Maximizing Driving Force in the Design of N-oxyl Hydrogen Atom Transfer Catalysts

23 October 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Increasing the bond dissociation enthalpy (BDE) of potential hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) catalysts has the potential to un-lock a greater substrate scope for radical C-H functionalization reactions. For the archetype N-oxyl catalyst phthalimide-N-oxyl (PINO), tuning the BDEO-H of its precursor N-hydroxyphthalimide (NHPI) by substitution of the the aryl ring has minimal effects, limiting meaningful advances in catalyst development by modifications of PINO. Herein, we demonstrate that inserting a heteroatom between one of the carbonyl groups of PINO and the aryl ring significantly increases the BDEO-H. For example, an N-phenyl moiety, O-atom or S-atom raises the BDEO-H by 6.5, 6.9 and 8.1 kcal/mol, respectively, relative to NHPI – which translates to an increased kHAT of 4, 36.3 and 24.3, respectively. Our studies of these compounds and a panel of analogs thereof highlight three advantages of this strategy: 1) high synthetic accessibility of catalyst candidates; 2) simultaneous optimization across multiple parameters; and 3) effective activity tuning. These new scaffolds are promising for the development of next-generation HAT catalysts and C-H functionalization reactions.

Keywords

hydrogen atom transfer
bond dissociation enthalpy
C-H functionalization
oxidation

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