The selective halogenation of complex (hetero)aromatic
systems
is a critical yet challenging transformation that is relevant to medicinal
chemistry, agriculture, and biomedical imaging. However, current methods
are limited by toxic reagents, expensive homogeneous second- and third-row
transition metal catalysts, or poor substrate tolerance. Herein, we
demonstrate that porous metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) containing
terminal Co(III) halide sites represent a rare and general class of
heterogeneous catalysts for the controlled installation of chlorine
and fluorine centers into electron-deficient (hetero)aryl bromides
using simple metal halide salts. Mechanistic studies support that
these halogen exchange (halex) reactions proceed via redox-neutral
nucleophilic aromatic substitution (SNAr) at the Co(III)
sites. The MOF-based halex catalysts are recyclable, enable green
halogenation with minimal waste generation, and facilitate halex in
a continuous flow. Our findings represent the first example of SNAr catalysis using MOFs, expanding the lexicon of synthetic
transformations enabled by these materials