Key words
photocatalysis - allenes - arylcarboxylation - regioselectivity - carbon dioxide
As one of the largest classes of organic compounds, carboxylic acids play an important role, not only in organic synthesis, but also in biochemistry and medicinal chemistry, as many drugs and natural products contain a carboxylic acid group.[1] Therefore, it is of great significance to explore an efficient way to introduce carboxylic acid groups into organic compounds. Over the past few decades, many methods have been developed to synthesize carboxylic acids, among which the difunctionalization of unsaturated C–C bonds with CO2 is one of the most direct, efficient, and atom-economical strategies.[2] However, due to the thermodynamic stability and kinetic inertness of CO2, it is challenging to directly utilize CO2 to construct carboxylic acids.
In recent years, visible-light-catalyzed reactions have played an increasingly important role in organic synthesis, and various photocatalytic reactions have emerged.[3] In this context, visible-light-catalyzed difunctionalization of unsaturated C–C bonds with CO2 has attracted significant attention because it allows the simultaneous introduction of a carboxylic acid group and a second functional group, thereby representing a fascinating strategy for rapidly accessing functionalized carboxylic acids.[4] Although well documented for alkenes and alkynes,[5] visible-light-catalyzed difunctionalization of allenes with CO2 has been largely undeveloped, and only a few examples have been reported. In 2021, Hong’s group developed a photoredox catalyzed aminoalkylcarboxylation of aryl allenes with CO2 and N,N-dimethylanilines with moderate to excellent regioselectivity (Scheme [1a]).[6] Later, Yu’s group reported a visible-light-catalyzed dicarboxylation of allenes, with the incorporation of two CO2 molecules (Scheme [1b]).[7] However, both methods suffer from selectivity issues and have poor regioselectivity for some allene substrates, which is a long-standing challenge in the functionalization of allenes. Most recently, our group developed a phosphonocarboxylation of allenes with diarylphosphine oxides and CO2 through visible-light photoredox catalysis, with exclusive regio- and stereoselectivity (Scheme [1c]).[8] Nevertheless, photocatalyzed difunctionalizations of allenes with CO2 are relatively rare and generally display poor selectivity. As a continuation of our work on photocatalyzed selective difunctionalization of unsaturated C–C bonds,[8]
[9] we have developed the first visible-light-catalyzed arylcarboxylation of allenes with CO2, delivering β-aryl β,γ-unsaturated carboxylic acids with complete regioselectivity. This strategy involves an efficient and atom-economical multicomponent reaction (Scheme [1d]).
Scheme 1 Previous and present work on photocatalyzed difunctionalization of allenes with CO2
Table 1 Optimization of the Reaction Conditionsa
|
Entry
|
Variation in reaction conditions
|
Yieldb (%)
|
1
|
–
|
47
|
2
|
darkness
|
N.R.c
|
3
|
without PC
|
N.R.
|
4
|
without HCOONa
|
trace
|
5
|
without DABCO
|
trace
|
6
|
without K2CO3
|
trace
|
7
|
HCOOK instead of HCOONa
|
38
|
8
|
Na2CO3 instead of K2CO3
|
23
|
9
|
Cs2CO3 instead of K2CO3
|
32
|
10
|
t-BuOK instead of K2CO3
|
41
|
11
|
N2 instead of CO2
|
trace
|
12
|
Ir[dF(CF3)ppy]2(dtbbpy)PF6 as PCd
|
trace
|
13
|
fac-Ir(ppy)3 as PC
|
18
|
a Reaction conditions: 1a (0.2 mmol), 2a (0.4 mmol, 2 equiv), [Ir(ppy)2(dtbbpy)]PF6 (5 mol%), DABCO (0.1 mmol, 0.5 equiv), K2CO3 (0.5 mmol, 2.5 equiv), HCOONa (0.4 mmol, 2 equiv), DMSO (2 mL), CO2 (1 atm), r.t., 24 h, 20 W blue LED (450 nm).
b Determined by 1H NMR with 1,3,5-trimethoxybenzene as internal standard.
c N.R. = no reaction.
d dF(CF3)ppy = 3,5-difluoro-2-[5-(trifluoromethyl)pyridine.
