition
oxidative umpolung
then acid or heat - MeOH
R
OMe
R Nu
common dearomatized intermediates electrophile OH
OMe OMe
CO2Me
NH indole 96% nucleophile Liao 1999
OH MeO
MeOH condensation
HO
Me
NH
NH 80% Chittimalla 2014
53% Fan 2011
OH
OH MeO
O
OH
N 46% Ghorai 2016
OMe
Me
O
86% Chittimalla 2014 OH
O Bu3SnH AIBN O
enolate nucleophile
MeO
EtO2C
MeO
OBn
MeO
I
radical addition
H+ MeO
O
- MeOH Clive 2004
O
Scheme 45. Hypervalent Iodine-Mediated meta-Functionalization of Phenol
A conceptually related, but mechanistically distinct approach to functionalize the
meta-position of phenols can be triggered by ortho-oxygenation (Scheme 46). This leads to the net functionalization of two aromatic C-H bonds, and provides a rapid entry into polyfunctional aromatic rings. In 2016, Lumb et al. described a catalytic aerobic functionalization of phenols with pendant amides that provided oxindoloquinones in high
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ACS Catalysis
yields across a broad substrate scope.221 Because of its electronic differentiation, the resulting ortho-quinone could be selectively functionalized at the more electron deficient carbonyl, to provide a range of C2, C5-difunctionalized oxindoles with complete regiocontrol. Mechanistic studies support the formation of a Cu(II) semiquinone radical complex as the immediate product of ortho-oxygenation, which undergoes oxidative C-O coupling with the starting phenol. Subsequent cyclization by a mechanism of addition/elimination closes the lactam and liberates the starting material, which can reenter the catalytic cycle. In a more recent contribution, the same team reported an efficient protocol for the synthesis of polyfunctional indoles from inexpensive and commercially available Boc-Tyr-OMe. ortho-Oxygenation affords coupled ortho-quinones, which can be directly cyclized by careful adjustment of pH in an alcoholic solvent to provide 5,6difunctionalized indoles on scales of up to 13 g.222 By capitalizing upon the complementary directing abilities of the C5-OH and the indole N-H, the team could then direct C-H functionalization to C4 and C7, selectively. Indoles of this family are found in many natural products, pharmaceuticals and bio-materials, making these polyfunctional indoles attractive synthetic platforms.
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a) Difunctionalization OH
OH H
R
2,5-difunctionalization
H
X
= (ArOH)
HX X = O, NTs
Oxygenation / C-O Coupling
Selective Functionalization
O
O
O
Cyclization by Substitution
ArO
O
ArOH re-enters cycle
HX
X
b) Oxindole Synthesis OH
OH H
OH F
OAc
OAc
OH
1. oxidation Ph
H 2. further functionalization
PhHN O
Ph
N O
O C-F
bond formed:
Ph
N
N O
C-O
C-C
c) Indole Synthesis OH
OMe 1. Cu / O2 2. MeOH / H2SO4
HN
BocHN CO2Me Boc-Tyr-OMe
OMe OH
MeO2C
OH
OH Directed C-H Bromination or Borylation
HN
MeO2C
66% 13.4 g prepared in a single pass
= Br or Bpin
Scheme 46. Catalytic Aerobic Poly-Functionalization of Phenols
4. C4-Functionalization Methods for para-functionalization can capitalize on the strong electronic effects of the phenol, as well as the reduced sterics of C4 relative to either C2 or C6. In 2011, Gaunt
et al. reported a para-selective, Cu-catalyzed arylation of phenols or their corresponding aryl ethers with diaryliodonium salts (Scheme 47).223 While para-arylated products are
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Page 86 of 129
formed preferentially, ortho-arylation is also observed when the para-position is substituted.224
OR2 Ar2IOTf or Ar2IBF4
R1
OR2
Cu(OTf)2 (20 mol%) R1
1,2-DCE 40-70 oC
Ar O
OMe
OMe
Ph
Ph
OH
NHPiv Ph 75%
80%
Ph 76%
Me O
52% OR2
H
Ph
R1 H
Ar
H
I
HO
Ar 64%
steric-driven
Scheme 47. Cu-Catalyzed para-Selective Arylation
In 2014, Zhang et al. reported a gold-catalyzed para-selective C-H alkylation between phenols and α-diazoesters (Scheme 48).225 The method remained efficient across a broad scope of coupling partners, resulting in 39 examples with yields of up to 99%. ortho-Functionalization is also possible when the para-position is blocked, however
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ACS Catalysis
this results in the corresponding lactone, following spontaneous lactonization of the phenol onto the ester.
