Nickel- and Palladium-Catalyzed Mono-α-Arylation of Carbonyl Compounds and the Synthesis of Heterocycles from Nickel-Enolates
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Abstract
The transition metal-catalyzed mono-α-arylation of carbonyl compounds is a powerful
class of C(sp2)-C(sp3) bond forming reactions that is broadly useful for the synthesis of
biologically active compounds. Through the application of various ancillary ligands which
can dramatically influence the steric and electronic properties of the metal, this class of
reactions has greatly matured in scope since its discovery over 20 years ago, encompassing
a large array of both (hetero)aryl (pseudo)halide and carbonyl substrates. Notwithstanding
the advances in the field of metal-catalyzed α-arylation chemistry, reactions employing
earth-abundant transition metals (e.g., nickel) remain underexplored in comparison to
palladium-catalyzed methodologies. Furthermore, chemoselective examples are limited,
despite the potential utility in the synthesis of complex molecules; and mono-α-arylations
of the most cheap and abundant esters, amides, and ketones remains a challenge, where
substrate/base pairings can result in undesired reactivity. With the intent of addressing
these limitations, this dissertation documenting my doctoral research describes the
development of a bisphosphine/palladium-catalyzed protocol for the chemoselective
synthesis of α-(o-chloro)aryl ketones from (2-chloro)aryl (pseudo)halides, as well as the
development of competent catalyst systems for the nickel-catalyzed α-arylation of cheap
and abundant carbonyl compounds with aryl chlorides, featuring the use of the “DalPhos”
(DALhousie PHOSphine) ligand family – previously employed for C(sp2)-N/O bond
forming reactions. Moreover, the complementarity of these Pd- and Ni-catalyzed α
arylation systems is highlighted in the development of two useful new nickel-catalyzed
heterocycle-forming reactions, starting from easily accessed α-(o-chloro)aryl ketones and
taking advantage of a single mechanistic landscape involving intermediates more
commonly associated with the metal-catalyzed α-arylation of carbonyl compounds.
Description
Keywords
Homogeneous Catalysis, Organometallic Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Alpha-Aryl Carbonyl Synthesis, Benzofuran Synthesis, Indole Synthesis, Bisphosphine Ligands
