A rhodium-catalyzed C–H functionalization with activated amides by decarbonylation has been developed. Notably, this is the first C–H arylation employing N-acylsaccharins as coupling partners to give biaryls in good to excellent yields. The highlight of the work is the high tolerance of functional groups such as formyl, ester, and vinyl and the use of a removable directing group.
Herein, we report that unstrained ketones can be efficiently employed as electrophiles in Suzuki–Miyaura reactions via catalytic activation of unstrained C–C bonds assist by an N-containing directing group. A wide range of aromatic ketones directly coupled with boronic ester with excellent functional group tolerance. This strategy provides an alternative and versatile approach to constructing biaryls
Iridium(<scp>iii</scp>)-catalyzed regioselective direct arylation of sp<sup>2</sup> C–H bonds with diaryliodonium salts
作者:Pan Gao、Li Liu、Zhuangzhi Shi、Yu Yuan
DOI:10.1039/c6ob01145d
日期:——
A regioselectivedirectarylation of arenes and olefins at the ortho position is reported. The key to the high selectivity is the appropriate choice of diaryliodonium salts as the arylating reagent in the presence of a cationic iridium(III) catalyst. The coordination of the metal with an oxygen atom or a nitrogen atom and subsequent C–H activation allows for directarylation with coupling partners
Rhodium-catalyzed regioselective direct C–H arylation of indoles with aryl boronic acids
作者:Liang Wang、Xing Qu、Zhan Li、Wang-Ming Peng
DOI:10.1016/j.tetlet.2015.04.015
日期:2015.6
A highly efficient Rh(III)-catalyzed direct C–H arylation of indoles with arylboronicacids under mild conditions has been developed. The methodology features wide substrate scope and excellent functional group compatibility (34 examples, up to 99% yield). The arylated products can also be conveniently transformed into biologically active polycyclic indole derivatives.
We report a chelation-assisted C–H arylation of various indoles with sterically and electronically diverse (hetero)arylsilanes enabled by cost-effective Cp*-free cobaltcatalysis. Key to the success of this strategy is the judicious choice of copper(II) fluoride as a bifunctional sliane activator and catalyst reoxidant. This methodology features a broad substrate scope and good functional group compatibility