Practical and Stereoselective Electrocatalytic 1,2-Diamination of Alkenes

Practical and Stereoselective Electrocatalytic 1,2-Diamination of Alkenes

View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Xiamen University Institutional Repository ARTICLE https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-13024-5 OPEN Practical and stereoselective electrocatalytic 1,2-diamination of alkenes Chen-Yan Cai1, Xiao-Min Shu1 & Hai-Chao Xu 1* The 1,2-diamine motif is widely present in natural products, pharmaceutical compounds, and catalysts used in asymmetric synthesis. The simultaneous introduction of two amino groups across an alkene feedstock is an appealing yet challenging approach for the synthesis of 1,2- 1234567890():,; diamines, primarily due to the inhibitory effect of the diamine products to transition metal catalysts and the difficulty in controlling reaction diastereoselectivity and regioselectivity. Herein we report a scalable electrocatalytic 1,2-diamination reaction that can be used to convert stable, easily available aryl alkenes and sulfamides to 1,2-diamines with excellent diastereoselectivity. Monosubstituted sulfamides react in a regioselective manner to afford 1,2-diamines bearing different substituents on the two amino groups. The combination of an organic redox catalyst and electricity not only obviates the use of any transition metal catalyst and oxidizing reagent, but also ensures broad reaction compatibility with a variety of electronically and sterically diverse substrates. 1 State Key Laboratory of Physical Chemistry of Solid Surfaces, Innovation Center of Chemistry for Energy Materials, Key Laboratory of Chemical Biology of Fujian Province, and College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Xiamen University, Xiamen 361005, People’s Republic of China. *email: [email protected] NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | (2019) 10:4953 | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-13024-5 | www.nature.com/naturecommunications 1 ARTICLE NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-13024-5 1,2-Diamine is a prevalent structural motif in natural products, drawbacks. First, the use of stoichiometric amounts of transition pharmaceutical compounds, and molecular catalysts1. Alkene 1,2- metal reagents (e.g., osmium or cobalt)3,7, chemical oxidants (e.g., diamination and 1,2-diazidation reactions are among the most iodine (III) reagents or organic peroxides)5,6,10,11, or azide straightforward and attractive strategies for 1,2-diamine synthesis, reagents8–14 raises cost, environmental, and safety issues, espe- especially considering the easy accessibility and handling of cially for large-scale applications19,20. Second, they are often alkene substrates2. Significant progress has been achieved limited in substrate scope, sometimes requiring special amination over the past decades in alkene 1,2-diamination and 1,2-diazi- reagents (e.g., diaziridinone and its analogs4,15,16, or azido-iodine dation reactions, mainly through transition metal catalysis compounds9). Other challenges that need to be addressed (Fig. 1a, b)3–18. Unfortunately, these methods are not without include unsatisfactory diastereoselectivity for internal alkenes and a Previous work: alkene 1,2-diamination via activation of nitrogenous reagents (refs. 3–6) O NtBu O NtBu R2 Os (1 equiv) t Os t 1) LiAlH tBuHN NHtBu tBuN NtBu Bu N N Bu 4 1 R 2) H O 2 R1 R2 R1 R2 X N N tBu X tBu t t N N Bu Bu (1.5–2 equiv) Concd. HCl H2N NH 2 Ar Then NaOH CuCl-PPh3 (cat.) Ar Ar X = SO2 or CO O O 1) Boc S N NH2 , [Rh] (cat.) O H O S R2 Boc Pyridine, H O BocHN NH PhI(OAc) 2 (1.1 equiv) N NH 2 2 1 R 2) NaI 2 R1 R2 R1 R O Me Me 1) Red-Al O Cl 2) (COCl) S S O OOH 2 R N 3) SmI 2 O O , Ms N NMs H N NH H (2 equiv) 2 2 2 2 Ar Ar-I (cat.) Ar R 4) HCl Ar R b Previous work: catalytic alkene 1,2-diazidation via activation of azido donor [Fe] or [Cu] (cat.) + azido source/oxidant (refs. 9–11) H2N NH 2 1 2 N3 I O R R HO I O O t reduction O or O Bu 2 TMSN3 + O Ph O R N3 N3 (1.2–2 equiv) R1 (2–2.5 equiv) R1 R2 low dr for acyclic alkenes [Mn] (cat.) + NaN3/HOAc or aminoxyl (cat.) + NaN3 Electrolysis (refs. 12–14) c This work: diastereoselective 1,2-diamination of alkenes via activation of alkenes O O H2 Functionalization R2 O O Cat 3 S R3HN NHR4 R N NH and deprotection R3 S + N NH R1 NAr (cat.) R1 R2 H H 3 R1 R2 R1 = Ar R2 Diastereoselective R2 = alkyl, vinyl via Differentiated amino groups R1 Transition metal- and oxidizing reagent-free Fig. 1 Synthesis of 1,2-diamines. a, b Representative examples of established 1,2-diamine synthesis via vicinal difunctionalization of alkenes. c Proposed electrochemical 1,2-diamination of alkenes with sulfamides via dehydrogenative annulation and removal of the sulfonyl group. Boc, tert-butyloxycarbonyl; Ms, methanesulfonyl; TMS, trimethylsilyl 2 NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | (2019) 10:4953 | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-13024-5 | www.nature.com/naturecommunications NATURE COMMUNICATIONS | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-019-13024-5 