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tBu OH
OH LAuCl (5 mol%) AgSbF6 (5 mol%)
R1
CO2R2
P
OAr
Au
L = (2,4-tBu2C6H3O)3P 39 examples up to 99%
OH
R1
O ArO
DCM, rt
N2 Ar
tBu
CO2R2
Ar
OH
CO2R2
Ar
OH
OH
Cl Ph
O
CO2Et
CO2Me
CO2Me S
NH 99%
91%
85%
56%
OH
O
OH
OH
Ph
R
Ph
CO2Et 83%
Ph
R = Me, 98% Cl, 83% I, 92% allyl, 68% CO2Me
H
O
H
H
O 97% (1;1 d.r.)
Scheme 48. Au-Catalyzed para-Alkylation with α-Diazoesters
In 2013, Zhou et al. reported a Pd-catalyzed arylation of phenols with aryl iodides in the presence of AgOTFA that is selective for para-functionalization (Scheme 49).226 Interestingly, in their first generation conditions, the iodoarene required an orthosubstituent. The authors proposed the oxidative addition of Pd(II) into the Ar-I bond, in which case the additional chelation could help to stabilize the Pd(IV) intermediate. Additional refinement in 2015 expanded the scope of iodoarenes to substrates lacking this coordinating group.227
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OH
Page 90 of 129
OH
cat. Pd(OAc)2 Ar
R1
I
R1
AgOTFA TsOH H2O, 25 oC
Ar OH
OH
OH OAc
I HO
I
O CO2H
85%
proposed Pd(IV) intermediate
65%
OH
O R
Modified Conditions: cat. Pd(OAc)2, AgOAc, TsOH, HOAc/H2O, 70 oC OH
L
CO2H
NMe2
69%
Pd
OH
OH Br
Cl
Ph
72% (p:o = 17:1)
NO2 87%
55%
Br 82%
Scheme 49. para-Arylation of Phenol
Although para-selective allylation of phenol is challenging due to the competitive Oand ortho-allylation, several examples of direct para-allylation have been reported (Scheme 50). In 1999, Kocovsky reported a Mo-catalyzed para-selective allylation of phenol with allylic acetates that afforded an 88:12 ratio between para- and ortho-allylated products.228 A similar transformation was reported by Pregosin in 2006, in which the authors developed a catalytic system based upon Ru that generated an 84:16 ratio of the
para-allylated product to all other regioisomers.229 More recently, Discolo reported a Pdcatalyzed allylation that is para-selective when employing electron deficient allyl coupling
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ACS Catalysis
partners.230 These conditions require a relatively high catalyst loading and excess phenol (2 equiv) to minimize competitive O-allylation. These conditions have also led to good chirality transfer when employing a chiral allyl carbonate starting material.
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OCO2Et
Me OH
[Mo(CO)4Br2]2 (5 mol%) Kocovsky 1999 Me
94% 88:12 (p:o)
CO2Et
OAc
Ph
Page 92 of 129
OH
S
OH
Pd(PPh3)4 (8 mol%) Discolo 2017 CO2Et
Ph S
OBoc (PF6)2
DMF Ru DMF Ph Ru complex
Ph Ru complex (3 mol%)
41%
OH
Pregosin 2006 Ph 100% C-C selectivity 84:6:10 (p:m:o)
Scheme 50. para-Allylation of Phenol
Recently, Wen and Xu reported a para-selective amination of phenols with iminoquinone ketals catalyzed by a Brønsted acid (Scheme 51).231 A broad range of phenols can be converted to the corresponding protected biaryl anilines with good yields and regioselectivity. However, the scope of the iminoquinone ketal coupling partner was relatively limited. The authors proposed a [5,5]-sigmatropic rearrangement of a mixed ketal in order to explain the high selectivity for para-functionalization, but did not comment on the possibility of a competitive [3,3]-rearrangement leading to ortho-functionalization (for example, see Scheme 15).
