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Suzuki solid-support

Scheme 36 Scaffold decoration via Stille and Suzuki-Miyaura reactions on solid support... Scheme 36 Scaffold decoration via Stille and Suzuki-Miyaura reactions on solid support...
The Leznoff acetal linker 69 was used to anchor an aldehyde to the solid support and following a series of reactions, the aldehyde was released by acidic cleavage [78]. An application of this resin was demonstrated for a biaryl aldehyde library synthesis which incorporated a Suzuki-Miyaura reaction (Scheme 37) [79]. Cleavage was effected by a solution of 3 M HC1... [Pg.206]

Chamoin S, Houldsworth S, Kruse CG, Bakker WI, Snieckus V. The Suzuki-Miyaura cross coupling reactions on solid support. Link to solution phase directed ortho metalation. The Leznoff acetal linker approach to biaryl and heterobiaryl aldehydes. Tetrahedron Lett 1998 39 4179-4182. [Pg.224]

Interestingly, the Suzuki reaction worked smoothly on solid supports and high yields of a variety of products were reported under these reaction conditions (Eq. 11.22) [36]. 4-Bromo- and 4-iodobenzoic acid linked to Rink-amide TentaGel re-... [Pg.390]

The palladium-catalyzed coupling of boronic acids with aryl and alkenyl halides, the Suzuki reaction, is one of the most efficient C-C cross-coupling processes used in reactions on polymeric supports. These coupling reactions requires only gentle heating to 60-80 °C and the boronic acids used are nontoxic and stable towards air and water. The mild reaction conditions have made this reaction a powerful and widely used tool in the organic synthesis. When the Suzuki reaction is transferred to a solid support, the boronic add can be immobilized or used as a liquid reactant Carboni and Carreaux recently reported the preparation of the macroporous support that can be employed to efficiently immobilize and transform functionalized arylboronic adds (Scheme 3.12) [107, 246, 247]. [Pg.166]

Scheme 3.12 Solid supported boronic acids (144) as reagents for Suzuki couplings [107],... Scheme 3.12 Solid supported boronic acids (144) as reagents for Suzuki couplings [107],...
Spear et al. chose the Heck reaction to elaborate 4-iodophenylsulfonyl chloride attached to Rink amide resin, that is, sulfonamide 18.43 The reaction (Scheme 16) was reported to be quantitative, as was a simple Stille coupling on the same molecule. Raju and Kogan used a Suzuki coupling on solid support (see below)44 to illustrate use of a new carbamate linker for the generation of more diverse sulfonamides than those above. [Pg.39]

Ruhland et al. used both the Suzuki and Heck (see above) reactions on solid support in their generation of libraries of biaryl- and styryl-substituted [3-lactams.45 A preliminary investigation was performed into the most generally suitable catalytic system for preparation of their libraries. This featured coupling of phenylboronic acid with a resin-bound iodophenyl [3-lactam 32 (Scheme 36) the latter compound had been formed from a... [Pg.56]

Veber et al.88 used Suzuki couplings on a solid support to generate simple biphenyls (Scheme 38), in the presence of a silyl linker, which was cleaved to release these structures without trace of the linkage position. [Pg.59]

Ellman used silyl chemistry for the direct linkage of aromatics onto the solid support by converting an aryl bromide to aryl lithium and reacting this with a silyl resin.90 It is the production of the silyl resin that is of interest in the context of this review, since an in situ Suzuki coupling was used to link the allyl silane to bromomethyl polystyrene resin (Scheme 40). 9-BBN is used to carry out the regioselective hydroboration, and this is linked to the resin with palladium catalysis in the usual way. After brief exposure of this... [Pg.60]

Sarkar et al.94 constructed the relatively complicated structure 40 (Scheme 45) on a solid support by using a Suzuki coupling. The objective of this work was to demonstrate the efficacy of spin echo MAS H NMR spectroscopy for gauging reactions on solid supports. The coupling was performed successfully under standard conditions, and a KCN in DMSO wash was used to remove adsorbed palladium after the reaction. [Pg.64]

