4.7 Article

Deciphering Reactivity and Selectivity Patterns in Aliphatic C-H Bond Oxygenation of Cyclopentane and Cyclohexane Derivatives

Journal

JOURNAL OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 86, Issue 15, Pages 9925-9937

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.joc.1c00902

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CHE1764328]
  2. University of Rome Tor Vergata [E84I20000250005]
  3. Shanghai Sailing Program [20YF1416000]

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A study on the reactions of the cumyloxyl radical with monosubstituted cyclopentanes and cyclohexanes showed that cyclopentanes predominantly functionalize at C-1, while the importance of HAT from C-1 decreases with increasing steric bulk in cyclohexanes. Determinants of site-selectivity include the nature of the HAT reagent, C-H bond strengths, and torsional effects.
A kinetic, product, and computational study on the reactions of the cumyloxyl radical with monosubstituted cyclopentanes and cyclohexanes has been carried out. HAT rates, site-selectivities for C-H bond oxidation, and DFT computations provide quantitative information and theoretical models to explain the observed patterns. Cyclopentanes functionalize predominantly at C-1, and tertiary C-H bond activation barriers decrease on going from methyl- and tert-butylcyclopentane to phenylcyclopentane, in line with the computed C-H BDEs. With cyclohexanes, the relative importance of HAT from C-1 decreases on going from methyl- and phenylcyclohexane to ethyl-, isopropyl-, and tert-butylcyclohexane. Deactivation is also observed at C-2 with site-selectivity that progressively shifts to C-3 and C-4 with increasing substituent steric bulk. The site-selectivities observed in the corresponding oxidations promoted by ethyl(trifluoromethyl)dioxirane support this mechanistic picture. Comparison of these results with those obtained previously for C-H bond azidation and functionalizations promoted by the PINO radical of phenyl and tert-butylcyclohexane, together with new calculations, provides a mechanistic framework for understanding C-H bond functionalization of cycloalkanes. The nature of the HAT reagent, C-H bond strengths, and torsional effects are important determinants of site-selectivity, with the latter effects that play a major role in the reactions of oxygen-centered HAT reagents with monosubstituted cyclohexanes.

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