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ACS Catalysis
OH N
OH
PG (PhO)2POOH (1 mol%)
R2
R1
R1
CH2Cl2, 0 oC PG
MeO
N
R2
OMe OMe
OH
Boc
OH
Me
N Me
OMe 85%
Ms
Me
N
O Me
N Ms Me
MeO Me
OMe 98%
[5,5]-sigmatropic rearrangement
Scheme 51. Para-Amination of Phenol via Rearrangement
In 2017, Hwang et al. reported a Cu-catalyzed visible light-promoted para-selective carbonylation of phenol with terminal alkynes under aerobic conditions (Scheme 52).232 The para-selective oxygenation of phenol was involved, which produces the para-quinone intermediate. Subsequent [2+2] cycloaddition with a Cu(II) acetylide followed by further ring opening / oxidative cleavage provides the one-carbon degraded product. A broad range of aryl- and alkyl-substituted alkynes were shown to be compatible, as were phenols with either 2- or 3-substitution. More recently, the mechanism of this transformation was interrogated by computations.233
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OH
Page 94 of 129
OH
CuCl (5 mol%) R
R
R CH3CN, O2 rt, blue LEDs
H
R OH
OH
O OH
Me
Me
Me Me
Me Ph
O
Ph
from 2-Me-phenol, 82% from 3-Me-phenol, 88%
O
OH
HO
Ph
80% OH
O
O 74% OH
HO
O
O
S 88%
82% CuCl
CuI
Ph
CuI
H
Ph
blue LEDs Ph
84%
*
O2
O
O2CuII
Ph
O
paterno-Buchi type [2+2] cycloaddition O
CuCl O2 h
O
OH O2 Ph
Ph
O
O CuII
CuII O
H O
OH
O
Ph O
Ph
OH
Ph
O
OH
Scheme 52. para-Selective Carbonylation by Aerobic / Photoredox Catalysis
Recently, Faber and Glueck reported a one-pot process for the enzymatic paraselective hydroxyethylation of phenol (Scheme 53).234 Four enzyme-catalyzed
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ACS Catalysis
transformations sequentially convert phenols into tyrosine derivatives, cinnamic acids, styrenes, and finally chiral secondary alcohols. The process combines four distinct enzymatic processes, and is conducted under buffered conditions (pH 8) using sodium pyruvate and ammonium chloride to provide alcohols in yields of up to 84% and enantiomeric excess of 92% e.e.
a) hydroxyethylation sequence
OH
OH
OH
O
R
CO2H
TAL
R
TPL
H 2N
H 2O
R
NH3 CO2H
NH3
CO2H
OH
OH FDC
TPL: tyrosine phenol lyase TAL: torosine ammonia lyase FDC: ferulic acid decarboxylase FDC*: FDC - hydratase variant
FDC*
R
CO2
R
H 2O OH
b) Substrate scope for the hydroxyethylation sequence OH OH
R
OH
OH
TPL/TAL/ FDC/FDC*
OH
F
Br
R sodium pyruvate NH4Cl pH 8 buffer
F OH OH
84% 78% e.e.
OH 58% 88% e.e.
OH 72% 85% e.e.
