A catalyst-free cross-coupling of isocyanates and triarylboranes for secondary amide synthesis

Literature Information

Publication Date 2023-11-23
DOI 10.1039/D3QO01617J
Impact Factor 5.281
Authors

You-Wei Wu, Mu-Xiang Chen, Yan Li, Lu-Min Hu, Lili Zhao, Zhenhua Jia, Xuefei Zhao, Xu-Hong Hu


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Abstract

Described herein is a distinct protocol for secondary amide formation through a catalyst-free cross-coupling of isocyanates with triarylboranes. As a practical strategy, this methodology avoids the use of moisture-sensitive organometallics, transition metals or any additives to allow the aryl transfer process to isocyanate electrophiles. Unlike the well-established frustrated interaction between triarylboranes and isocyanates to form direct Lewis acid–base adducts, this operationally simple and scalable reaction undergoes aryl migration to access valuable amides with good functional group compatibility. Conversion of abundant amines into amides has also been achieved in a stepwise procedure with satisfactory yields. Control experiments reveal that triphenylborane is identified to be the sole reactive organoboron reagent in the aryl transfer process. Density functional theory (DFT) calculations indicate that the reaction proceeds via four-membered-ring 1,3-phenyl migration.

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Organic Chemistry Frontiers

Organic Chemistry Frontiers
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Organic Chemistry Frontiers publishes high-quality research from across organic chemistry. Emphases are placed on studies that make significant contributions to the field of organic chemistry by reporting either new or significantly improved protocols or methodologies. Topics include, but are not limited to the following: Organic synthesis Development of synthetic methodologies Catalysis Natural products Functional organic materials Supramolecular and macromolecular chemistry Physical and computational organic chemistry

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