Title: LONG-RANGE GOAL:
1LONG-RANGE GOAL Selective amination of CH-bonds
in Cu nitrene systems
2 SYSTEMS FOR DIRECT HYDROCARBON AMIDATION
- PhINTs / Mn porphyrinate
- PhINTs / Rh2(OAc)4
- ButOOCONHTs / Cu(OTf)2
- TsNCl(Na) / Cu(II)
Ru(salen)(PPh3)2 Ru(Tp)(PPh3)2Cl RuCl2(cod)n RuCl3x H2O Reaction condition 1.1 equ of substrate, r.t. 3 h 2 mol of catalyst
3 SUBSTRATE / AMIDATION SELECTIVITY
4 IN SITU PREPARATION of PhINTs ?
PhI(OAc)2 H2NR ? PhINR 2 AcOH
5 OTHER AMIDES H2NR AS A SOURCE OF NHR ?
H2NSO2Me ? PhINSO2Me ? H2NCOPh ?
PhINCOPh ?
6 SOME MECHANISTIC ASPECTS
7 SOME MECHANISTIC ASPECTS
8 SOME MECHANISTIC ASPECTS
Mechanism, postulated for Mn-porphyrin systems
Ru(N-N)2Cl2 PhINTs ?
Ru(N-N)2(NTs)Cl ES-MS, m/z 756
9JACS Communications 2003, 125, 12078-12079
Cyclohexane and Benzene Amination by Catalytic
Nitrene Insertion into C-H Bonds with the
Copper-Homoscorpionate Catalyst TpBr3Cu(NCMe) M.
Mar Diaz-Requejo, Tomas R. Belderrain, M. Carmen
Nicasio, Swiatoslaw Trofimenko, Pedro J. Perez
10 SIMPLE Cu CATALYSTS FOR CH AMINATION
OUR FINDINGS 1) Alkane amination AND
dehydrogenation/aziridination
2) Alkylarene amination AND amine
dehydrogenation
3) Simple CuII complexes are efficient catalysts
of these reactions
Activity of catalysts increases in the presence
of NaBArF4
11 EXAMPLE OF OLEFIN AZIRIDINATION
Table 1. Results of olefin aziridination with 1
equivalent of PhINTs in the presence of 5 mol
of (L)CuCl2 and no or 2 equivalents of NaBArF4
in CHCl3 at 296 K
Entry Substrate Yield of aziridine, on olefin (time, min) Yield of aziridine, on olefin (time, min) Yield of aziridine, on olefin (time, min) Yield of aziridine, on olefin (time, min) Yield of aziridine, on olefin (time, min) Yield of aziridine, on olefin (time, min)
Entry Substrate dpm dpp Cl-dpm Me-dpm (py)2 dipy
2 equivalents of NaBArF4 per (L)CuCl2 2 equivalents of NaBArF4 per (L)CuCl2 2 equivalents of NaBArF4 per (L)CuCl2 2 equivalents of NaBArF4 per (L)CuCl2 2 equivalents of NaBArF4 per (L)CuCl2 2 equivalents of NaBArF4 per (L)CuCl2
1 cis-Cyclooctene 66 (1) 82 (1) 83 (1) 67 (5) 83 (1) 73 (10)
2 Styrene 95 (1) 95 (1) 98 (1) 93 (2) 97 (10) a 98 (5)
3 Tetramethylethylene 76 (5) 81 (5) 91 (2) 75 (1) 94 (2) 50 (5)
4 tert-Butylethylene 49 (10) 60 (3) 63 (5) 31 (40) 55 (3)
5 Methyl acrylate 35 (30) 45 (30) 45 (20) 38 (25) 44 (5)
No NaBArF4 No NaBArF4 No NaBArF4 No NaBArF4 No NaBArF4 No NaBArF4
6 Styrene 97 (20) 81 (5) 65 (20) 92 (5)
7 Tetramethylethylene 51 (30) 67 (2) 55 (30) 89 (2)
8 cis-Cyclooctene 50 (15) 57 (1) 36 (60) 71 (2)
9 tert-Butylethylene 21 (30) 19 (15) 31 (15)
a 1 mol of catalyst
12 PLAUSIBLE MECHANISM OF CH AMINATION
- Facts in support of the scheme above
- Addition of PhINTs to CuII complex causes its
color change from blue to yellow (CuIII?). The
yellow color is gone when PhINTs reacted
completely. - Additional hypotheses
- 1) Dinuclear Cu complexes are responsible for
alkane and amine dehydrogenation - 2) Efficiency of Cu catalyst is a function of the
ability of L to withstand oxidative degradation - 3) Part of PhINTs forms less active nitrene
dimers TsNNTs
13 QUESTIONS / PLANS FOR FUTURE
- Are the reaction products, N-tosylamides /
aziridines, - good or bad ligands for CuII
based catalysis of nitrene transfer? - What is the catalyst resting state?
- If they are poor ligands, how to modify pyridine
ligands to achieve a better performance to cost
ratio? - Is it possible to detect spectroscopically (NMR,
UV-Vis etc) plausible CuIII - nitrene adducts? - Is it possible to prepare such robust ligands
which will allow isolation of Cu-nitrene adducts? - Will dinuclear-only Cu-complexes be more
efficient in catalytic dehydrogenation? - Is it possible to use TsNNTs as a source of
NTs? - How reactivity of Cu-nitrene adducts will be
influenced by the nature of R group in nitrenes
RN? Is it possible to enhance their reactivity so
that methane CH bonds can be attacked? Or tune
their reactivity so that only selective CH bond
cleavage will occur (3o-only, e.g.)?