N-Heteroaryl Carbamates from Carbon Dioxide via Chemoselective Superbase−Catalysis: Substrate Scope and Mechanistic Investigation

We report a mild superbase-catalyzed and nitrogen-selective carboxylation of N-heteroaryls, with subsequent alkylation enabling the synthesis of drug-like O-alkyl carbamates in good yields (av. 86%). Our findings suggest a partial revision of the current mechanistic understanding as superbases upon...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:ACS catalysis
Main Authors: Mannisto, Jere K, Pavlovic, Ljiljana, Heikkinen, Johannes, Tiainen, Tony, Sahari, Aleksi, Maier, Norbert, Rissanen, Kari, Nieger, Martin, Hopmann, Kathrin Helen, Repo, Timo
Format: Journal Article
Language:Norwegian
Published: 2023
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:We report a mild superbase-catalyzed and nitrogen-selective carboxylation of N-heteroaryls, with subsequent alkylation enabling the synthesis of drug-like O-alkyl carbamates in good yields (av. 86%). Our findings suggest a partial revision of the current mechanistic understanding as superbases upon mixing with indoles and azoles generally form uncharged hydrogen-bonded complexes and not ionic salts as previously proposed. However, when these complexes are exposed to CO2, carbamate salts are formed. These can be categorized into two subgroups, stable and fluxional carbamate salts, where the latter undergo fast and reversible CO2 exchange, thus being poor substrates for alkylation. Experiments and DFT calculations indicate that the fluxional behavior is primarily caused by substrate-specific electronic destabilization effects. The degree of destabilization depends on the number of nitrogen atoms within and the functional group substitution on the heterocyclic ring structures. Fluxionality can be compensated for by the use of lower temperatures and/or higher CO2 pressures as both measures stabilize the carbamate salts sufficiently, enabling subsequent alkylation.
Bibliography:NFR/300769
ISSN:2155-5435
2155-5435