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Ru-Catalyzed C–H Arylation of Fluoroarenes with Aryl Halides
Author(s) -
Marco Simonetti,
Gregory J. P. Perry,
Xacobe C. Cambeiro,
Francisco JuliáHernández,
Jude N. Arokianathar,
Igor Larrosa
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.6b01615
Subject(s) - chemistry , aryl , catalysis , deprotonation , ruthenium , bromide , regioselectivity , medicinal chemistry , aryl halide , benzoic acid , steric effects , kinetic isotope effect , catalytic cycle , metalation , iodide , reductive elimination , ligand (biochemistry) , oxidative addition , photochemistry , palladium , stereochemistry , deuterium , organic chemistry , alkyl , ion , biochemistry , physics , receptor , quantum mechanics
Although the ruthenium-catalyzed C-H arylation of arenes bearing directing groups with haloarenes is well-known, this process has never been achieved in the absence of directing groups. We report the first example of such a process and show that unexpectedly the reaction only takes place in the presence of catalytic amounts of a benzoic acid. Furthermore, contrary to other transition metals, the arylation site selectivity is governed by both electronic and steric factors. Stoichiometric and NMR mechanistic studies support a catalytic cycle that involves a well-defined η(6)-arene-ligand-free Ru(II) catalyst. Indeed, upon initial pivalate-assisted C-H activation, the aryl-Ru(II) intermediate generated is able to react with an aryl bromide coupling partner only in the presence of a benzoate additive. In contrast, directing-group-containing substrates (such as 2-phenylpyridine) do not require a benzoate additive. Deuterium labeling and kinetic isotope effect experiments indicate that C-H activation is both reversible and kinetically significant. Computational studies support a concerted metalation-deprotonation (CMD)-type ruthenation mode and shed light on the unusual arylation regioselectivity.

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