Scheme 53. para-Selective Enzymatic Hydroxyethylation of Phenol
5. External-Functionalization
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Page 96 of 129
Phenols are also suitable directing groups for C-H functionalization reactions of substituents at C2 or C6. Because these C-H bonds are not part of the same aromatic nucleus as the phenol itself, we have categorized this family as external functionalization. Because of the more favorable ring sizes that can form by metalation under these conditions, external C-H functionalization can often be favored over the corresponding internal C-H functionalization (see Scheme 22 for a previously discussed example). Among all of the substrates that have been examined for external C-H functionalization, 2-arylphenols are among the most popular, and have been employed in both intermolecular coupling reactions as well as intramolecular cyclizations (Scheme 54 - 57). In 2004, Zhou et al. reported an intramolecular borylation of 2-arylphenol that proceeded through the di-chloro-boron-phenolate (Scheme 54).235 Subsequent borylation via EArS was promoted by AlCl3, which afforded the corresponding boronate as a single regioisomer following a hydrolytic work up. Subsequent diversification by either arylation or carbonylation proceeds smoothly to produce the corresponding biaryls or lactones, respectively.
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ACS Catalysis
Scheme 54. External C-H Borylation of 2-Arylphenol
OH R
R1
O
O
BCl3
OH
BCl2
2
cat. AlCl3 R2
R1
OH
OH
B
B
O
O
then H2O
B
R2
R1 OH
Me
O
B
F CH3
99%
80%
98%
O Me
O
Pd(OAc)2 CO
Pd(PPh3)4 PhI, K2CO3
Me
OH
futher diversification 96%
Ph 81%
In 1997, Miura et al. reported the first example of a Pd-catalyzed, phenol-directed CH arylation of 2-arylphenol with aryl iodides (Scheme 55).236 Mechanistically, the reaction is consistent with C-H insertion to afford a six-membered palladacycle, form which oxidative addition and reductive elimination can afford the corresponding biaryl. Under similar conditions, the authors also found that C8-arylation of 1-naphthol was possible, even when the C2 position of naphthol was not substituted. In 2013, Manabe demonstrated compatibility for a similar arylation using aryl-nonaflates.237 Because of their complementary reactivity with aryl iodides, their introduction allowed for the
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Page 98 of 129
synthesis of more complex poly-arylated products by sequential arylation/Nf protection steps.
cat. Pd(OAc)2
OH Ar
OH
I Cs2CO3 100 oC
H
Ar
53-1
53-2 OH
NO2
Ph
OH
Ph
Ph
63%
72%
70%
53-2 Cs Ln O
OH
OH
Ln
70%
OMe Ar-I
Pd
Ar Pd
Ln Pd
Ar Ln Pd
Ar
I
O 53-1
CsHCO3
Cs2CO3 Cs2CO3
CsI CsHCO3
Iterative chain growth with Ar-ONf for polymer synthesis: ONf MeO
standard condition
NfF, NEt3
Ph
OH
MeO OH
standard condition
=
64%
Pd(OAc)2 PCy3 Cs2CO3 Mesitylene, reflux
ONf
MeO 86% Pd(OAc)2 OH SPhos, KF
NfF, NEt3
OH
MeO
97%
(HO)2B
ONf MeO standard condition 73%
OH
MeO
Ph OH
64%
Scheme 55. External C-H Arylation of 2-Arylphenol
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ACS Catalysis
Miura’s group also reported the external C-H olefination of 2-arylphenols (Scheme 56), demonstrating migratory insertion from the corresponding palladacycle.238 Subsequent β-hydride elimination affords the product of vinylation and a Pd-hydride, from which Pd(OAc)2 is regenerated by a Cu(OAc)2/O2 couple. In cases where electron-deficient olefins were employed, additional cyclization of the OH group led to the corresponding cyclic ether. In 2014, Sun reported a similar vinylation that employed benzoquinone as the terminal oxidant.239
R OH O
cat. Pd(OAc)2
OH R H
or
Cu(OAc)2·H2O 4 Å MS, air 80 - 120 oC
56-1 CO2Et
56-2
56-3
R
CO2nBu
CONMe2
OH O
O
O
Ph 56%
44%
H 2O
56-2 or 56-3 Ln H R
2 Cu(OAc)2 H Pd OAc
27%
Cl
53%
1/2 O2 2 HOAc
2 Cu(OAc)
56-1
R
LnPd(OAc)2
HOAc
HOAc R Ln
Ln Pd O
AcO
Pd
O
R
R Ln Pd O
Ln O
Pd
HOAc
Scheme 56. External C-H Vinylation of 2-Arylphenol
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In 2011, Liu et al. reported a Pd-catalyzed intramolecular dehydrogenative coupling of 2-arylphenols to afford the corresponding dibenzofurans (Scheme 57).240 The authors proposed a reductive elimination from the 6-membered ring palladacycle to account for C-O bond formation, which was promoted by the electron rich and sterically encumbered NHC-ligand. To close the catalytic cycle, Pd-(0) is then re-oxidized by air to Pd(OAc)2. The authors reported a broad substrate scope that tolerated electron donating and withdrawing substituents throughout the substrate. In the same year, Yoshikai et al. reported a similar Pd-catalyzed dibenzofuran synthesis, but proposed an alternative Pd(II)/Pd(IV) cycle on account of using tert-butyl peroxybenzoate as the terminal oxidant.241 In 2012, Zhu et al. reported that Cu could promote a similar dibenzofuran synthesis from 2-arylphenol (Scheme 57),242-243 however, this system required an electron withdrawing substituent at C4 of the phenol or a directing group ortho- to the site of C-H activation, for good yields.
