posted on 2016-08-04, 00:00authored byNicklas Deibl, Rhett Kempe
The borrowing hydrogen
or hydrogen autotransfer methodology is
an elegant and sustainable or green concept to construct carbon–carbon
bonds. In this concept, alcohols, which can be obtained from barely
used and indigestible biomass, such as lignocellulose, are employed
as alkylating reagents. An especially challenging alkylation is that
of unactivated esters and amides. Only noble metal catalysts based
on iridium and ruthenium have been used to accomplish these reactions.
Herein, we report on the first base metal-catalyzed α-alkylation
of unactivated amides and esters by alcohols. Cobalt complexes stabilized
with pincer ligands, recently developed in our laboratory, catalyze
these reactions very efficiently. The precatalysts can be synthesized
easily from commercially available starting materials on a multigram
scale and are self-activating under the basic reaction conditions.
This Co catalyst class is also able to mediate alkylation reactions
of both esters and amides. In addition, we apply the methodology to
synthesize ketones and to convert alcohols into aldehydes elongated
by two carbon atoms.