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Oxidative Addition of Water, Alcohols, and Amines in Palladium Catalysis

Annette Grünwald, Frank W. Heinemann, Dominik Munz

2020Angewandte Chemie International Edition47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The homolytic cleavage of O-H and N-H or weak C-H bonds is a key elementary step in redox catalysis, but is thought to be unfeasible for palladium. In stark contrast, reported here is the room temperature and reversible oxidative addition of water, isopropanol, hexafluoroisopropanol, phenol, and aniline to a palladium(0) complex with a cyclic (alkyl)(amino)carbene (CAAC) and a labile pyridino ligand, as is also the case in popular N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) palladium(II) precatalysts. The oxidative addition of protic solvents or adventitious water switches the chemoselectivity in catalysis with alkynes through activation of the terminal C-H bond. Most salient, the homolytic activation of alcohols and amines allows atom-efficient, additive-free cross-coupling and transfer hydrogenation under mild reaction conditions with usually unreactive, yet desirable reagents, including esters and bis(pinacolato)diboron.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryChemoselectivityPalladiumHomolysisCatalysisAnilineCarbeneOxidative additionBond cleavageReductive eliminationMedicinal chemistryLigand (biochemistry)HeterolysisPhotochemistryReagentOrganic chemistryRadicalReceptorBiochemistryCatalytic Cross-Coupling ReactionsCatalytic C–H Functionalization MethodsN-Heterocyclic Carbenes in Organic and Inorganic Chemistry
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