Frenette, R. Friesen, R. W. Biaryl Synthesis via Suzuki Coupling on a Solid Support, Tetrahedron Lett. 1994, 35, 9177-9180. [Pg.76]

Chamoin, S. Houldsworth, S. Kruse, C. G. Bakker, W. I. Snieckus, V. The Suzuki-Miyaura Cross Coupling Reactions on Solid Support. Link to Solution Phase Directed ortho Metalation. The Leznoff Acetal Linker Approach to Biaryl and Heterobiaryl Aldehydes, Tetrahedron Lett. 1998, 39, 4179-4182. [Pg.79]

Lately, a number of papers have dealt with microwave-assisted reactions on palladium-doped A1203. Villemin reported on Stifle, Suzuki, Heck and Trost—Tsuji reactions where potassium fluoride on alumina was used as the base26. The reactions were carried out without solvent or stabilising phosphine ligands in single-mode reactors. The Stifle reactions were noteworthy as the toxic organotin residue remained adsorbed on the solid support, thus allowing a simplified work-up procedure for the otherwise unpleasant, and toxic, stannous by-products. Both the Stifle and the Suzuki reactions could be performed under air. Furthermore, it was noted that with experiments where the... [Pg.24]

Applications of Suzuki and Heck cross-coupling reactions were adopted by Gallop and coworkers [131] to prepare diverse biaryl- and styryl-substituted (3-lactams on solid support. The catalyst system, [PdCl2(dppf)]-TEA, was found to be efficient to promote C-C bond formation around a (3-lactam template (Schemes 26 and 27). [Pg.285]

The Suzuki coupling of arylboronic acids to the solid-supported arylha-lide 4 was initially performed by conventional heating methods, DMF at 85° in an oil bath for 16 h, to provide the desired products 6 after TFA cleavage. Due to the extended heating times necessary for the Suzuki reaction, full optimization of the reaction conditions were not investigated prior to compound library synthesis. Reaction conditions sufficient for the library synthesis were determined within a couple of weeks affording moderate yields of the desired oxazolidinones. Libraries of hundreds of... [Pg.227]

Over the past 5 years the number of reports on the use of palladium-catalyzed reactions for solid-phase derivatizations has greatly increased. In this section (and throughout this chapter), we limit our scope to representative applications for the modification of solid-supported heterocyclic scaffolds. A more general overview of the versatility of Suzuki, Heck, and Stille reactions on solid supports was recently provided by Franzen.32... [Pg.450]

Suzuki Coupling to Displace the Remaining Chloro Atom on C2 with Aryl Groups (Fig. 10).15 To a 10-ml flame-dried Schlenk flask containing the solid supported intermediate 61 (0.10 mmol, 1.0 equiv.) are added an arylboronic acid (0.50 mmol, 5.0 equiv.), Pd2(dba)3 (0.007 mmol, 0.07 equiv.), l,3-bis(2,6-diisopropylphenyl)-lH-imidazol-3-ium chloride (carbine ligand, 0.014 mmol, 0.14 equiv.), and Cs2C03 (0.60 mmol,... [Pg.465]

An alternative to solid-supported catalysts are catalysts that are insoluble themselves [136]. A pyridine-aldoxime ligand was presented and evaluated in the Suzuki-Miyaura reaction using water as a solvent. Using an Irori kan to contain the polymeric catalyst, the reaction could be repeated 14 times without any noticeable reduction in efficiency. The optimized reaction conditions were then used to create a small library of approximately 30 biaryl compounds using aryl iodides, bromides, triflates as well as an activated chloride (Scheme 56) [136]. [Pg.131]

R. Franzen, The Suzuki, the Heck, and the Stille Reaction Three Versatile Methods for the Introduction of New C-C Bonds on Solid Support, Can. J. Chem. 2000, 78, 957-962. [Pg.735]

