Selective palladium-catalyzed carbonylative synthesis of aurones with formic acid as the CO source

Xinxin Qi a, Rui Li a and Xiao-Feng Wu *ab
aDepartment of Chemistry, Zhejiang Sci-Tech University, Xiasha Campus, Hangzhou 310018, People's Republic of China. E-mail: xiao-feng.wu@catalysis.de
bLeibniz-Institut für Katalyse e.V. an der Universit Rostock, Albert-Einstein-Strasse 29a, 18059 Rostock, Germany

Received 25th May 2016 , Accepted 24th June 2016

First published on 27th June 2016


Abstract

A general and practical strategy has been developed to prepare aurone derivatives. In the presence of the palladium catalyst, 2-iodophenol and terminal alkynes were reacted by using formic acid as the CO source with acetic anhydride as the additive. A variety of aurones were obtained in moderate to good yields. Notably, this is first report on carbonylative synthesis of aurones with formic acid as the CO source.


Flavonoids are a major class of plant natural products, exhibiting a broad variety of biological activities.1 As a subclass of the flavonoid family, aurones2 displaying a wide range of significant biological activities and have been utilized as antifungal agents,3 anticancer agents,4 and antioxidants.5 Therefore, numerous approaches for aurone synthesis have been reported. The most popular strategy is the condensation of benzofuran3(2H)-ones with benzaldehydes.6 This aldol-type reaction needs to prepare benzofuran3(2H)-ones from 2-phenoxyacetic acids under very harsh reaction conditions with modest yields. Other traditional synthetic methods include Wheeler aurone synthesis from chalcones dihalides,7 oxidative cyclization of 2′-hydroxychalcones,8 and ring closure of o-hydroxyaryl phenylethynyl ketones.9 However, these methods always result in a mixture of aurones and flavones. Thus, an selective and practical synthetic protocol for aurones synthesis is still in great demand.

Recently, palladium-catalyzed carbonylation reaction has drawn much attention for their widely application in both academy and industry.10 In these reactions, CO is used as the cheapest C1 source to prepare the carbonyl-containing compounds. Carbonylative procedures have also been applied in aurones synthesis, however problems such as the selectivity between aurones and flavones and limited substrates testing were not solved.11 Additionally, gaseous CO which is toxic, odorless, flammable and difficult to handle have to be applied. Under this background, various CO surrogates were developed and applied.12 In this regard, we wish to describe here a selective palladium-catalyzed carbonylation reaction of 2-iodophenol and terminal alkynes using formic acid as the CO precursor to provide aurone derivatives.13,14 The reaction proceeds in a selective manner and give the desired aurones in good yields. Notably, this is first report on carbonylative synthesis of aurones with formic acid as the CO source.

Initially, 2-iodophenol and phenyl acetylene was chosen as the model substrates to screen the reaction conditions (Table 1). Fortunately, the aurone product was obtained in 27% yield using Pd(OAc)2 as catalyst, PPh3 as ligand, Et3N as base in toluene at 80 °​C (entry 1). Other bases such pyridine, DBU, tBuONa, and NaHCO3 were also studied, and Et3N still give the best results. We then tested different solvents (entries 6–8), toluene proven to be the optimal solvent here. Furthermore, a variety of mono- and bidentate ligands were investigated (entries 9–14), DPPF, DPPPE, and Xphos resulted in similar yields compared with PPh3, 40% and 49% yields were observed by using P(o-tolyl)3 and BuPAd2 (entries 13–14). The yield decreased in the absence of phosphine ligand (entry 15). To our delight, the highest yield can be obtained when the reaction was performed with preformed Pd(PPh3)4 as the catalyst (entry 16).

Table 1 Screening of reaction conditionsa

image file: c6ra13615j-u1.tif

Entry Catalyst Ligand Base Solvent Yieldb (%)
a Reaction conditions: 2-iodophenol (1.0 mmol), phenyl acetylene (2.0 mmol), catalyst (3 mol%), ligand (6 mol%), base (5 equiv.), HCOOH (2.0 mmol), acetic anhydride (2.0 mmol), solvent (2 mL), 14 h. b GC yield, with dodecane as the internal standard. c Ligand (4 mol%).
1 Pd(OAc)2 PPh3 Et3N Toluene 27
2 Pd(OAc)2 PPh3 Pyridine Toluene 25
3 Pd(OAc)2 PPh3 DBU Toluene 6
4 Pd(OAc)2 PPh3 tBuONa Toluene 6
5 Pd(OAc)2 PPh3 NaHCO3 Toluene 24
6 Pd(OAc)2 PPh3 Et3N THF 9
7 Pd(OAc)2 PPh3 Et3N DMF 20
8 Pd(OAc)2 PPh3 Et3N CH3CN 25
9c Pd(OAc)2 DPPF Et3N Toluene 24
10c Pd(OAc)2 DPPPE Et3N Toluene 20
11c Pd(OAc)2 Xantphos Et3N Toluene 18
12 Pd(OAc)2 XPhos Et3N Toluene 27
13 Pd(OAc)2 P(o-tolyl)3 Et3N Toluene 40
14 Pd(OAc)2 BuPAd2 Et3N Toluene 49
15 Pd(OAc)2 Et3N Toluene 17
16 Pd(PPh3)4 Et3N Toluene 85
17 PdCl2(PPh3)2 Et3N Toluene 54


