247 research outputs found

    SHARPER reaction monitoring: generation of a narrow linewidth NMR singlet, without X-pulses, in an inhomogeneous magnetic field

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    We report a new pure-shift method, termed SHARPER (Sensitive, Homogeneous, And Resolved PEaks in Real time) designed for the analysis of reactions and equilibria by NMR. By focusing on a single selected signal, SHARPER removes all heteronuclear couplings of a selected nucleus without the need to pulse on X channels, thus overcoming hardware limitations of conventional spectrometers. A more versatile decoupling scheme, termed <i>sel</i>-SHARPER, removes all heteronuclear and homonuclear couplings of the selected signal. Both methods are characterized by a periodic inversion of the active spin during the real-time acquisition. In addition to decoupling, they also compensate for pulse imperfections and magnetic field inhomogeneity, generating an extremely narrow singlet with a linewidth approaching limits dictated by the spin–spin relaxation. The decoupling and line narrowing effected by (<i>sel</i>)-SHARPER provide significant increases in the signal-to-noise (S/N) ratio. Increases of 20-fold were routinely achieved for <sup>19</sup>F detection. <i>sel</i>-SHARPER is also applicable to first- and higher-order <sup>1</sup>H spectra. The sensitivity gains are substantially greater for inhomogeneous magnetic fields, including dynamic inhomogeneity caused by gas sparging. The parameters of the pulse sequences have been analyzed in detail to provide guidelines for their most effective application. The considerable reduction in the detection threshold induced by (<i>sel</i>)-SHARPER make the technique particularly suited for <i>in situ</i> monitoring of reaction kinetics. The approach is illustrated by a <sup>19</sup>F NMR study of the protodeboronation of an aryl boronic acid. Here, the high S/N allowed reliable determination of the net protodeoboronation kinetics, and the excess line broadening of <sup>19</sup>F singlets was utilized to characterize the boronic acid/boronate equilibrium kinetics. Oxidation of diphenylphosphine, monitored by <sup>31</sup>P NMR under optimized gas-flow conditions, demonstrated the high tolerance of SHARPER to dynamic inhomogeneity. The principles of the (<i>sel</i>)-SHARPER sequences are expected to find numerous applications in the design of new NMR experiments

    Kinetics of a Ni/Ir-Photocatalyzed Coupling of ArBr with RBr: Intermediacy of ArNi<sup>II</sup>(L)Br and Rate/Selectivity Factors

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    [Image: see text] The Ni/Ir-photocatalyzed coupling of an aryl bromide (ArBr) with an alkyl bromide (RBr) has been analyzed using in situ LED-(19)F NMR spectroscopy. Four components (light, [ArBr], [Ni], [Ir]) are found to control the rate of ArBr consumption, but not the product selectivity, while two components ([(TMS)(3)SiH], [RBr]) independently control the product selectivity, but not the rate. A major resting state of nickel has been identified as ArNi(II)(L)Br, and (13)C-isotopic entrainment is used to show that the complex undergoes Ir-photocatalyzed conversion to products (Ar-R, Ar-H, Ar-solvent) in competition with the release of ArBr. A range of competing absorption and quenching effects lead to complex correlations between the Ir and Ni catalyst loadings and the reaction rate. Differences in the Ir/Ni Beer–Lambert absorption profiles allow the rate to be increased by the use of a shorter-wavelength light source without compromising the selectivity. A minimal kinetic model for the process allows simulation of the reaction and provides insights for optimization of these processes in the laboratory

    Formal Synthesis of (±)-Allocolchicine Via Gold-Catalysed Direct Arylation: Implication of Aryl Iodine(III) Oxidant in Catalyst Deactivation Pathways

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    Abstract A concise formal synthesis of racemic allocolchicine has been developed, centred on three principal transformations: a retro-Brook alkylation reaction to generate an arylsilane, a gold-catalysed arylative cyclisation to generate the B-ring via biaryl linkage, and a palladium-catalysed carbonylation of an aryl chloride to generate an ester. 1H NMR monitoring of the key gold-catalysed cyclisation step reveals that a powerful catalyst deactivation process progressively attenuates the rate of catalyst turnover. The origins of the catalyst deactivation have been investigated, with an uncatalysed side-reaction, involving the substrate and the iodine(III) oxidant, identified as the source of a potent catalyst poison. The side reaction generates 1–4% of a diaryliodonium salt, and whilst this moiety is shown not to be an innate catalyst deactivator, when it is tethered to the arylsilane reactant, the inhibition becomes powerful. Kinetic modelling of processes run at two different catalyst concentrations allows extraction of the partitioning of the gold catalyst between the substrate and its diaryliodonium salt, with a rate of diaryliodonium salt generation consistent with that independently determined in the absence of catalyst. The high partition ratio between substrate and diaryliodonium salt (5/1) results in very efficient, and ultimately complete, diversion of the catalyst off-cycle. Graphical Abstract </jats:sec

    <i>In Situ </i>Studies of Arylboronic Acids/Esters and R<sub>3</sub>SiCF<sub>3</sub> Reagents: Kinetics, Speciation, and Dysfunction at the Carbanion–Ate Interface

