4.8 Article

Empirical Guidelines for the Development of Remote Directing Templates through Quantitative and Experimental Analyses

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 144, Issue 6, Pages 2793-2803

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c12654

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Scripps Research Institute
  2. NIH (National Institute of General Medical Sciences) [R01 GM102265]
  3. Korea Foundation for Advanced Studies

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This study summarizes key factors for achieving high selectivity at defined aryl positions by analyzing 119 structurally unique remote DTs, which are experimentally corroborated through the development of new aliphatic meta and para-selective DTs for electronically unbiased arenes. These empirical rules, summarizing key distance and geometric factors, are expected to be useful tools for the future development of site-selective arene C-H activation and other reactions relying on covalent/noncovalent DT-mediated remote regioselection.
The ability to differentiate and selectively activate remote C-H bonds represents a perennial challenge in the field of C-H activation. Since its first report in 2012, a now-established directing template (DT) approach remains demonstrably effective for the functionalization of remote C-H bonds. As selectivity is hypothesized to be principally determined by the optimal positioning of the reactive catalyst to a target C-H bond, a DT's spatial factors are particularly important toward achieving high selectivity, though a systematic study on its requisite factors remain unelucidated. Through an in-depth analysis of 119 structurally unique published remote DTs, this report summarizes the key factors that are central toward achieving high selectivity at defined aryl positions, which are experimentally corroborated through the development of new aliphatic meta and para-selective DTs for electronically unbiased arenes. These empirical rules, which summarize key distance and geometric factors, are expected to be useful tools for the future development of site-selective arene C-H activation as well as other reactions that rely on covalent/noncovalent DT-mediated remote regioselection.

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