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Iron-Catalyzed sp 3 C-H Alkylation of Fluorene with Primary and Secondary Alcohols: A Borrowing Hydrogen Approach.

Ratnakar SahaBhairab Chand HembramSurajit PandaRahul GhoshBidraha Bagh
Published in: The Journal of organic chemistry (2024)
The utilization of earth-abundant, cheap, and nontoxic transition metals in important catalytic transformations is essential for sustainable development, and iron has gained significant attention as the most abundant transition metal. A mixture of FeCl 2 (3 mol %), phenanthroline (6 mol %), and KO t Bu (0.4 eqivalent) was used as an effective catalyst for the sp 3 C-H alkylation of fluorene using alcohol as a nonhazardous alkylating partner, and eco-friendly water was formed as the only byproduct. The substrate scope includes a wide range of substituted fluorenes and substituted benzyl alcohols. The reaction is equally effective with challenging secondary alcohols and unactivated aliphatic alcohols. Selective mono-C9-alkylation of fluorenes with alcohols yielded the corresponding products in good isolated yields. Various postfunctionalizations of C-9 alkylated fluorene products were performed to establish the practical utility of this catalytic alkylation. Control experiments suggested a homogeneous reaction path involving borrowing hydrogen mechanism with the formation and subsequent reduction of 9-alkylidene fluorene intermediate.
Keyphrases
  • transition metal
  • molecular docking
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  • visible light
  • ionic liquid
  • iron deficiency
  • health risk
  • hepatitis c virus
  • gold nanoparticles
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • drinking water
  • heavy metals