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OH
H
cat. Pd(OAc)2
R2
oxidant
R1
R1
Liu 2011 | cat. Pd(OAc)2 / IPr, air SiMe3 O
R Cl
O O
O
82%
R2
O
Ts
48%
O H
N
67%
IPr
Pd
O
Pd (II) - Pd (0) cycle
Yoshikai 2011 | cat. Pd(OAc)2 / 3-NO2-py, BzOOtBu O
Br
O O
O
40%
Cl
55%
Cu-based conditions: special substrates required
O
O
Ln Pd
X
O
Pd (IV) - Pd (II) cycle
55%
AcHN
o-DG
O cat. CuBr air 72%
NO2
X
cat. Cu(OAc)2 O2
R1 = p-EWG
EWG
56%
R2 = o-DG
F
Scheme 57. Dibenzofuran Synthesis
In addition to the Csp2-H bonds of aromatic rings, phenol directed C-H insertions into vinyl or heteroaryl substituents have been reported. In 2014, Liu et al. reported a Cucatalyzed, Ag-mediated synthesis of 2-sulfonylbenzofurans by the addition of sodium sulfonates to 2-hydroxycinnamic acids using a tandem decarboxylative sulfonylation / oxidative cyclization cascade (Scheme 58).244 Good substrate scope was demonstrated for both the phenol and sulfonate coupling partners, to provide more than 25 examples
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with yields of up to 79%. Mechanistically, a proto-decarboxylation occurred followed by an oxidative sulfonylation of the terminal alkene. Subsequent phenol-directed C-H metalation followed by oxidative insertion and reductive elimination gave the benzofuran product.
R2-SO2Na CuCl2·2H2O (50 mol%) AgTFA (2.5 equiv)
O OH
R1
Cs2CO3 (2.0 equiv) DMF, 80-100 oC
OH
O R1
S
F
O
Ts
S
Ts
O
BnO
O
O 51%
67% O S
O R2
O
O Me
72%
O R = Me, 79% OMe, 77% F, 56% Br, 52% NHAc, 72%
O
Ts O 81%
R O OH
[Ag] or [Cu] protodecarboxylation
OH
OH
SO2R
RSO2 2 Ag
SO2R
OH
2 Ag
OH [Cu] SO2R
SO2R
O2 O [Cu]
[Cu] O
SO2R O
Scheme 58. Benzofuran Synthesis via External C-H Functionalization of Phenol
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In 2015, Nachtsheim et al. reported a Rh-catalyzed alkynylation of 2-vinylphenols, using a hypervalent I-(III)-alkyne transfer agent (TIPS-EBX*) as the electrophilic source of the alkyne (Scheme 59).245 This chemistry has shown good scope on both the vinyl and aromatic components, and control experiments demonstrated the requirement of a free phenol for successful C-H functionalization.
