Iron-Catalyzed C–H Activation for Heterocoupling and Copolymerization of Thiophenes with Enamines

Abstract

C–H/C–H coupling via C–H activation provides straightforward synthetic access to the construction of complex π-conjugated organic molecules. The palladium-catalyzed Fujiwara–Moritani (FM) coupling between an arene and an electron-deficient olefin presents an early example but is not applicable to enamines such as N-vinylcarbazoles and N-vinylindoles. We report herein iron-catalyzed C–H/C–H heterocoupling between enamines and thiophenes and its application to copolymerization of bisenamine and bisthiophene using diethyl oxalate as an oxidant and AlMe3 as a base, as a result of our realization that synthetic limitations in oxidative C–H/C–H couplings imposed by the high redox potential of the Pd(II)/Pd(0) catalytic cycle can be circumvented by the use of iron, which has a lower Fe(III)/Fe(I) redox potential. The trisphosphine ligand provides a coordination environment for iron to achieve the reaction’s regio-, stereo-, and chemoselectivity. The reaction includes C–H activation of thiophene via σ-bond metathesis and subsequent enamine C–H cleavage triggered by nucleophilic enamine addition to the Fe(III) center, thereby differing from the FM reaction in mechanism and synthetic scope. The copolymers synthesized by the new reaction possess a new type of enamine-incorporated polymer backbone

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