Unlocking the Aromatic Cope Rearrangement with Gold(I) Catalysis

17 September 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The Aromatic Cope Rearrangement (ArCopeR) is a highly challenging chemical reaction under thermal conditions, pri-marily attributed to the loss of aromaticity during the initial [3,3]-sigmatropic step of the process. Such rare transfor-mation typically requires high temperatures and specially engineered 1,5-hexadiene scaffolds, making it impractical for straightforward synthesis of new molecules. Here, we demonstrated that gold(I) catalysts significantly lower the energet-ic barriers associated to ArCopeR, enabling the reaction to be carried out at low temperature (rt to 70°C) in dichloro-ethane or hexafluoroisopropanol with high yields. Specifically, phosphine gold(I) complex ((p-CF3Ph)3PAuOTf) permits for the diastereoselective and divergent aromatic Cope rearrangement from various α-allyl-α’-heteroaromatic γ-lactone or malonate derivatives, while N-heterocyclic carbene gold(I) (IPrAuNTf2) allows the selective dearomatization reaction. Extended quantum mechanics calculations, consistent with experimental observations, reveal that (i) an interweaved transformation occurs instead of the expected ArCope cascade made of formal [3,3]-sigmatropic rearrangement and [1,3]H-shift steps, and that (ii) van der Waals interactions between the catalyst and substrate contribute to the interrupt-ed ArCope process leading to dearomatize products. This study presents the first catalytic and synthetically useful proto-col to promote ArCopeR under mild conditions.

Keywords

Aromatic Cope Rearragement
Gold
Catalysis
Dearomatization reaction
Quantum mechanics calculations

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