TIPS
TIPS
H R'
R
2.5 mol% [(Cp*RhCl2)2] 1.5 equiv DIPEA
I
MeCN, rt OH
R
CH3
OH
TIPS-EBX*
TIPS
X
TIPS
Cl
CH3
O
R'
1.5 equiv TIPS-EBX*
TIPS
O
CH3
OH
OH
X = F, 86%, 3 h X= Cl, 90%, 2 h X = Br, 93%, 2 h X = NO2, 92%, 2 h
Ph OH
MeO
Cl 98%, 20 min
TIPS
84%, 3 h
TIPS
TIPS OH CH3 H 3C
HO
95%, 2 h
CH3
CH3
S
OCH3 0%, 8 h
0%, 8 h
Scheme 59. Alkynylation of 2-Vinylphenol
In 1998, Larock et al. reported a novel dihydrobenzofuran and dihydrobenzopyran synthesis via a Pd-catalyzed vinylation / cyclization cascade between 2-vinyl or 2-
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allylphenol and vinyl halides (Scheme 60).246 Good substrate scope in both components provided
a
direct
entry
into
structurally
diverse
dihydrobenzofuran
and
dihydrobenzopyran products. The proposed mechanism began by oxidative addition into the vinyl halides by Pd-(0), followed by migratory insertion and β-hydride elimination. Reinsertion of the Pd-H led to a -allyl complex, from which C-O bond formation could occur by coordination and reductive elimination or direct attack onto the allyl fragment.
cat. Pd(OAc)2 Na2CO3
OH R
R1
2
n = 0, 1
R1
n Bu4Cl DMF, 80 oC
X
n
n
X = Br, I, OTf
O
Ph
R2
O
major O
O
Ph Me
X =Br, 82%
X = Br, 75% cis/trans = 77/23
X = I, 68%
O
Me
O
Ph
O Ph
X = OTf, 76%
X = Br, 56% OH
OH
X
PdX
X = Br, 56%
-hydride elimination
OH Pd(H)X
migratory insertion Pd
migratory insertion
oxidative addition
X
Pd0
OH O
O - Pd (0) -X-
deprotonation
PdX
PdX
Scheme 60. Tandem Vinylation / Cyclization of 2-Vinyl or 2-Allylphenol
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7. Conclusion In surveying the recent literature on transformations that directly functionalize the CH bonds of phenols, we have identified a number of methodologies that are increasingly capable of overcoming longstanding challenges of selectivity. These include hydrogen bonding or electrostatic interactions between the phenol and a substrate-catalyst complex to direct C-H functionalization to the ortho-position. Metal-catalyzed C-H insertion, directed by increasingly sophisticated templates, has given rise to selective metafunctionalization, which remains an important area for future development. In this context, the temporary disruption of aromaticity by oxidation can provide a complementary means of activating the meta-position of phenols that can offer advantages to synthetic efficiency when O2 is employed as the terminal oxidant. Selective functionalization of the paraposition has also been addressed, and appears to follow classical considerations of sterics. Since phenols affect all stages of the chemical value chain, methodologies for their diversification can have wide-ranging impact. This can include the efficient preparation of versatile feedstocks, the late-stage functionalization of complex and biologically active natural products or polymer synthesis. While the primary source of
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phenols is currently benzene derived from petroleum, efforts to valorize the lignin fraction of biomass have led to an increasingly well-defined stream of phenolic building blocks. Successfully incorporating these small molecules into the existing chemical value chain is a requirement for the economic viability of emergent integrated bio-refineries. This will require increasingly efficient manipulation of phenols and their derivatives under conditions that are practical, low-cost and environmentally benign. We hope to have highlighted the current state of the art in phenol-directed C-H functionalization reactions, with the goal of motivating these continued developments.
AUTHOR INFORMATION
Corresponding Author *
[email protected] ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Financial support was provided by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Council (NSERC) of Canada (Discovery Grant to J.-P. L.); the Fonds de Recherche Quebecois
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Nature et Technologies (FRQNT) (Team Grant to J.-P. L.); McGill University Faculty of Science (Milton Leong Fellowship in Science to Z. H.).
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