Electrochemical Single-Carbon Insertion: Unlocking para-Insertion via Distonic Radical Cation Intermediates

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

Abstract

The synthesis of polysubstituted (hetero)aromatic compounds is essential in various fields, including pharmaceuticals, where such compounds are fundamental to many approved drugs. In this study, we present a novel electrochemical method for sin-gle-carbon insertion targeting various (hetero)aromatic compounds, with a particular focus on pyridines. In this process, the electrochemical oxidation of pyrrole derivatives produces a radical cation intermediate, which then undergoes nucleophilic attack by diazo compounds to yield polysubstituted pyridine derivatives. Notably, the insertion position is influenced by the electronic properties of N-protecting groups, allowing for unprecedented para-selective insertion through the introduction of electron-withdrawing groups. This approach is applicable to various substrates such as indole, imidazole, indene, and cyclo-pentadiene, resulting in the desired carbon-inserted products. Insights from in-situ spectroscopy and theoretical calculations suggest the involvement of distonic radical cation intermediates, facilitating carbon-atom migration on the aromatic ring and enabling insertion at different positions. This study expands the chemical toolkit for synthesizing polysubstituted (het-ero)aromatic compounds and introduces a new concept for single-carbon insertion chemistry.

Keywords

Electrosynthesis
Skeletal editing
Single carbon insertion
Ring expansion

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information
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General methods, description of the electrolyzer and experimental procedure, details of computation, chromatography data, and 1H NMR spectra (PDF).
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