Chinese Chemical Letters  2023, Vol. 34 Issue (7): 108302-1-108302-2   PDF    
Divided or undivided? Electrolytic cells regulate site selectivity in C-H carboxylation of N-heteroarenes
Chuang-Xin Wanga,b, Congyang Wanga,b,*     
a Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, CAS Key Laboratory of Molecular Recognition and Function, CAS Research/Education Center for Excellence in Molecular Sciences, Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100190, China;
b University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China

The precise synthesis of molecules is of great significance to the fields of life science, material science, pharmaceutical chemistry and so on. The development of chemo-, regio- and stereo-selective reactions is therefore highly demanding in synthetic chemistry. Pyridines and related N-heteroarenes are core structures in various medicines, agricultural chemicals and bioactive molecules. The C—H functionalization of N-heteroarenes is becoming an important means to achieve the precise synthesis of many drugs and other functional molecules [1]. At present, the C—H arylation, alkylation and borylation of pyridine and its derivatives have been well reported, however, the C—H carboxylation of pyridine and other N-heteroarenes is rather underdeveloped. Carbon dioxide (CO2) is an attractive renewable C1 source for both biological and chemical synthesis [2]. Along this line, it is of high values to provide accurate access to important N-heteroaromatic carboxyl acid derivatives through direct functionalization of C—H bonds in N-heteroarenes using CO2 as an ideal carboxylation reagent. Despite impressive advances made in the above approach, great challenges still remain such as heavy substrate limitations and absence of precise selectivity control by means of other than electro- and stereo-structure of the feedstock itself.

Meanwhile, organic electrosynthesis, which uses electrons as redox reagents, is emerging as a unique and increasingly powerful method to prepare value-added compounds with electricity input instead of traditional redox chemicals. Among varied electrochemical reactions, electrocarboxylation with CO2 proved to be a promising strategy for direct synthesis of carboxylic acids [3,4]. It is therefore of great interest whether electrosynthesis could meet the above-mentioned challenges in precise C—H carboxylation of N-heteroarenes. Very recently, Yu, Lin and co-workers reported a highly selective site-regulated C—H carboxylation of N-heteroarenes by changing the electrochemical reactors [5], where a divided cell gave rise to C5-carboxylation of pyridines and an undivided cell resulted in C4-carboxylation remarkably (Fig. 1).

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Fig. 1. Cell-regulated regiodivergent electrochemical C–H carboxylation of pyridines.

The authors first used 2-phenylpyridine as a model substrate to optimize the electrochemical reaction conditions and the C5-carboxylation product was selectively obtained (C5/C4 > 20:1) with a CO2 balloon in a divided cell of nBu4NI/NMP electrolyte solution when iron and zinc were adopted as a cathode and sacrificial anode respectively with Cu(OTf)2, KOtBu, H2O and O2 as promoters (Fig. 2). In a sharp contrast, the C4-carboxylation product was favorably formed (C4/C5 > 20:1) using the iron cathode and platinum anode with KOtBu in an undivided cell. This electrochemical protocol occurred under mild reaction conditions and proved to be of wide substrate applicability and good functional group compatibility on a series of substituted pyridine, quinoline and other N-heteroarenes. It's noteworthy that important nitrogenous aromatic carboxylic acids could be accessed from N-heteroarenes with CO2 in moderate to good yields with precise and tunable control of site-selectivity.

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Fig. 2. Scope of electrochemical C–H carboxylation of pyridines.

Through mechanistic experiments and theoretical calculations, Yu, Lin and co-workers proposed the possible pathways for the site-divergent electrochemical C—H carboxylation reactions (Fig. 3). In divided cells, one-electron reduction of 2-phenylpyridine at the cathode generated radical anion Int1, the C5 position of which with higher electron density preferentially underwent nucleophile attack on CO2 affording Int2. The second single electron reduction gave dianion Int3, which was then oxidized by O2 to afford the C5 carboxylation product. DFT calculations confirmed that nucleophilic attack at the C5-position was preferred to that at the C4-position (ΔG = 13.7 kcal/mol for C5 and 14.5 kcal/mol for C4). These thermodynamic data showed that the attack of radical anion Int1 on CO2 was reversible at both C5 and C4 positions. Moreover, DFT calculations indicated that the C4—H bond dissociation free energy in Int4 was significantly lower than that of C5—H bond in Int2. In undivided cells, anodic oxidation of a large amount of I to I2 compensated for non-productive reduction of I2 at the cathode (Fig. 4). As a hydrogen acceptor, I2 promoted the hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) or proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) process of Int4, thereby altering the reaction selectivity by Curtin-Hammett principle [6] to deliver the C4-carboxylation products.

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Fig. 3. Proposed mechanism for C5- and C4-carboxylation of pyridines.

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Fig. 4. Anionic oxidation of I to I2 and its key role as a hydrogen acceptor for C4-carboxylation.

As further evidences for the above proposed mechanism, alternating current electrolysis was performed using a divided electrochemical cell, which mimicked an undivided cell by programmable changing the electrode. The radical anion Int1 and I2 were thus formed in the same chamber and the C4-carboxylation product was indeed detected as the major one. Meanwhile, the experiments on kinetic isotope effect showed that the kH/kD value was 2 at C4 in the undivided cell, indicating that the C—H bond cleavage was rate-determining for C4-carboxylation, which was consistent with the proposed mechanism in Fig. 3.

In summary, Yu, Lin and coworkers developed an electrochemical strategy for highly site-selective C5—H and C4—H carboxylation of N-heteroarenes with CO2 to achieve the precise synthesis of N-heteroaryl carboxylic acid molecules. Unlike the traditional tools to control the regio-selectivity in C—H functionalization including substrates’ intrinsic electro- and stereo-structures, installation of directing groups, and catalyst/ligand design, this novel strategy realized the divergent site-selectivity by changing the electrochemical reactors, namely the undivided and divided cells, which provides inspiring hints for the selective regulation of various reactions beyond C—H activation. Also, this work demonstrates huge potentials and prospects of organic electrosynthesis and we believe that electrochemistry will greatly reshape the traditional synthesis of various functional molecules.

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Divided or undivided? Electrolytic cells regulate site selectivity in C-H carboxylation of N
Chuang-Xin Wang, Congyang Wang