Mechanistic Study of the N-Formylation of Amines with Carbon Dioxide and Hydrosilanes
Author(s) -
Martin Hulla,
Gábor Laurenczy,
Paul J. Dyson
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
acs catalysis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.898
H-Index - 198
ISSN - 2155-5435
DOI - 10.1021/acscatal.8b03274
Subject(s) - chemistry , formylation , nucleophile , catalysis , amine gas treating , reaction intermediate , reactive intermediate , substituent , reaction mechanism , synergistic catalysis , photochemistry , medicinal chemistry , combinatorial chemistry , organic chemistry
N-formylation of amines with CO2 and hydrosilane reducing agents proceeds via fast and complex chemical equilibria, which hinder easy analysis of the reaction pathways. In situ reaction monitoring and kinetic studies reveal that three proposed pathways, via direct- and amine-assisted formoxysilane formation (pathways 1 and 2, respectively) and via a silylcarbamate intermediate (pathway 3), are possible depending on the reaction conditions and the substrates. While pathway 1 is favored for non-nucleophilic amines in the absence of a catalyst, a base catalyst results in noninnocent behavior of the amine in the CO2 reduction step toward the formoxysilane intermediate. The reaction pathway is altered by strongly nucleophilic amines, which form stable adducts with CO2. Silylcarbamate intermediates form, which can be directly reduced to the N-formylated products by excess hydrosilane. Nevertheless, without excess hydrosilane, the silylcarbamate is an additional intermediate en route to formoxysilanes along path...
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