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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(32): 18126-18140, 2023 Aug 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37526380

ABSTRACT

Azole anions are highly competent in the activation of weak acyl donors, but, unlike neutral (aprotic) Lewis bases, are not yet widely applied as acylation catalysts. Using a combination of in situ and stopped-flow 1H/19F NMR spectroscopy, kinetics, isotopic labeling, 1H DOSY, and electronic structure calculations, we have investigated azole-catalyzed aminolysis of p-fluorophenyl acetate. The global kinetics have been elucidated under four sets of conditions, and the key elementary steps underpinning catalysis deconvoluted using a range of intermediates and transition state probes. While all evidence points to an overarching mechanism involving n-π* catalysis via N-acylated azole intermediates, a diverse array of kinetic regimes emerges from this framework. Even seemingly minor changes to the solvent, auxiliary base, or azole catalyst can elicit profound changes in the temporal evolution, thermal sensitivity, and progressive inhibition of catalysis. These observations can only be rationalized by taking a holistic view of the mechanism and a set of limiting regimes for the kinetics. Overall, the analysis of 18 azole catalysts spanning nearly 10 orders of magnitude in acidity highlights the pitfall of pursuing ever more nucleophilic catalysts without regard for catalyst speciation.

2.
Prog Nucl Magn Reson Spectrosc ; 129: 28-106, 2022 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35292133

ABSTRACT

A 'principles and practice' tutorial-style review of the application of solution-phase NMR in the analysis of the mechanisms of homogeneous organic and organometallic reactions and processes. This review of 345 references summarises why solution-phase NMR spectroscopy is uniquely effective in such studies, allowing non-destructive, quantitative analysis of a wide range of nuclei common to organic and organometallic reactions, providing exquisite structural detail, and using instrumentation that is routinely available in most chemistry research facilities. The review is in two parts. The first comprises an introduction to general techniques and equipment, and guidelines for their selection and application. Topics include practical aspects of the reaction itself, reaction monitoring techniques, NMR data acquisition and processing, analysis of temporal concentration data, NMR titrations, DOSY, and the use of isotopes. The second part comprises a series of 15 Case Studies, each selected to illustrate specific techniques and approaches discussed in the first part, including in situ NMR (1/2H, 10/11B, 13C, 15N, 19F, 29Si, 31P), kinetic and equilibrium isotope effects, isotope entrainment, isotope shifts, isotopes at natural abundance, scalar coupling, kinetic analysis (VTNA, RPKA, simulation, steady-state), stopped-flow NMR, flow NMR, rapid injection NMR, pure shift NMR, dynamic nuclear polarisation, 1H/19F DOSY NMR, and in situ illumination NMR.


Subject(s)
Isotopes , Kinetics , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy/methods
3.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(50): 21079-21099, 2021 12 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34870970

ABSTRACT

Chemists have many options for elucidating reaction mechanisms. Global kinetic analysis and classic transition-state probes (e.g., LFERs, Eyring) inevitably form the cornerstone of any strategy, yet their application to increasingly sophisticated synthetic methodologies often leads to a wide range of indistinguishable mechanistic proposals. Computational chemistry provides powerful tools for narrowing the field in such cases, yet wholly simulated mechanisms must be interpreted with great caution. Heavy-atom kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) offer an exquisite but underutilized method for reconciling the two approaches, anchoring the theoretician in the world of calculable observables and providing the experimentalist with atomistic insights. This Perspective provides a personal outlook on this synergy. It surveys the computation of heavy-atom KIEs and their measurement by NMR spectroscopy, discusses recent case studies, highlights the intellectual reward that lies in alignment of experiment and theory, and reflects on the changes required in chemical education in the area.

4.
J Am Chem Soc ; 143(4): 2097-2107, 2021 02 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33427456

ABSTRACT

Alkylidene carbenes undergo rapid inter- and intramolecular reactions and rearrangements, including 1,2-migrations of ß-substituents to generate alkynes. Their propensity for substituent migration exerts profound influence over the broader utility of alkylidene carbene intermediates, yet prior efforts to categorize 1,2-migratory aptitude in these elusive species have been hampered by disparate modes of carbene generation, ultrashort carbene lifetimes, mechanistic ambiguities, and the need to individually prepare a series of 13C-labeled precursors. Herein we report on the rearrangement of 13C-alkylidene carbenes generated in situ by the homologation of carbonyl compounds with [13C]-Li-TMS-diazomethane, an approach that obviates the need for isotopically labeled substrates and has expedited a systematic investigation (13C{1H} NMR, DLPNO-CCSD(T)) of migratory aptitudes in an unprecedented range of more than 30 alkylidene carbenes. Hammett analyses of the reactions of 26 differentially substituted benzophenones reveal several counterintuitive features of 1,2-migration in alkylidene carbenes that may prove of utility in the study and synthetic application of unsaturated carbenes more generally.

