Discovery of a Simple Iron Catalyst Reveals the Intimate Steps of C–H Amination to Form C–N Bonds

22 September 2022, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Formation of ubiquitous C–N bonds traditionally uses prefunctionalized carbon precursors. Recently, metal-catalyzed amination of unfunctionalized C–H bonds with azides has become an attractive and atom-economic strategy for C–N bond formation, though all catalysts contain sophisticated ligands. Here, we report Fe(HMDS)2 (HMDS = –N(SiMe3)2) as an easy-to-prepare catalyst for intramolecular C–H amination. The catalyst shows unprecedented turnover frequencies (110 h–1 vs 70 h–1 reported to date) and requires no additives. Amination is successful for benzylic and aliphatic C–H bonds (>80% yield) and occurs already at room temperature. The catalyst simplicity enabled for the first time comprehensive mechanistic investigations. Kinetic, stoichiometric, and computational studies unveiled the intimate steps of the C–H amination process, including catalyst resting state and turnover-limiting N2 loss of the coordinated azide, The high reactivity of the iron imido intermediate is rationalized by its complex spin system revealing imidyl and nitrene character.

Keywords

C–H amination
Nitrenes
N-heterocycles
Iron
Mechanistic investigations
bis(trimethylsilyl)amides
DFT
NEVPT2-CASSCF

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