Pd-Catalyzed Domino Carbonylative/Decarboxylative Allylation Steven Giboulot
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Pd-catalyzed domino carbonylative/decarboxylative allylation Steven Giboulot To cite this version: Steven Giboulot. Pd-catalyzed domino carbonylative/decarboxylative allylation. Organic chemistry. Université Pierre et Marie Curie - Paris VI, 2012. English. NNT : 2012PAO66196. tel-00829489 HAL Id: tel-00829489 https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00829489 Submitted on 3 Jun 2013 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. THESE DE DOCTORAT DE L’UNIVERSITE PIERRE ET MARIE CURIE - PARIS 6 Spécialité CHIMIE ORGANIQUE Ecole Doctorale de Chimie Moléculaire de Paris Centre – ED 406 Présentée par Mr Steven GIBOULOT Pour obtenir le grade de DOCTEUR de l’UNIVERSITE PIERRE ET MARIE CURIE Sujet de la thèse : Pd-Catalyzed Domino Carbonylative / Decarboxylative Allylation Soutenue le 24 SEPTEMBRE 2012 Devant le jury composé de : Docteur Emmanuel ROULLAND Institut de Chimie des Substances Naturelles Rapporteur Professeur Bartolo GABRIELE Université de Calabria Rapporteur Professeur André MORTREUX Université de Lille 1 Examinateur Professeur Serge THORIMBERT Université Pierre et Marie Curie Examinateur Docteur Frédéric LIRON Université Pierre et Marie Curie Examinateur Professeur Giovanni POLI Université Pierre et Marie Curie Directeur de thèse Université Pierre & Marie Curie - Paris 6 Tél. Secrétariat : 01 42 34 68 35 Bureau d’accueil, inscription des doctorants et base de Fax : 01 42 34 68 40 données Tél. pour les étudiants de A à EL : 01 42 34 69 54 Esc G, 2ème étage Tél. pour les étudiants de EM à MON : 01 42 34 68 41 15 rue de l’école de médecine Tél. pour les étudiants de MOO à Z : 01 42 34 68 51 75270-PARIS CEDEX 06 E-mail : [email protected] THESE DE DOCTORAT DE L’UNIVERSITE PIERRE ET MARIE CURIE - PARIS 6 Spécialité CHIMIE ORGANIQUE Ecole Doctorale de Chimie Moléculaire de Paris Centre – ED 406 Présentée par Mr Steven GIBOULOT Pour obtenir le grade de DOCTEUR de l’UNIVERSITE PIERRE ET MARIE CURIE Sujet de la thèse : Pd-Catalyzed Domino Carbonylative / Decarboxylative Allylation Soutenue le 24 SEPTEMBRE 2012 Devant le jury composé de : Docteur Emmanuel ROULLAND Institut de Chimie des Substances Naturelles Rapporteur Professeur Bartolo GABRIELE Université de Calabria Rapporteur Professeur André MORTREUX Université de Lille 1 Examinateur Professeur Serge THORIMBERT Université Pierre et Marie Curie Examinateur Docteur Frédéric LIRON Université Pierre et Marie Curie Examinateur Professeur Giovanni POLI Université Pierre et Marie Curie Directeur de thèse Université Pierre & Marie Curie - Paris 6 Tél. Secrétariat : 01 42 34 68 35 Bureau d’accueil, inscription des doctorants et base de Fax : 01 42 34 68 40 données Tél. pour les étudiants de A à EL : 01 42 34 69 54 Esc G, 2ème étage Tél. pour les étudiants de EM à MON : 01 42 34 68 41 15 rue de l’école de médecine Tél. pour les étudiants de MOO à Z : 01 42 34 68 51 75270-PARIS CEDEX 06 E-mail : [email protected] ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS First of all, I would to thank the dear members of my Ph.D defense, Prof. Bartolo Gabriele, Dr. Emmanuel Roulland, Prof. Serge Thorimbert and Prof. André Mortreux for their presence and for agreeing to be referees. I would like also to thank the Prof. Max Malacria and Dr. Corinne Aubert for trusting me and giving me the opportunity to realize this work in the Institut Parisien de Chimie Moléculaire of the Université Pierre et Marie Curie. I am also grateful to Prof. Giovanni Poli for giving me the opportunity of doing my Ph.D in his group and for his guidance in the course of scientific research presented here. More than a supervisor, the work done under his supervision was always a pleasure. My special gratitude goes to Dr. Frédéric Liron for his guidance and many advices during the whole course of my thesis. You help me in thousands of subjects dealing with chemistry or not. For the careful correction of this manuscript, which is hopefully not in French. I would also like to thank Dr. Julie Oble, her recent arrival in the team gave a new start to the team. It was a pleasure to work with you. Moreover the many summertime “pause-bière” were always welcome. I would like to thank Prof. Guillaume Prestat, Dr. Alejandro Perez Luna and Dr. Franck Ferreira for all the jokes and the good mood they create in the SSO team. Special thanks to Mathieu my “same-year-partner” and “tea-buddy” all the time together were always playful (especially when some solutions “has” to be hydrolyzed) and Redouane aka “rouge1” which had always