5.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(17): 7181-7193, 2019 05 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30943722

ABSTRACT

Controlling the regioselectivity of ambident nucleophiles toward alkylating agents is a fundamental problem in heterocyclic chemistry. Unsubstituted triazoles are particularly challenging, often requiring inefficient stepwise protection-deprotection strategies and prefunctionalization protocols. Herein we report on the alkylation of archetypal ambident 1,2,4-triazole, 1,2,3-triazole, and their anions, analyzed by in situ 1H/19F NMR, kinetic modeling, diffusion-ordered NMR spectroscopy, X-ray crystallography, highly correlated coupled-cluster computations [CCSD(T)-F12, DF-LCCSD(T)-F12, DLPNO-CCSD(T)], and Marcus theory. The resulting mechanistic insights allow design of an organocatalytic methodology for ambident control in the direct N-alkylation of unsubstituted triazole anions. Amidinium and guanidinium receptors are shown to act as strongly coordinating phase-transfer organocatalysts, shuttling triazolate anions into solution. The intimate ion pairs formed in solution retain the reactivity of liberated triazole anions but, by virtue of highly regioselective ion pairing, exhibit alkylation selectivities that are completely inverted (1,2,4-triazole) or substantially enhanced (1,2,3-triazole) compared to the parent anions. The methodology allows direct access to 4-alkyl-1,2,4-triazoles ( rr up to 94:6) and 1-alkyl-1,2,3-triazoles ( rr up to 99:1) in one step. Regioselective ion pairing acts in effect as a noncovalent in situ protection mechanism, a concept that may have broader application in the control of ambident systems.

6.
Faraday Discuss ; 211(0): 569-591, 2018 10 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30051896

ABSTRACT

Recent periodic density functional calculations have predicted the existence of ultra-flexible low-energy forms of boron oxides in which rigid boron-oxygen heterocycles are linked by flexible B-O-B bridges. The minima in the energy landscapes of these frameworks are remarkably broad, with widths in excess of those of many hybrid metal-organic frameworks. Enormous changes in cell volume, which can exceed a factor of two, are accompanied by negligible changes in energy. Here we explore the underlying reasons for this behaviour using molecular electronic-structure calculations, periodic density functional theory and template-based geometric simulations. The angular flexibility of the B-O-B bridge depends only upon the geometry of the local B2O5 unit, independent of the configuration of neighbouring bridges. Unique cooperativity between the bending and twisting motions of the bridges leads to considerable anisotropy in framework flexibility. Exceptional flexibility is conferred not only by the intrinsic bending flexibility of the bridges but by topological factors, crucially the relaxation of torsional constraints when B3O3 rings are present. We test these conclusions by showing how the flexibility of the frameworks can be tuned by decoration with isoelectronic rings. The new nanoporous boron oxides presented in this work are predicted to be potential novel guest-host materials because of their flat energy landscapes. Furthermore, such structures can be generated systematically from silicates by the substitution of B2O54- for SiO44-. A borate analogue of ß-cristobalite is shown to be isoenergetic with the known B2O3-I polymorph. We raise the possibility of new families of frameworks and zeolite analogues.

7.
J Am Chem Soc ; 140(4): 1285-1293, 2018 01 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29300460

ABSTRACT

Photoredox catalysis has driven a revolution in the field of organic chemistry, but direct mechanistic insights into reactions of genuine synthetic utility remain relatively scarce. Herein we report ultrafast time-resolved spectroscopic observation of a bimolecular organocatalyzed photoredox reaction, from catalyst photoexcitation through to photoinduced electron transfer (PET) and intermediate formation, using transient vibrational and electronic absorption spectroscopy with sub-picosecond time resolution. Specifically, the photochemical dynamics of initiation in organocatalyzed atom-transfer radical polymerization (O-ATRP) are elucidated for two complementary photoredox organocatalysts (N,N-diaryl-5,10-dihydrophenazines). Following photoexcitation, a dissociative bimolecular electron transfer is observed from the first excited singlet state of both photocatalysts to methyl 2-bromopropionate in dichloromethane, toluene, and dimethylformamide. The photocatalyst excited donor state, ground state, and radical cation are tracked in real time alongside the debrominated radical fragment. Our work challenges previously proposed mechanisms of initiation in O-ATRP and indicates that PET from short-lived excited singlet states can exert control of polymer molecular weight and dispersity by suppressing the steady-state concentration of the reactive debrominated radical. More broadly, we aim to demonstrate the potential of ultrafast absorption spectroscopy to observe directly transient, open-shell intermediates in mechanistic studies of photoredox catalysis.

8.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 56(41): 12533-12537, 2017 10 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28817222

ABSTRACT

Diarylamines find use as metal ligands and as structural components of drug molecules, and are commonly made by metal-catalyzed C-N coupling. However, the limited tolerance to steric hindrance of these couplings restricts the synthetic availability of more substituted diarylamines. Here we report a remarkable variant of the Smiles rearrangement that employs readily accessible N-aryl anthranilamides as precursors to diarylamines. Conformational predisposition of the anthranilamide starting material brings the aryl rings into proximity and allows the rearrangement to take place despite the absence of electron-withdrawing substituents, and even with sterically encumbered doubly ortho-substituted substrates. Some of the diarylamine products are resolvable into atropisomeric enantiomers, and are the first simple diarylamines to display atropisomerism.

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