4.8 Review

Catalytic Transformation of Aldehydes with Nickel Complexes through η2 Coordination and Oxidative Cyclization

Journal

ACCOUNTS OF CHEMICAL RESEARCH
Volume 48, Issue 6, Pages 1746-1755

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.5b00061

Keywords

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Funding

  1. MEXT
  2. ACT-C
  3. Frontier Research Base for Global Young Researchers at Osaka University
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15H05803, 25708018] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Chemists no longer doubt the importance of a methodology that could activate and utilize aldehydes in organic syntheses since many products prepared from them support our daily life. Tremendous effort has been devoted to the development of these methods using main-group elements and transition metals. Thus, many organic chemists have used an activator-(aldehyde oxygen) interaction, namely, eta(1) coordination, whereby a Lewis or Bronsted acid activates an aldehyde. In the field of coordination chemistry, eta(2) coordination of aldehydes to transition metals by coordination of a carbon-oxygen double bond has been well-studied; this activation mode, however, is rarely found in transition-metal catalysis. In view of the distinctive reactivity of an eta(2)-aldehyde complex, unprecedented reactions via this intermediate are a distinct possibility. In this Account, we summarize our recent results dealing with nickel(0)-catalyzed transformations of aldehydes via eta(2)-aldehyde nickel and oxanickelacycle intermediates. The combination of electron-rich nickel(0) and strong electron-donating N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) ligands adequately form eta(2)-aldehyde complexes in which the aldehyde is highly activated by back-bonding. With Ni(0)/NHC catalysts, processes involving intramolecular hydroacylation of alkenes and homo/cross-dimerization of aldehydes (the Tishchenko reaction) have been developed, and both proceed via the simultaneous re coordination of aldehydes and other pi components (alkenes or aldehydes). The results of the mechanistic studies are consistent with a reaction pathway that proceeds via an oxanickelacycle intermediate generated by the oxidative cyclization with a nickel(0) complex. In addition, we have used the eta(2)-aldehyde nickel complex as an effective activator for an organosilane in order to generate a silicate reactant. These reactions show 100% atom efficiency, generate no wastes, and are conducted under mild conditions.

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