With the best reaction conditions in hand, we went on our study with a series of terminal alkynes (Table 2). First, various aromatic alkynes were examined, substrates with electron-donating groups including methoxy, tert-butyl, and methyl gave the corresponding products in very good yields (entries 2–4) those substrates with methyl group substituted at ortho-position gave higher yield than meta- and para- substitution (entry 4, 5 vs. 6). Electron-withdrawing group such as trifluoromethyl provided the desired products in 73% yields (entry 7). Subsequent examination of halide groups showed that fluoro and chloro substitutions resulted in better yields than bromo group (entry 8, 9 vs. 10). Moreover, heteroaryl groups involved thiophene, and pyridine moieties worked well to afford the desired aurone products in good yields (entries 11–12). Furthermore, alkyl alkynes were also tolerated well to provide the target products in good yields (entries 13–15).

Table 2 Carbonylative Sonogashira reaction of aryl iodides and terminal alkynesa

image file: c6ra13615j-u2.tif

Entry Alkyne Product Yieldb (%)
a Reaction conditions: 2-iodophenol (1.0 mmol), terminal acetylene (2.0 mmol), Pd(PPh3)4 (3 mol%), Et3N (5 equiv.), HCOOH (2.0 mmol), acetic anhydride (2.0 mmol), toluene (2 mL), 12–18 h. b Isolated yields.
1 image file: c6ra13615j-u3.tif image file: c6ra13615j-u4.tif 82
2 image file: c6ra13615j-u5.tif image file: c6ra13615j-u6.tif 82
3 image file: c6ra13615j-u7.tif image file: c6ra13615j-u8.tif 68
4 image file: c6ra13615j-u9.tif image file: c6ra13615j-u10.tif 75
5 image file: c6ra13615j-u11.tif image file: c6ra13615j-u12.tif 72
6 image file: c6ra13615j-u13.tif image file: c6ra13615j-u14.tif 81
7 image file: c6ra13615j-u15.tif image file: c6ra13615j-u16.tif 73
8 image file: c6ra13615j-u17.tif image file: c6ra13615j-u18.tif 80
9 image file: c6ra13615j-u19.tif image file: c6ra13615j-u20.tif 75
10 image file: c6ra13615j-u21.tif image file: c6ra13615j-u22.tif 58
11 image file: c6ra13615j-u23.tif image file: c6ra13615j-u24.tif 55
12 image file: c6ra13615j-u25.tif image file: c6ra13615j-u26.tif 68
13 image file: c6ra13615j-u27.tif image file: c6ra13615j-u28.tif 54
14 image file: c6ra13615j-u29.tif image file: c6ra13615j-u30.tif 62
15 image file: c6ra13615j-u31.tif image file: c6ra13615j-u32.tif 51


Based on the results of aurone synthesis from 2-iodophenol and terminal alkynes, a plausible reaction mechanism was proposed in Scheme 1. Initially, Pd(0) underwent oxidative addition with 2-iodophenol to form arylpalladium species I, and aroylpalladium iodide complex II was formed by the insertion of CO, which generated from formic acid and acetate anhydride. Then alkynes attack and elimination to afford alkynyl ketone intermediate III. Then, Pd(0) inserted to the O–H bond of phenol to provide complex IV, followed by insertion and reductive elimination to give the final aurones V products. However, the insertion of the alkyne into intermediate II followed by cyclopalladation and reductive elimination cannot be excluded.


image file: c6ra13615j-s1.tif
Scheme 1 A plausible reaction mechanism.

Conclusions

In conclusion, a palladium-catalyzed carbonylative reaction of 2-iodophenol and terminal alkynes has been developed. In this strategy, instead of toxic CO gas, formic acid was utilized as the CO source with acetic anhydride as the activator. Aurones were prepared in good yields with good selectivity and functional group tolerance.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the financial supports from NSFC (21472174) and Zhejiang Natural Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars (LR16B020002). X.-F. Wu appreciates the general support from Professor Matthias Beller in LIKAT.

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Footnote

Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Experimental detail. See DOI: 10.1039/c6ra13615j

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