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C-H Insertions of Electrophilic Carbene Complexes

Carbene C-H (and Si-H, [695]) insertion is characteristic of electrophilic carbene complexes. In particular the insertion reactions of acceptor-substituted carbene complexes (Section 4.2) have become a valuable tool for organic synthesis. [Pg.122]

Few examples of C-H insertions have been reported for carbene complexes without electron-withdrawing groups attached to the carbene carbon atom [696]. Most of these are C-H insertions of cationic iron(IV) carbene complexes. [Pg.122]

This unique C-C bond-forming reaction has been applied to the synthesis of natural products [480,481]. In the examples reported, intramolecular C-H insertion into R3C-H groups was used for the construction of more elaborate, polycyclic carbon frameworks. Representative examples are listed in Table 3.7. [Pg.122]

Methyllithium (0.72 mL of a 1.4 M solution in N her, 1.0 mmol) is added over 2 min to a solution of l-trimethylsilyloxy-3-(2-phenylethyl)-l-cyclohexene (274 mg, 1.0 mmol) in THE at 0 °C under nitrogen. The resulting solution is stiired at [Pg.124]

1 h at—78 °G the mixture is left to warm to -30 °C and diluted with cold hexane (20 mL, -78 °G). Filtration and cpiicentration of the filtrate gives the crude iron alkyl complex as a red oil, which can be used in the next step without fiirttier purification. [Pg.124]


Fig. 4.6. Possible mechanism of the C-H insertion of electrophilic carbene complexes into aromatic C-H bonds (Z electron-withdrawing group). Fig. 4.6. Possible mechanism of the C-H insertion of electrophilic carbene complexes into aromatic C-H bonds (Z electron-withdrawing group).
Few examples of the formation of cyclopropanes by intramolecular C-H insertion of electrophilic carbene complexes have been reported. This methodology for cyclopropane preparation seems only to be suitable for polycyclic compounds with little conformational flexibility. Illustrative examples are listed in Table 4.3. [Pg.181]

Examples of the formation of four-membered rings by intramolecular C-H insertion of electrophilic carbene complexes are listed in Table 4.4. [Pg.181]

Table 4.4. Intramolecular 1,4-C-H insertions of electrophilic carbene complexes generated from diazocarbonyl compounds. Table 4.4. Intramolecular 1,4-C-H insertions of electrophilic carbene complexes generated from diazocarbonyl compounds.
Several examples have been reported for furanone formation by intramolecular C-H insertion of electrophilic carbene complexes [1006,1148] (Table 4.7). Yields can, however, be low with some substrates, possibly as a result of several potential side-reactions. Oxonium ylide formation and hydride abstraction, in particular, [1090,1149-1152] (see Section 4.2.9) seem to compete efficiently with the formation of some types of furanones. [Pg.187]

Few examples of preparatively useful intermolecular C-H insertions of electrophilic carbene complexes have been reported. Because of the high reactivity of complexes capable of inserting into C-H bonds, the intermolecular reaction is limited to simple substrates (Table 4.9). From the results reported to date it seems that cycloalkanes and electron-rich heteroaromatics are suitable substrates for intermolecular alkylation by carbene complexes [1165]. The examples in Table 4.9 show that intermolecular C-H insertion enables highly convergent syntheses. Elaborate structures can be constructed in a single step from readily available starting materials. Enantioselective, intermolecular C-H insertions with simple cycloalkenes can be realized with up to 93% ee by use of enantiomerically pure rhodium(II) carboxylates [1093]. [Pg.189]

Low-valent, 18-electron (Fischer-type) carbene complexes with strong n-acceptors usually are electrophilic at the carbene carbon atom (C ). These complexes can undergo reactions similar to those of free carbenes, e.g. cyclopropanation or C-H insertion reactions. The carbene-like character of these complexes becomes more pronounced when electron-accepting groups are directly bound to C (Chapter 4), whereas electron-donating groups strongly attenuate the reactivity (Chapter 2). [Pg.104]

The intramolecular addition of acylcarbene complexes to alkynes is a general method for the generation of electrophilic vinylcarbene complexes. These reactive intermediates can undergo inter- or intramolecular cyclopropanation reactions [1066 -1068], C-H bond insertions [1061,1068-1070], sulfonium and oxonium ylide formation [1071], carbonyl ylide formation [1067,1069,1071], carbene dimerization [1066], and other reactions characteristic of electrophilic carbene complexes. [Pg.177]

