4.5 Article

Direct arylation of oxazole and benzoxazole with aryl or heteroaryl halides using a palladium-diphosphine catalyst

Journal

JOURNAL OF ORGANOMETALLIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 693, Issue 1, Pages 135-144

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.jorganchem.2007.10.028

Keywords

aryl bromides; catalysis; C-H activation; oxazole; palladium

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Through the use of PdCl(dppb)(C3H5) as a catalyst, a range of aryl bromides and chlorides undergoes coupling via C-H bond activation/flunctionalization reaction with oxazole or benzoxazole in good yields. This air-stable catalyst can be used at low loadings with several substrates. Surprisingly, better results in terms of substrate/catalyst ratio were obtained in several cases using electron-excessive aryl bromides than with the electron-deficient ones. This seems to be mainly due to the relatively low thermal stability of some of the 2-arylbenzoxazoles formed with electron -deficient aryl halides. With these substrates, in order to obtain higher yields of product, the reactions had to be performed at a lower temperature (100-120 degrees C) using a larger amount of catalyst. On the other hand, in the presence of the most stable products, the reactions were performed at 150 degrees C using as little as 0.2 mol% catalyst. Arylation of benzoxazole with heteroaryl bromides also gave the coupling products in moderate to high yields using 0.2-5 mol% catalyst. With this catalyst, electron-deficient aryl chloride such as 4-chlorobenzonitrile, 4-chloroacetophenone or 2-chloronitrobenzene have also been used successfully. (c) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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