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The Palladium Way to N‐Heteroacenes
Author(s) -
Bunz Uwe H. F.,
Engelhart Jens U.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
chemistry – a european journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.687
H-Index - 242
eISSN - 1521-3765
pISSN - 0947-6539
DOI - 10.1002/chem.201505018
Subject(s) - catalysis , palladium , combinatorial chemistry , flexibility (engineering) , materials science , chemistry , computer science , organic chemistry , mathematics , statistics
Abstract Novel synthetic methodologies allow increasingly efficient access to known organic materials, as well as the preparation of otherwise inaccessible species. Pd‐catalyzed coupling of aromatic dihalides to ortho ‐diaminoarenes furnishes embedded stable N , N ′‐dihydropyrazines expediently and in often excellent yields. The embedded N , N ′‐dihydropyrazines can then be oxidized by MnO 2 to give substituted azatetracenes, azapentacenes, azahexacenes, and azaheptacenes, which are soluble, processable, and stable. This powerful Pd‐catalyzed methodology allows the preparation of azaacenes, including diaza‐, tetraaza‐ and hexaazaacenes. In combination with a suitable Pd precursor, Buchwald‐type biarylphosphines have been shown to give excellent results. Activated dihalides such as 2,3‐dihaloquinoxalines are coupled easily under simplified conditions, whereas 2,3‐dibromoacenes require more stringent conditions and advanced catalyst precursors. Pd catalysts effect the assembly of azaacenes with otherwise difficult to obtain substitution patterns. High yields and flexibility make this method most attractive.

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