The use of solid supported, recyclable catalysts, is a well-assessed technique in classic organic chemistry, and many exhaustive reviews dealing with this subject are available [105, 115]. The use of solid supported catalysts for library synthesis in solution has also been reported. Among others, Kobayashi et al. presented the use of a new supported scandium catalyst for 3CC reactions leading to solution libraries of amino ketones, esters, and nitriles (24-member model discrete library) [116], or to quinolines (15-member model discrete library) [117], and Jang [118] presented a polymer bound Pd-catalyzed Suzuki coupling of organoboron compounds with halides and triflates. This area was also briefly reviewed recently [119]. [Pg.125]

Gravel M, Berube CD, Hall DG, Resin-to-resin Suzuki coupling of solid supported arylboronic acids, J. Comb. Chem., 2 228-231, 2000. [Pg.147]

A 9-phenylfluoren-9-yl polystyrene-based resin has been described for the attachment of nitrogen and oxygen nucleophiles. Greater acid stability compared to the standard trityl resins that are widely used in solid-phase peptide synthesis make this solid support an interesting alternative in solid-phase organic synthesis. This resin can be used in Suzuki coupling reactions to furnish biaryls in good yields [100]. [Pg.84]

The scope and limitations of Pd(0)-mediated coupling reactions between aromatic halides linked to a polystyrene resin and boronic acid derivatives (Suzuki coupling) or arylstannanes (Stille coupling) have been reported. For all the reactions, the conditions were optimized and evaluated with various reagents. In most cases, products were obtained in excellent yields upon cleavage from the solid support (Eq. (63)) [101]. [Pg.85]

Numerous linkers have been developed with the aim of immobilizing substrates on a solid support. Commercially available (+)-a-lipoic acid has been employed as a novel, chemically stable linker for the immobilization of ketones. The utility of this thioacetal-based linker in solid-phase synthesis has been demonstrated by the synthesis of several 4-acetylbiphenyls by means of the Suzuki reaction. The products were readily cleaved from the solid support by treatment with [bis(trifluoroacetoxy)iodo]benzene [PhI(OCOCF3)2] [107]. [Pg.87]

Franzen has recently presented a review on the Suzuki, Heck, and Stille reactions on solid supports [110]. [Pg.87]

Two groups [127, 128] have reported results on the solid-phase amination of aryl halides using both P(o-C6H4Me)3 and chelating ligands. It has been shown that Stille and Suzuki reactions are reliable, high-yielding processes for substrates loaded on solid supports [129]. Thus, supported aryl halides can now be used to form new C C and C-N bonds, and presumably C S, CP, and CO bonds as well. [Pg.119]

The Suzuki-Miyaura tactic carried out on solid support (Scheme 28) [52] provides routes to small libraries of condensed heterocycles. Thus, Merrifield resin with the LeznofF-linked bromobenzene derivative 78 undergoes cross-coupling under normal solution-phase conditions with boron pinacolate 79 or boronic acid 80, prepared by DoM, to afford phenan-thridines 81 or, via 82 and some manipulation, dibenzopyranones 83 in good yields and with high purities. The Stille solid-support reaction has also been successfully executed [53]. [Pg.346]

Scheme 28. Solution-phase DoM-initiated Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling on solid support. Scheme 28. Solution-phase DoM-initiated Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling on solid support.

See other pages where Suzuki solid-support is mentioned: [Pg.167]    [Pg.197]    [Pg.743]    [Pg.389]    [Pg.390]    [Pg.332]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.16]    [Pg.49]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.59]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.211]    [Pg.380]    [Pg.180]    [Pg.116]    [Pg.182]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.539 , Pg.540 , Pg.541 , Pg.542 ]




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Solid support catalysts Suzuki coupling

Solid-supported

Suzuki solid supported catalysts

Triflates solid support catalysts. Suzuki reactions

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