Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Spontaneous reduction and C–H borylation of arenes mediated by uranium(III) disproportionation

2012; Nature Portfolio; Volume: 4; Issue: 8 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1038/nchem.1392

ISSN

1755-4349

Autores

Polly L. Arnold, Stephen M. Mansell, Laurent Maron, David McKay,

Tópico(s)

Catalytic C–H Functionalization Methods

Resumo

Transition-metal-arene complexes such as bis(benzene)chromium Cr(η(6)-C(6)H(6))(2) are historically important to d-orbital bonding theory and have modern importance in organic synthesis, catalysis and organic spintronics. In investigations of f-block chemistry, however, arenes are invariably used as solvents rather than ligands. Here, we show that simple uranium complexes UX(3) (X = aryloxide, amide) spontaneously disproportionate, transferring an electron and X-ligand, allowing the resulting UX(2) to bind and reduce arenes, forming inverse sandwich molecules [X(2)U(µ-η(6):η(6)-arene)UX(2)] and a UX(4) by-product. Calculations and kinetic studies suggest a 'cooperative small-molecule activation' mechanism involving spontaneous arene reduction as an X-ligand is transferred. These mild reaction conditions allow functionalized arenes such as arylsilanes to be incorporated. The bulky UX(3) are also inert to reagents such as boranes that would react with the traditional harsh reaction conditions, allowing the development of a new in situ arene C-H bond functionalization methodology converting C-H to C-B bonds.

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