Issue 19, 2021

Imidazoline synthesis: mechanistic investigations show that Fe catalysts promote a new multicomponent redox reaction

Abstract

Multicomponent reactions are attracting strong interest because they contribute to develop more efficient synthetic chemistry. Understanding their mechanism at the molecular level is thus an important issue to optimize their operation. The development of integrated experimental and theoretical approaches has very recently emerged as most powerful to achieve this goal. In the wake of our recent investigation of amidine synthesis, we used this approach to explore how an Fe-catalyzed aziridination can lead to an imidazoline when run in acetonitrile. We report that the synthesis of imidazoline by combination of styrene, acetonitrile, an iron catalyst and a nitrene precursor occurs along a new kind of multicomponent reaction. The formation of imidazoline results from acetonitrile interception of a benzyl radical styrene aziridination intermediate within Fe coordination sphere, as opposed to classical nucleophilic opening of the aziridine by a Lewis acid. Comparison of this mechanism to that of amidine formation allows a rationalization of the modes of intermediates trapping by acetonitrile according to the oxidation state Fe active species. The molecular understanding of these processes may help to design other multicomponent reactions.

Graphical abstract: Imidazoline synthesis: mechanistic investigations show that Fe catalysts promote a new multicomponent redox reaction

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
20 Mar 2021
Accepted
20 Apr 2021
First published
28 Apr 2021

Dalton Trans., 2021,50, 6512-6519

Imidazoline synthesis: mechanistic investigations show that Fe catalysts promote a new multicomponent redox reaction

G. Coin, P. Dubourdeaux, P. Bayle, C. Lebrun, P. Maldivi and J. Latour, Dalton Trans., 2021, 50, 6512 DOI: 10.1039/D1DT00919B

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