Site-selective C-H bond carbonylation with CO and cobalt-catalysis

Utilization of anthropogenic greenhouse gas CO 2 for catalytic C-C bond formation via conversion to essentially valuable C1 synthons like CO is very challenging. The requirement of an efficient catalyst that has the ability to convert CO 2 into CO and activate inert C-H bonds is the bottleneck. We h...

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Veröffentlicht in:Catalysis science & technology 2018-11, Vol.8 (22), p.5963-5969
Hauptverfasser: Barsu, Nagaraju, Kalsi, Deepti, Sundararaju, Basker
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Zusammenfassung:Utilization of anthropogenic greenhouse gas CO 2 for catalytic C-C bond formation via conversion to essentially valuable C1 synthons like CO is very challenging. The requirement of an efficient catalyst that has the ability to convert CO 2 into CO and activate inert C-H bonds is the bottleneck. We herein demonstrate a tandem approach accomplished in a two-chamber system for efficient fluoride-mediated generation of CO from CO 2 using disilane as a deoxygenating reagent and utilization of the in situ -produced CO gas for C-H bond carbonylation using earth-abundant cobalt catalysts. The ease of handling CO 2 gas at atmospheric pressure allows us to prepare 13 C labelled compounds which are otherwise difficult to achieve. The procedure developed makes it possible to utilize CO 2 as a CO source, which can be widely applied as a C1 synthon that can be incorporated between C-H and N-H bonds of aromatic, hetero-aromatic and aliphatic carboxamides for the synthesis of various cyclic imides including spirocycles in a site-selective fashion. The late-stage derivatization of a well-known angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB), Telmisartan, and a well-known drug for very low-density lipoproteins (VLDLs), Gemfibrozil, is demonstrated. Further, to showcase the generality of the reaction, various pharmacologically important and privileged scaffolds like xanthone, coumarin and isatin have been synthesized with CO 2 under atmospheric pressure. Utilization of anthropogenic greenhouse gas CO 2 for catalytic C-C bond formation via conversion to essentially valuable C1 synthons like CO is very challenging.
ISSN:2044-4753
2044-4761
DOI:10.1039/c8cy02060d