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An efficient method to prepare sulfoxonium ylides and their reactivity studies using copper powder and Sc(III) as catalysts: Molecular and electronic structure analysis
Author(s) -
Ramakrishna Kankanala,
Jayarani Arumugam,
Koothradan Fathima Febin,
Sivasankar Chinnappan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
applied organometallic chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.53
H-Index - 71
eISSN - 1099-0739
pISSN - 0268-2605
DOI - 10.1002/aoc.5748
Subject(s) - diazo , chemistry , carbene , catalysis , ylide , combinatorial chemistry , reactivity (psychology) , organic chemistry , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology
Sulfoxonium ylides are the viable alternatives for diazo compounds as carbene precursors. Unlike diazo compounds, these are bench‐stable and crystalline solids. However, the existing methods for the synthesis of sulfoxonium ylides have disadvantages related to the yields, substrate scope, and usage of expensive catalysts. Therefore, it is necessary to develop efficient and competitive protocols for the preparation of sulfoxonium ylides. In this study, we developed an economically affordable protocol for the synthesis of sulfoxonium ylides from diazo compounds using copper powder as a catalyst. This protocol leads to the efficient multigram‐scale synthesis of a wide range of sulfoxonium ylides in good yields. Further, we demonstrated scandium triflate–catalyzed carbene insertion into the N−H bond from sulfoxonium ylide. A variety of anilines and sulfoxonium ylides with various functional groups reacted well and produced the corresponding α ‐amino esters in good yields. All the synthesized compounds were characterized using various standard spectroscopic and analytical techniques. We also used computational methods to understand the electronic structure of all the sulfoxonium ylides using geometry optimization, frequency calculation, molecular orbital and natural bond orbital analysis, and energy decomposition analysis. Our computational results revealed that the interaction between carbene and dimethyl sulfoxide is covalent in nature and stable enough to handle in the absence of any catalyst.