Division of Chemical Sciences, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and Department of Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720, USA.
Acc Chem Res. 2012 Jun 19;45(6):814-25. doi: 10.1021/ar200190g. Epub 2011 Dec 8.
Over the last several decades, researchers have achieved remarkable progress in the field of organometallic chemistry. The development of metal-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions represents a paradigm shift in chemical synthesis, and today synthetic chemists can readily access carbon-carbon and carbon-heteroatom bonds from a vast array of starting compounds. Although we cannot understate the importance of these methods, the required prefunctionalization to carry out these reactions adds cost and reduces the availability of the starting reagents. The use of C-H bond activation in lieu of prefunctionalization has presented a tantalizing alternative to classical cross-coupling reactions. Researchers have met the challenges of selectivity and reactivity associated with the development of C-H bond functionalization reactions with an explosion of creative advances in substrate and catalyst design. Literature reports on selectivity based on steric effects, acidity, and electronic and directing group effects are now numerous. Our group has developed an array of C-H bond functionalization reactions that take advantage of a chelating directing group, and this Account surveys our progress in this area. The use of chelation control in C-H bond functionalization offers several advantages with respect to substrate scope and application to total synthesis. The predictability and decreased dependence on the inherent stereoelectronics of the substrate generally result in selective and high yielding transformations with broad applicability. The nature of the chelating moiety can be chosen to serve as a functional handle in subsequent elaborations. Our work began with the use of Rh(I) catalysts in intramolecular aromatic C-H annulations, which we further developed to include enantioselective transformations. The application of this chemistry to the simple olefinic C-H bonds found in α,β-unsaturated imines allowed access to highly substituted olefins, pyridines, and piperidines. We observed complementary reactivity with Rh(III) catalysts and developed an oxidative coupling with unactivated alkenes. Further studies on the Rh(III) catalysts led us to develop methods for the coupling of C-H bonds to polarized π bonds such as those in imines and isocyanates. In several cases the methods that we have developed for chelation-controlled C-H bond functionalization have been applied to the total synthesis of complex molecules such as natural products, highlighting the utility of these methods in organic synthesis.
在过去的几十年中,研究人员在有机金属化学领域取得了显著的进展。金属催化的交叉偶联反应的发展代表了化学合成的范式转变,如今,合成化学家可以从大量起始化合物中轻松获得碳-碳和碳-杂原子键。尽管我们不能低估这些方法的重要性,但进行这些反应所需的预官能化会增加成本并降低起始试剂的可用性。使用 C-H 键活化代替预官能化,为经典的交叉偶联反应提供了一种诱人的替代方案。研究人员通过在底物和催化剂设计方面的创造性进步,克服了与 C-H 键功能化反应相关的选择性和反应性挑战。关于基于空间效应、酸度以及电子和导向基团效应的选择性的文献报道现在已经很多。我们小组已经开发了一系列利用螯合导向基团的 C-H 键功能化反应,本综述调查了我们在这一领域的进展。在 C-H 键功能化中使用螯合控制具有相对于底物范围和对全合成的应用的几个优点。通常,由于底物固有立体电子效应的可预测性和依赖性降低,导致具有广泛适用性的选择性和高产率转化。螯合部分的性质可以选择作为后续修饰的功能处理。我们的工作始于使用 Rh(I)催化剂进行分子内芳香族 C-H 稠环反应,我们进一步将其发展为包括对映选择性转化。该化学的应用于在α,β-不饱和亚胺中发现的简单烯烃 C-H 键,使我们能够获得高度取代的烯烃、吡啶和哌啶。我们观察到与 Rh(III)催化剂的互补反应,并开发了一种与未活化烯烃的氧化偶联。对 Rh(III)催化剂的进一步研究使我们开发了用于与极化π键(如亚胺和异氰酸酯中的键)耦合 C-H 键的方法。在几种情况下,我们开发的用于螯合控制的 C-H 键功能化的方法已应用于复杂分子的全合成,例如天然产物,突出了这些方法在有机合成中的实用性。