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July 28, 2017

Chemists build new chemical structures on unreactive bonds

An outline of this research. Credit: Osaka University
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An outline of this research. Credit: Osaka University

Making complicated organic molecules is like solving a Rubik's cube. Organic chemists need to design sequences of reactions to carefully build up parts of a molecule, while maintaining the structure at other sites. Although chemists have developed many ingenious ways of performing chemical transformations, some chemical reactions remain out of reach.

At Osaka University, a team of organic chemists has now developed and enhanced a that allows controlled transformations of one of the toughest chemical bonds. "We previously developed a cobalt-catalyzed Grignard reaction for making hindered quaternary carbon centers. But that reaction also showed potential for modifying carbon-fluorine bonds. We tried many different additives and eventually found one that let us selectively build the same quaternary carbon-carbon bonds at carbon-fluorine sites," says first author Takanori Iwasaki.

The Grignard reaction is a classic reaction in organic chemistry, useful for building the carbon skeleton of by transforming carbon-halogen bonds into carbon-carbon bonds. Fluorine is also considered to be a halogen but the carbon-fluorine is among the strongest known and is usually unreactive to Grignard chemistry. Performing any kind of chemical reaction at carbon-fluorine bonds is difficult without affecting the rest of the molecule.

The Osaka team enhanced their catalytic system for performing difficult Grignard chemistry at very crowded, so-called quaternary carbon atoms. By adding a carefully selected additive to this catalytic system, they boosted its ability to work selectively on carbon-fluorine bonds.

"We have shown that this reaction is a very useful tool for sequentially changing parts of a molecule with great control," says group leader Nobuaki Kambe. "Our control over the chemistry of carbon-fluorine bonds should enable much more synthetic freedom for building complex carbon structures."

Co-catalyzed cross-coupling of alkyl fluorides with alkyl Grignard reagents. Credit: Osaka University
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Co-catalyzed cross-coupling of alkyl fluorides with alkyl Grignard reagents. Credit: Osaka University
An iterative coupling reaction using the present catalytic system. Credit: Osaka University
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An iterative coupling reaction using the present catalytic system. Credit: Osaka University

More information: Takanori Iwasaki et al, Co-Catalyzed Cross-Coupling Reaction of Alkyl Fluorides with Alkyl Grignard Reagents, Organic Letters (2017).

Journal information: Organic Letters

Provided by Osaka University

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