some good advice and trick in chemistry! Laetitia, Iban and Jennifer the members of the “lunch team” which was of big help when the chemistry was not so good. I thank all former members of the SSO team: Julien, Sabrina, Audrey and Mitch. I would also like to thank all the members of 2nd floor, and especially Benoit, Hugo, Ségolène, Dénia, Sandrine and Ludwig for their friendship. I would like to thank the members of the team Unité de Catalyse et de Chimie du Solide (UCCS) of Lille for accepting me a hole month in December under the snow. It was a wonderful experience. I spent a really good time. I would like to thank especially Prof. Mathieu Sauthier, Dr. Yves Castanet, Dr. Benoit Wahl and Florian Medina for the welcome I had worthy of people of the north of the France. I thank also Omar for all the HRMS analysis, the interest you show in everything, you are always ready to help! I am also grateful for the hard work you do to improve the facilities at the 2nd floor. I am also grateful toward the ANR for the funding of my thesis project. Finally I would like to thank my family for their moral support throughout my thesis. Contents i ii Contents ....................................................................................................................................... i Abbreviations ............................................................................................................................. ix General Introduction.................................................................................................................. 1 Bibliography ............................................................................................................................... 5 CHAPTER I : Transition metal catalyzed domino reactions .......................................... 7 a) Pure domino reactions (TM-DOM).............................................................. 8 b) Pseudo-domino reactions (TM-PDOM) ..................................................... 10 i. Pseudo-domino type I reactions .......................................................... 11 ii. Pseudo-domino type II reactions ......................................................... 14 CHAPTER II : Carbonylation reactions .......................................................................... 17 a) Foreword ................................................................................................... 17 b) Carbonylation of sp-hybridized carbon atoms .......................................... 20 c) Carbonylation of sp2-hybridized carbon atoms ........................................ 22 i. Starting from an alkyne substrate ........................................................ 23 ii. By oxidative addition of a carbon-halogen bond ................................. 28 1) Cross-coupling reaction .............................................................. 28 2) Alkoxycarbonylation .................................................................... 32 3) Aminocarbonylation .................................................................... 35 4) Carboxylic acids formation .......................................................... 37 iii. By C-H activation .................................................................................. 38 d) Carbonylation of sp3 hybridized carbon atoms ......................................... 39 i. Carbonylation of π-allyl systems .......................................................... 39 ii. With β-hydrogen atoms ....................................................................... 41 iii 1) Via carbopalladation ................................................................... 42 2) Via hydropalladation ................................................................... 45 iii. Case of benzyl halides .......................................................................... 47 iv. With α-carbon-bound resonance stabilized electron withdrawing groups ................................................................................................... 50 1) Carbonylation of α-haloacetates ................................................ 50 2) Carbonylation of α-haloketones ................................................. 51 e) Carbonylation within domino reactions.................................................... 55 CHAPTER III : Decarboxylative Allylation ...................................................................... 61 a) Introduction ............................................................................................... 61 b) Catalysis by the transition metals ............................................................