C-H Insertions into vinylic C-H bonds are also a common reaction of electrophilic carbene complexes. Insertions into aromatic or heteroaromatic C-H bonds can proceed via cyclopropanation and rearrangement (Figure 4.6). [Pg.180]

Table 4.3. Intramolecular 1,3-C-H insertion reactions of electrophilic carbene complexes. Table 4.3. Intramolecular 1,3-C-H insertion reactions of electrophilic carbene complexes.
If chiral catalysts are used to generate the intermediate oxonium ylides, non-racemic C-O bond insertion products can be obtained [1265,1266]. Reactions of electrophilic carbene complexes with ethers can also lead to the formation of radical-derived products [1135,1259], an observation consistent with a homolysis-recombination mechanism for 1,2-alkyl shifts. Carbene C-H insertion and hydride abstraction can efficiently compete with oxonium ylide formation. Unlike free car-benes [1267,1268] acceptor-substituted carbene complexes react intermolecularly with aliphatic ethers, mainly yielding products resulting from C-H insertion into the oxygen-bound methylene groups [1071,1093]. [Pg.205]

A variety of transition metal-carbene complexes have been prepared and characterized. None of these are known to efficiently effect intermolecular C-H insertion. An electrophilic iron carbcne complex can, however, participate in intramolecular C-H insertions (Section I.2.2.3.2.I.). More commonly, transition metal complexes are used to catalyze intramolecular C-H insertion starting with a diazo precursor. In these cases, the intermediate metal carbene complexes are not isolated. [Pg.1136]

Calculations performed for cyclopropanation with Fischer-type carbene complexes [28] indicate that the electrophilic attack of the carbene complex at the alkene and the final ring closure are concerted. Extrapolation from this result to the C-H insertion reaction (in which a a-bond instead of a 7i-bond is cleaved) suggests that C-H bond cleavage and the formation of the new C-C and C-H bonds might also be concerted (Figure 3.38). [Pg.122]

Fig. 3.38. Possible mechanism for the insertion of electrophilic iron(IV) carbene complexes into aliphatic C-H bonds. Fig. 3.38. Possible mechanism for the insertion of electrophilic iron(IV) carbene complexes into aliphatic C-H bonds.
However, with substrates prone to form carbocations, complete hydride abstraction from the alkane, followed by electrophilic attack of the carbocation on the metal-bound, newly formed alkyl ligand might be a more realistic picture of this process (Figure 3.38). The regioselectivity of C-H insertion reactions of electrophilic transition metal carbene complexes also supports the idea of a carbocation-like transition state or intermediate. [Pg.122]

The different synthetic applications of acceptor-substituted carbene complexes will be discussed in the following sections. The reactions have been ordered according to their mechanism. Because electrophilic carbene complexes can undergo several different types of reaction, elaborate substrates might be transformed with little chemoselectivity. For instance, the phenylalanine-derived diazoamide shown in Figure 4.5 undergoes simultaneous intramolecular C-H insertion into both benzylic positions, intramolecular cyclopropanation of one phenyl group, and hydride abstraction when treated with rhodium(II) acetate. [Pg.178]

The formation of six-membered or larger rings by intramolecular C-H bond insertion normally requires the attacked position to be especially activated towards electrophilic attack [1157,1158]. Electron-rich arenes or heteroarenes [1159-1162] and donor-substituted methylene groups can react intramolecularly with electrophilic carbene complexes to yield six- or seven-membered rings. Representative examples are given in Table 4.8. [Pg.189]

Electrophilic carbene complexes can react with amines, alcohols or thiols to yield the products of a formal X-H bond insertion (X N, O, S). Unlike the insertion of carbene complexes into aliphatic C-H bonds, insertion into X-H bonds can proceed via intermediate formation of ylides (Figure 4.7). [Pg.193]

Ylide formation, and hence X-H bond insertion, generally proceeds faster than C-H bond insertion or cyclopropanation [1176], 1,2-C-H insertion can, however, compete efficiently with X-H bond insertion [1177]. One problem occasionally encountered in transition metal-catalyzed X-H bond insertion is the deactivation of the (electrophilic) catalyst L M by the substrate RXH. The formation of the intermediate carbene complex requires nucleophilic addition of a carbene precursor (e.g. a diazocarbonyl compound) to the complex Lj,M. Other nucleophiles present in the reaction mixture can compete efficiently with the carbene precursor, or even lead to stable, catalytically inactive adducts L M-XR. For this reason carbene X-H bond insertion with substrates which might form a stable complex with the catalyst (e.g. amines, imidazole derivatives, thiols) often require larger amounts of catalyst and high reaction temperatures. [Pg.194]

