Decarboxylative cross-coupling
Decarboxylative cross coupling reactions are chemical reactions in which a carboxylic acid is reacted with an organic halide to form a new carbon-carbon bond, concomitant with loss of CO2. Aryl and alkyl halides participate. Metal catalyst, base, and oxidant are required.
A significant advantage of this reaction is that it uses relatively inexpensive carboxylic acids and is far less air and moisture sensitive in comparison to typical cross-coupling organometallic reagents. Furthermore, the carboxylic acid moiety is a common feature of natural products and can also be prepared by relatively benign air oxidations. Additional benefits include the broad tolerance of functional groups, as well as the capacity to avoid the use of strong bases. An important elementary step in this reaction is protodecarboxylation or metalation to first convert the C–COOH bond to a C–H or C–M bond respectively.
History and catalyst development
Copper monometallic systems
The first reported decarboxylative cross coupling reaction was an Ullmann reaction, in 1966 by Nilsson et al. Thermal decarboxylation of [|copper] benzoates, in the presence of an aryl halide, was found to produce biaryls through aryl-Cu intermediates.This monometallic copper system required drastic conditions for complete cross-coupling, and had various intrinsic limitations, both of which prevented development of a catalytic, preparatory version of this reaction.
It was not until 2009 that Liu and Shang et al. found that decarboxylative cross-coupling of aryl bromides and iodides with potassium polyfluorobenzoates could be achieved using monometallic copper iodide as a catalyst. The oxidative addition step was determined to be the rate-limiting step in the copper-only catalyst cycle.
[|Cu-only] systems have also been found to promote coupling of alkynyl carboxylic acids with aryl halides, as well as decarboxylative dehydrogenative cross-coupling of amino acids with alkynes.
Catalysts for decarboxylative cross-coupling are of the general form ML2, with a wide variety of ligand types optimized for different substrates. Copper centers are often complexed with phenanthrolines, and activity is reported to increase with electron-rich substituents on the ligands.
Palladium monometallic systems
In 2000, Steglich et al. reported an intramolecular Pd-mediated decarboxylative cross-coupling reaction in their synthesis of lamellarin L.Myers et al. reported decarboxylative olefination of ortho-substituted arene carboxylates in the presence of an oxidant in 2002.
Subsequent studies showed that homogeneous Pd catalysts were able to decarboxylate acids at lower temperatures than their Cu and Ag counterparts, but were limited to electron rich ortho-substituted aromatic carboxylic acids.
Despite this, palladium catalysts are able to promote a wide variety of cross-coupling reactions including biaryl formation and aryl alkyne formation, along with a variety of cross-coupling reactions in which the carboxylic acid is not bonded to an aromatic.
Other Pd-catalyzed decarboxylation cross-coupling reactions include conjugated diene preparation and dehydrogenative reactions.
Contrarily to Cu-only systems, decarboxylative palladation is the rate-limiting step in the palladium catalytic cycle.
Palladium-–copper bimetallic systems
A Pd–Cu bimetallic system was not discovered until 2006 when Goossen et al. reported a decarboxylative cross-coupling of aryl halides with ortho-substituted aromatic carboxylic acids.Through subsequent studies it was found that the use of aryl triflates allowed substrate scope for cross-coupling to be extended to some aromatic carboxylates lacking any ortho-substitution. This was a result of the fact that any halide anion generated in the reaction inhibited the Cu-catalyzed decarboxylation process.
Further optimization of the system and catalyst conditions has made decarboxylative cross-coupling using bimetallic Pd–Cu systems applicable to organic synthesis, most predominantly in the formation of biaryls.
As well, the variability of this combined catalytic system allows for promotion of a large spectrum of reactions, including aryl ketone formation, c-heteroatom cross-coupling, and many others.
Palladium–silver bimetallic systems
Silver being in the same group as copper, Pd–Ag bimetallic systems are inherently similar to Pd–Cu catalytic systems. However, silver salts are better suited for protodecarboxylation of carboxylic acids than their copper equivalents, allowing milder reaction conditions in Pd–Ag cycles relative to Pd–Cu cycles.Ag catalyzed monometallic systems have also been reported. Their proficiency is likely attributed to lower electronegativity and greater expansion of d-orbitals, which promote decarboxylation of the substrate.
One limitation of this catalyst combination is that the [|silver] salts will form insoluble silver halides, forcing the reaction to require a stoichiometric amount of Ag if halides are present. This obstacle was overcome by Goossen et al. in 2010 by using aryl triflates, and catalytic reaction with aryl sulfonates has also been reported.