A sequential procedure for the synthesis of 2,5-disubstituted thiazoles from terminal alkynes, sulfonyl azides, and thionoesters is reported. A copper(I)-catalyzed 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition of terminal alkynes with sulfonyl azides affords 1-sulfonyl-1,2,3-triazoles, which then react with thionoesters in the presence of a rhodium(II) catalyst. The resulting 3-sulfonyl-4-thiazolines subsequently aromatize
Cooperative bimetallic catalysis is a fundamental approach in modern synthetic chemistry. We report bimetallic cooperative catalysis for the direct decarbonylative heteroarylation of ubiquitous carboxylic acids via acyl C‐O/C‐H coupling. This novel catalytic system exploits the cooperative action of a copper catalyst and a palladium catalyst in decarbonylation, which enables highly chemoselective synthesis
Programmed synthesis of arylthiazoles through sequential C–H couplings
作者:Satoshi Tani、Takahiro N. Uehara、Junichiro Yamaguchi、Kenichiro Itami
DOI:10.1039/c3sc52199k
日期:——
A programmed synthesis of privileged arylthiazoles via sequential C–Hcouplings catalyzed by palladium or nickel catalysts has been accomplished. This versatile protocol can supply all possible arylthiazole substitution patterns (2-aryl, 4-aryl, 5-aryl, 2,4-diaryl, 2,5-diaryl, 4,5-diaryl, and 2,4,5-triaryl) from an unfunctionalized thiazole platform by 11 distinct synthetic routes. We have generated
Photoinduced Copper-Catalyzed C−H Arylation at Room Temperature
作者:Fanzhi Yang、Julian Koeller、Lutz Ackermann
DOI:10.1002/anie.201512027
日期:2016.4.4
Room‐temperature azole C−H arylations were accomplished with inexpensive copper(I) compounds by means of photoinduced catalysis. The expedient copper catalysis set the stage for site‐selective C−H arylations of non‐aromatic oxazolines under mild reaction conditions, and provides step‐economical access to the alkaloid natural products balsoxin and texamine.
practical Cu-catalyzed aerobicoxidativesynthesis of thiazoles was developed. This chemistry for the first time achieved thiazole construction from simple aldehydes, amines, and element sulfur through multiple Csp3–H bond cleavage processes. Molecular oxygen was used as a green oxidant in this oxidative protocol. The substrate scope is broad with the tolerance of aliphatic amines. The mechanistic study