4.3 Article Proceedings Paper

New catalytic transformations of carboxylic acids

Journal

PURE AND APPLIED CHEMISTRY
Volume 80, Issue 8, Pages 1725-1733

Publisher

INT UNION PURE APPLIED CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1351/pac200880081725

Keywords

decarboxylation; enol esters; enamides; aryl-metal intermediates; copper catalyst; carbon nucleophiles; biaryls

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A series of metal-catalyzed processes are [)resented, in which carboxylic acids act Lis sources of either carbon nucleophiles or electrophiles, depending on the catalyst employed, the mode of activation, and the reaction conditions. A first reaction mode is the addition of carboxylic acids or amides over C-C multiple bonds, giving rise to enol esters or enamides. respectively. The challenge here is to control both the regio- and stereoselectivity of these reactions by the choice of the catalyst system. Alternatively, carboxylic acids can efficiently be decarboxylated using new Cu catalysts to give aryl-metal intermediates. Under protic conditions, these carbon nucleophiles give the corresponding arenes. If carboxylate salts are employed instead of the free acids, the aryl-metal species resulting from the catalytic decarboxylation can be utilized for the synthesis of biaryls in I novel cross-coupling reaction with aryl halides, thus replacing stoichiometric organometallic reagents. An activation with Coupling reagents or simple conversion to esters allows the oxidative addition of carboxylic acids to transition-metal catalysts under formation of acyl-metal species, which can either be reduced to aldehydes, or coupled with nucleophiles. At elevated temperatures, such acyl-metal species decarbonylate, so that carboxylic acids become synthetic equivalents for aryl or alkyl halides, e.g., in Heck reactions.

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