We began our investigation by employing 1,1-diphenylallene (1a) as the model substrate and iodobenzene (2a) as the arylation reagent with irradiation by a 20 W blue LED in the presence of commercially available [Ir(ppy)2(dtbbpy)]PF6 (ppy = 2-phenylpyridine; dtbbpy = 4,4′-di-tert-butyl-2,2′-bipyridine) as a photocatalyst (PC) under CO2 at atmospheric pressure and ambient temperature for 24 hours (Table [1]). To our delight, the expected reaction proceeded smoothly, delivering the terminal carboxylation product 3a exclusively (Table [1], entry 1). The results of control experiments showed that none of the desired product was obtained in the absence of either light or the photocatalyst (entries 2 and 3). Notably, only a trace amount of the desired product was produced when DABCO, K2CO3, or HCOONa was omitted, indicating that all three are vital to this reaction (entries 4–6), and other alternatives proved to be less efficient (entries 7–10). Moreover, CO2 was also shown to be essential for this transformation (entry 11). Our screening of photocatalysts revealed that [Ir(ppy)2(dtbbpy)]PF6 is the most suitable for the catalytic reaction (entries 12 and 13).
Scheme 2 Scope of the arylcarboxylation of allenes. Reaction conditions: 1 (0.2 mmol), 2 (2 equiv), [Ir(ppy)2(dtbbpy)]PF6 (5 mol%), DABCO (0.5 equiv), K2CO3 (2.5 equiv), HCOONa (2 equiv), DMSO (2 mL), CO2 (1 atm), r.t., 24 h, 20 W blue LED (450 nm). Isolated yields are reported.
With the optimal reaction conditions in hand, we investigated the scope of the substrates for the reaction, and various allenes and aryl halides were tested. As shown in Scheme [2, 1],1-disubstituted allenes bearing various substituents were subjected to the visible-light-catalyzed arylcarboxylation with CO2. The reaction proceeded efficiently in regioselective manner, producing the terminal carboxylation product exclusively. The main byproducts were allene polymerization products and hydroarylation products. Other byproducts were too complicated to analyze. Besides these, small amounts of the allene (0–10%) were recovered after the reaction. Symmetric 1,1-disubstituted allenes showed good compatibility toward this reaction, generating the corresponding arylcarboxylation product 3a–f in moderate yields. Notably, when the 1-aryl-1-alkylallenes were submitted to the standard reaction condition, high yields of the products were obtained with good selectivity toward the Z-products 3g–l; these are thermodynamically unstable, sterically hindered, and uncommon products for this type of reaction. Unsurprisingly, the reaction showed no Z/E selectivity when asymmetric 1,1-diarylallenes were used as the substrate (3m and 3n). Finally, preliminary studies were conducted to investigate the scope of the aryl iodide, and electron-withdrawing groups (carbonyl and cyano) were found to be tolerated in this reaction (3o and 3p).
Scheme 3 Preliminary mechanism studies and proposed mechanism
Concerning the mechanism, preliminary experiments were conducted to gain further insight into the nature of the allene arylcarboxylation. When five equivalents of a well-known radical scavenger (TEMPO or BHT) were added to the reaction mixture, the desired product was not observed, indicating this transformation might be a radical process (Scheme [3a]). Secondly, we performed isotope labeling studies with D2O under a N2 atmosphere (Scheme [3b]). We found a 78% deuterium incorporation at the terminal position of the hydroarylation product 3a′ when 50 equivalents of D2O were added, indicating the formation of methyl allyl anion intermediate. On the basis of these mechanistic studies and previous works,[5a] we propose a possible mechanism for the reaction of visible-light-catalyzed arylcarboxylation of allenes with CO2 and aryl halides. First, blue light (λ = 450 nm) irradiation promotes the single-electron transfer (SET) between the excited state of [Ir(ppy)2(dtbbpy)]PF6 and DABCO (HAT catalyst) to generate the corresponding DABCO radical cation A, which then traps the hydrogen of the formate salt and provides a CO2 radical anion B. The aryl halide is then reduced by the radical anion B to afford the aryl radical C; this is followed by regioselective radical addition to the allene to afford an allylic radical intermediate D. A second SET between D and the reduced photocatalyst delivers an allylic carbanion intermediate E, which then undergoes nucleophilic addition to CO2 to produce the target arylcarboxylation product.
In conclusion, we have developed the first highly regioselective strategy for the arylcarboxylation of allenes with CO2 through visible-light photoredox catalysis to deliver β-aryl β,γ-unsaturated carboxylic acids,[10] which are widely present in pharmaceuticals. The methodology uses abundant and readily available CO2 as the C1 source and it represents an unprecedented example of a highly regioselective photocatalyzed arylcarboxylation of allenes.