14309-92-3Relevant articles and documents
Nucleophilic Aromatic Substitution Reactions in Water Enabled by Micellar Catalysis
Isley, Nicholas A.,Linstadt, Roscoe T. H.,Kelly, Sean M.,Gallou, Fabrice,Lipshutz, Bruce H.
, p. 4734 - 4737 (2015)
Given the huge dependence on dipolar, aprotic solvents such as DMF, DMSO, DMAc, and NMP in nucleophilic aromatic substitution reactions (SNAr), a simple and environmentally friendly alternative is reported. Use of a "benign-by-design" nonionic surfactant, TPGS-750-M, in water enables nitrogen, oxygen, and sulfur nucleophiles to participate in SNAr reactions. Aromatic and heteroaromatic substrates readily participate in this micellar catalysis, which takes place at or near ambient temperatures.
Trimethyl Borate-Catalyzed, Solvent-Free Reductive Amination
Ramachandran, P. Veeraraghavan,Choudhary, Shivani,Singh, Aman
, p. 4274 - 4280 (2021/03/09)
Solvent-free reductive amination of aldehydes and ketones with aliphatic and aromatic amines in high-to-excellent yields has been achieved with sub-stoichiometric trimethyl borate as promoter and ammonia borane as reductant.
Nucleophilic aromatic substitution reactions under aqueous, mild conditions using polymeric additive HPMC
Ansari, Tharique N.,Borlinghaus, Niginia,Braje, Leon H.,Braje, Wilfried M.,Handa, Sachin,Ogulu, Deborah,Wittmann, Valentin
supporting information, p. 3955 - 3962 (2021/06/17)
The use of the inexpensive, benign, and sustainable polymer, hydroxypropyl methylcellulose (HPMC), in water enables nucleophilic aromatic subsitution (SNAr) reactions between various nucleophiles and electrophiles. The mild reaction conditions facilitate a broad functional group tolerance that can be utilized for subsequent derivatization for the synthesis of pharmaceutically relevant building blocks. The use of only equimolar amounts of all reagents and water as reaction solvent reveals the greenness and sustainability of the methodology presented herein.
Iron-Catalyzed Oxidative Amination of Benzylic C(sp3)–H Bonds with Anilines
Song, Yan-Ling,Li, Bei,Xie, Zhen-Biao,Wang, Dan,Sun, Hong-Mei
, p. 17975 - 17985 (2021/12/13)
Iron-catalyzed oxidative amination of benzylic C(sp3)–H bonds with anilines bearing electron-withdrawing groups (EWGs) or electron-donating groups (EDGs) is realized based on simple variations of N-substituents on imidazolium cations in novel ionic Fe(III) complexes. The structural modification of the imidazolium cation resulted in regulation of the redox potential and the catalytic performance of the iron metal center. Using DTBP as oxidant, [HItBu][FeBr4] showed the highest catalytic activity for anilines bearing EWGs, while [HIPym][FeBr4] was more efficient for EDG-substituted anilines. This work provides alternative access to benzylamines with the advantages of both a wide substrate scope and iron catalysis.