Insertion can also be carried out on the C-H bonds of heteroaromatics. Masahiro Murakami of Kyoto University has described (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2003,125,4720) a Ru catalyst that will effect rearrangement of a silyl alkyne such as 10 into the vinylidene carbene. The intermediate Ru carbene complex is then electrophilic enough to insert into the aromatic C-H bond. The insertion is highly regioselective. The Au and the Ru alkylidene insertions are geometrically complementary, as Ru gives the E-alkcne. [Pg.179]

In certain cases, the metal-carbene complex derived from an unsaturated diazocarbonyl compound can be trapped intramolecularly in reactions other than cyclopropanation, e.g. C-H insertion and ylide formation by interaction with a heteroatom with a lone pair. Since the chemoselectivity is influenced by the electrophilicity of the metal-carbene complex, it may be controlled in favorable cases by the catalyst metal and its ligands or by the second substituent at the carbenoid carbon atom. [Pg.488]

Many rhodium(II) complexes are excellent catalysts for metal-carbenoid-mediated enantioselective C-H insertion reactions [101]. In 2002, computational studies by Nakamura and co-workers suggested the dirhodium tetracarboxylate catalyzed diazo compounds insertion reaction to alkanes C-H bonds proceed through a three-centered hydride-transfer-like transition state (Fig. 25) [102]. Only one rhodium atom of the catalyst is involved in the formation of rhodium carbene intermediate, while the other rhodium atom served as a mobile ligand, which enhanced the electrophilicity of the first one and facilitate the cleavage of rhodium-carbon bond. In this case, the metal-metal bond constitutes a special example of Lewis acid activation of Lewis acidic transition-metal catalyst. [Pg.179]

Ylides other than acceptor-substituted diazomethanes have only occasionally been used as carbene-complex precursors. lodonium ylides (PhI=CZ Z ) [1017,1050-1056], sulfonium ylides [673], sulfoxonium ylides [1057] and thiophenium ylides [1058,1059] react with electrophilic transition metal complexes to yield intermediates capable of undergoing C-H or N-H insertions and olefin cyclopropanations. [Pg.176]

It has been demonstrated35 that enolate trapping by the electrophilic iron-carbene complex 1 provides 2. Alkylation at sulfur followed by a-elimination again generates a carbene, which then inserts stoichiometrically 1,5 into the C —H bond to give the octahydroindenone 3. Several other applications of this cyclization have been published 3fi. [Pg.1137]

As already mentioned for rhodium carbene complexes, proof of the existence of electrophilic metal carbenoids relies on indirect evidence, and insight into the nature of intermediates is obtained mostly through reactivity-selectivity relationships and/or comparison with stable Fischer-type metal carbene complexes. A particularly puzzling point is the relevance of metallacyclobutanes as intermediates in cyclopropane formation. The subject is still a matter of debate in the literature. Even if some metallacyclobutanes have been shown to yield cyclopropanes by reductive elimination [15], the intermediacy of metallacyclobutanes in carbene transfer reactions is in most cases borne out neither by direct observation nor by clear-cut mechanistic studies and such a reaction pathway is probably not a general one. Formation of a metallacyclobu-tane requires coordination both of the olefin and of the carbene to the metal center. In many cases, all available evidence points to direct reaction of the metal carbenes with alkenes without prior olefin coordination. Further, it has been proposed that, at least in the context of rhodium carbenoid insertions into C-H bonds, partial release of free carbenes from metal carbene complexes occurs [16]. Of course this does not exclude the possibility that metallacyclobutanes play a pivotal role in some catalyst systems, especially in copper-and palladium-catalyzed reactions. [Pg.797]


See other pages where C-H Insertions of Electrophilic Carbene Complexes is mentioned: [Pg.122]    [Pg.179]    [Pg.122]    [Pg.179]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.231]    [Pg.49]    [Pg.243]    [Pg.386]    [Pg.236]    [Pg.28]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.482]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.366]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.340]    [Pg.423]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.273]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.2]   


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C -electrophiles

C complexation

C-H Insertion complexes

C-H complexes

C-H insertion

Carbene C-H insertion

Carbene electrophile

Carbene insertion

Carbenes C—H insertion

Carbenes electrophilicity

Carbenes insertion

Electrophiles carbenes

Electrophiles insertions

Electrophilic carbene

Electrophilic carbene complexes

Electrophilic carbenes

Electrophilic insertion

H Insertion

Insertion of carbenes

Of carbenes

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