Diversification of Amidyl Radical Intermediates Derived from C–H Aminopyridylation

11 March 2022, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

C–H amination chemistry promises to streamline access to nitrogen-containing fine chemicals. The typical need for N-activating substituents — such of N-sulfonyl groups, which are challenging to remove and difficult to engage in synthetic elaboration — limits synthetic utility. Here, we demonstrate that N-benzylaminopyridinium species, generated by C–H aminopyridylation, provide a platform for synthetic elaboration via reductive N–N bond activation to unveil electrophilic N-centered radicals. These reactive intermediates can be trapped either via anti-Markovnikov olefin carboamination to provide access to tetrahydroisoquinolines, which are important heterocycles in molecular therapeutics, or via aza-Rubottom chemistry with silyl enol ethers to provide alpha-amino ketones. This approach broadens the synthetic utility of N-alkylaminopyridinium intermediates and demonstrates a new approach to C–H amination with synthetically addressable, bifunctional reagents.

Keywords

amination
heterocycles
photoredox

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
Actions
Title
21 PR benzylic am deam SI
Description
Experimental and spectral details.
Actions

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