Electrochemical C-O and C-N Arylation using Alternating Polarity in flow for Compound Libraries

Etherification and amination of aryl halide scaffolds are commonly used reactions in parallel medicinal chemistry to rapidly scan structure-activity relationships with abundant building blocks. Electrochemical methods for aryl etherification and amination demonstrate broad functional group tolerance...

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Veröffentlicht in:Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2024-11, p.e202413383
Hauptverfasser: Morvan, Jennifer, Kuijpers, Koen P L, Fanfair, Dayne, Tang, Bingqing, Bartkowiak, Karolina, van Eynde, Lars, Renders, Evelien, Alcazar, Jesus, Buijnsters, Peter J J A, Carvalho, Mary-Ambre, Jones, Alexander X
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Etherification and amination of aryl halide scaffolds are commonly used reactions in parallel medicinal chemistry to rapidly scan structure-activity relationships with abundant building blocks. Electrochemical methods for aryl etherification and amination demonstrate broad functional group tolerance and extended nucleophile scope compared to traditional methods. Nevertheless, there is a need for robust and scale-transferable workflows for electrochemical compound library synthesis. Herein we describe a platform for automated electrochemical synthesis of C-X arylation (X=NH, OH) in flow to access compound libraries. A comprehensive Design of Experiment (DoE) study identifies an optimal protocol which generates high yields across>30 aryl halide scaffolds, diverse amines (including electron-deficient sulfonamides, sulfoximines, amides, and anilines) and alcohols (including serine residues within peptides). Reaction sequences are automated on commercially available equipment to generate libraries of anilines and aryl ethers. The unprecedented application of potentiostatic alternating polarity in flow is essential to avoid accumulating electrode passivation. Moreover, it enables reactions to be performed in air, without supporting electrolyte and with high reproducibility over consecutive runs. Our method represents a powerful means to rapidly generate nucleophile independent C-X arylation compound libraries using flow electrochemistry.
ISSN:1433-7851
1521-3773
1521-3773
DOI:10.1002/anie.202413383