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    [Image: see text] Reagent instability reduces the efficiency of chemical processes, and while much effort is devoted to reaction optimization, less attention is paid to the mechanistic causes of reagent decomposition. Indeed, the response is often to simply use an excess of the reagent. Two reaction classes with ubiquitous examples of this are the Suzuki–Miyaura cross-coupling of boronic acids/esters and the transfer of CF(3) or CF(2) from the Ruppert–Prakash reagent, TMSCF(3). This Account describes some of the overarching features of our mechanistic investigations into their decomposition. In the first section we summarize how specific examples of (hetero)arylboronic acids can decompose via aqueous protodeboronation processes: Ar–B(OH)(2) + H(2)O → ArH + B(OH)(3). Key to the analysis was the development of a kinetic model in which pH controls boron speciation and heterocycle protonation states. This method revealed six different protodeboronation pathways, including self-catalysis when the pH is close to the pK(a) of the boronic acid, and protodeboronation via a transient aryl anionoid pathway for highly electron-deficient arenes. The degree of “protection” of boronic acids by diol-esterification is shown to be very dependent on the diol identity, with six-membered ring esters resulting in faster protodeboronation than the parent boronic acid. In the second section of the Account we describe (19)F NMR spectroscopic analysis of the kinetics of the reaction of TMSCF(3) with ketones, fluoroarenes, and alkenes. Processes initiated by substoichiometric “TBAT” ([Ph(3)SiF(2)][Bu(4)N]) involve anionic chain reactions in which low concentrations of [CF(3)](−) are rapidly and reversibly liberated from a siliconate reservoir, [TMS(CF(3))(2)][Bu(4)N]. Increased TMSCF(3) concentrations reduce the [CF(3)](−) concentration and thus inhibit the rates of CF(3) transfer. Computation and kinetics reveal that the TMSCF(3) intermolecularly abstracts fluoride from [CF(3)](−) to generate the CF(2), in what would otherwise be an endergonic α-fluoride elimination. Starting from [CF(3)](−) and CF(2), a cascade involving perfluoroalkene homologation results in the generation of a hindered perfluorocarbanion, [C(11)F(23)](−), and inhibition. The generation of CF(2) from TMSCF(3) is much more efficiently mediated by NaI, and in contrast to TBAT, the process undergoes autoacceleration. The process involves NaI-mediated α-fluoride elimination from [CF(3)][Na] to generate CF(2) and a [NaI·NaF] chain carrier. Chain-branching, by [(CF(2))(3)I][Na] generated in situ (CF(2) + TFE + NaI), causes autoacceleration. Alkenes that efficiently capture CF(2) attenuate the chain-branching, suppress autoacceleration, and lead to less rapid difluorocyclopropanation. The Account also highlights how a collaborative approach to experiment and computation enables mechanistic insight for control of processes

    Taming Ambident Triazole Anions: Regioselective Ion-Pairing Catalyzes Direct N-Alkylation with Atypical Regioselectivity

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    Controlling the regioselectivity of ambident nucleophiles toward alkylating agents is a fundamental problem in heterocyclic chemistry. Unsubstituted triazoles are particularly challenging, often requiring inefficient stepwise protection–deprotection strategies and prefunctionalization protocols. Herein we report on the alkylation of archetypal ambident 1,2,4-triazole, 1,2,3-triazole, and their anions, analyzed by in situ <sup>1</sup>H/<sup>19</sup>F NMR, kinetic modeling, diffusion-ordered NMR spectroscopy, X-ray crystallography, highly correlated coupled-cluster computations [CCSD­(T)-F12, DF-LCCSD­(T)-F12, DLPNO-CCSD­(T)], and Marcus theory. The resulting mechanistic insights allow design of an organocatalytic methodology for ambident control in the <i>direct</i> N-alkylation of unsubstituted triazole anions. Amidinium and guanidinium receptors are shown to act as strongly coordinating phase-transfer organocatalysts, shuttling triazolate anions into solution. The intimate ion pairs formed in solution retain the reactivity of liberated triazole anions but, by virtue of highly regioselective ion pairing, exhibit alkylation selectivities that are completely inverted (1,2,4-triazole) or substantially enhanced (1,2,3-triazole) compared to the parent anions. The methodology allows direct access to 4-alkyl-1,2,4-triazoles (<i>rr</i> up to 94:6) and 1-alkyl-1,2,3-triazoles (<i>rr</i> up to 99:1) in one step. Regioselective ion pairing acts in effect as a noncovalent in situ protection mechanism, a concept that may have broader application in the control of ambident systems

    Au-Catalyzed Oxidative Arylation: Chelation-Induced Turnover of ortho-Substituted Arylsilanes

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    <i>ortho</i>-Substituted aryl silanes have previously been found to undergo much slower Au-catalyzed intermolecular arylation than their <i>m,p</i>-substituted isomers, with many examples failing to undergo turnover at all. A method to indirectly quantify the rates of C–Si auration of <i>o</i>-substituted aryl silanes, under conditions of turnover, has been developed. All examples are found to undergo very efficient C–Si auration, indicative that it is the subsequent C–H auration that is inhibited by the <i>ortho</i> substituent. A simple Ar–Au conformational model suggests that C–H auration can be accelerated by chelation. A series of <i>ortho</i>-functionalized aryl silanes are shown to undergo efficient arylation
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