ARTICLE poor differentiation of the two amino groups in the diamine The electrons that the alkene loses to the anode would eventually products. combine with the protons at the cathode to form H2, thereby Organic electrochemistry, which drives redox processes with obviating the need for external electron and proton acceptors. electric current, is increasingly considered as a highly sustainable The controlled formation of alkene radical cations at low con- and efficient synthetic method21–34. One key advantage of using centrations is essential to overcome their strong propensity electrochemical methods is that the reaction efficiency and toward self-dimerization or reaction with the alkene precursors, selectivity can often be boosted by manipulating the electric especially on electrode surface44–46. This could be accomplished current or potential, allowing one to achieve transformations that by conducting electrolysis indirectly in the presence of a redox are otherwise synthetically inaccessible. In this context, Yoshida35 catalyst rather than direct electrolysis. Measuring catalytic current reported isolated examples of alkene diamination through intra- through cyclic voltammetry33,47, with tris(2,4-dibromophenyl) 36 molecular trapping of alkene radical cations. Shäfer reported an amine (1, Ep/2 = 1.48 V vs saturated calomel electrode (SCE)) as early example of electrochemical 1,2-diazidation of simple alkenes the redox catalyst, confirmed the facile electrocatalytic oxidation with NaN3 in acetic acid. Lin and co-workers recently developed a of the alkenes 2 (Ep/2 = 1.66 V vs SCE) and 3 (Ep/2 = 1.80 V vs fi NaN3-based electrocatalytic ole n 1,2-diazidiation reaction that SCE) that bears an electron-withdrawing ester group (Fig. 2b, c). showed an exceptional substrate scope and broad functional 12–14 group compatibility (Fig. 1b, bottom) . Reaction optimization. The 1,2-diamination of aryl alkene 2 Building on our experience with electrochemical alkene 37,38 with sulfamide 4 was chosen as a model reaction for optimizing difunctionalization , herein we report a diastereoselective the electrochemical conditions. The electrolysis was conducted at electrocatalytic 1,2-diamination reaction of di- and tri-substituted RT and at a constant current in a three-necked round-bottomed alkenes using easily available and stable sulfamides as amino flask equipped with a reticulated vitreous carbon (RVC) anode donors. A wide variety of 1,2-diamines, where the two amino and a platinum plate cathode. The optimal reaction system groups are functionalized with different substituents, can be consisted of triarylamine 1 (10 mol %) as redox catalyst, iPrCO H prepared via regio- and diastereoselective diamination using 2 (2 equiv) and BF3•Et2O (0.5 equiv) as additives, Et4NPF6 as monosubstituted sulfamides. The electrosynthetic method supporting electrolyte to increase conductivity, and MeCN/ employs an organic redox catalyst and proceeds through H2 CH2Cl2 (1:2) as solvent. Under these conditions, the diamination evolution, while obviating the need for transition metal catalysts product 5 was obtained in 72% yield with excellent diastereos- and external chemical oxidants. electivty ( > 20:1 dr) even though a starting mixture of Z/E iso- mers of 2 was used (in a ratio of 5.6:1) (Table 1, entry 1). Results Independent reaction using a pure E-orZ-isomer of 2 afforded Design plan. Inspired by our previously work on electrochemical the same trans diastereomer 5 in 65% and 69% yield, respectively. alkene dioxygenation reactions38, we envisioned the trapping of Similar results could also be obtained when the reaction was an electrocatalytically generated alkene radical cation II•+ with a performed in ElectraSyn 2.0, a commercial apparatus (Table 1, 39–43 sulfamide III to generate a carbon radical IV (Fig. 2a). entry 2). The use of MeCN as solvent instead of MeCN/CH2Cl2 Single-electron transfer oxidation of IV by I•+ would produce a resulted in a lower yield of 50% (Table 1, entry 3). Other triar- = = carbocation V, which could then undergo cyclization to afford the ylamine derivatives such as 6 (Ep/2 1.06 V vs SCE), 7 (Ep/2 = cyclic sulfamide VI. Cyclization of V has a key role in governing 1.26 V vs SCE), and 8 (Ep/2 1.33 V vs SCE) were found to be the stereoselectivity of the 1,2-diamination, in which the alkene- less effective in promoting the formation of 5 probably because of originated substituents R1 and R2 are positioned on opposite sides their lower oxidation potentials (Table 1, entries 4–6). Control of the nascent five-membered ring to minimize steric repulsion. experiments showed that the triarylamine catalyst (Table 1, entry ab Br Anodee − Cathode Et R 2 N Br R 3 2, R = H NAr3 1 3, R = COOMe R1 e− I II SET 123 2 R O O NAr3 R3 S I 1 N NH2 R II H III 1.4 V 1.6 V 1.8 V 2.0 V 2H+ 2e− R3 O O HN S c H+ 20 1 NH 1 R 2 NAr3 15 1 and 2 H R2 H − 2 3 I IV e A) 10 1 and 3 SET + ( H I R3 O O O NAr O 5 3 S I HN S R3 NH N NH R1 0 2 1 2 H R R R 1.2 1.6 2.0 V VI E (V) vs SCE Fig.

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