Open Access
Cobalt-Catalyzed Borylation of Fluorinated Arenes: Thermodynamic Control of C(sp2)-H Oxidative Addition Results in ortho-to-Fluorine Selectivity
Author(s) -
Tyler P. Pabst,
Jennifer V. Obligacion,
Étienne Rochette,
Iraklis Pappas,
Paul J. Chirik
Publication year - 2019
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.9b07984
Subject(s) - chemistry , regioselectivity , oxidative addition , cobalt , borylation , catalysis , fluorine , reductive elimination , aryl , selectivity , medicinal chemistry , photochemistry , kinetic isotope effect , organic chemistry , alkyl , deuterium , physics , quantum mechanics
The mechanism of C(sp 2 )-H borylation of fluorinated arenes with B 2 Pin 2 (Pin = pinacolato) catalyzed by bis(phosphino)pyridine ( iPr PNP) cobalt complexes was studied to understand the origins of the uniquely high ortho -to-fluorine regioselectivity observed in these reactions. Variable time normalization analysis (VTNA) of reaction time courses and deuterium kinetic isotope effect measurements established a kinetic regime wherein C(sp 2 )-H oxidative addition is fast and reversible. Monitoring the reaction by in situ NMR spectroscopy revealed the intermediacy of a cobalt(I)-aryl complex that was generated with the same high ortho -to-fluorine regioselectivity associated with the overall catalytic transformation. Deuterium labeling experiments and stoichiometric studies established C(sp 2 )-H oxidative addition of the fluorinated arene as the selectivity-determining step of the reaction. This step favors the formation of ortho -fluoroaryl cobalt intermediates due to the ortho fluorine effect, a phenomenon whereby ortho fluorine substituents stabilize transition metal-carbon bonds. Computational studies provided evidence that the cobalt-carbon bonds of the relevant intermediates in ( iPr PNP)Co-catalyzed borylation are strengthened with increasing ortho fluorine substitution. The atypical kinetic regime involving fast and reversible C(sp 2 )-H oxidative addition in combination with the thermodynamic preference for forming cobalt-aryl bonds adjacent to fluorinated sites are the origin of the high regioselectivity in the catalytic borylation reaction.