Site-Selective Cross-Coupling of Remote Chlorides Enabled by Electrostatically Directed Palladium Catalysis.
William A GoldingRobert Pearce-HigginsRobert J PhippsPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2018)
Control of site-selectivity in chemical reactions that occur remote from existing functionality remains a major challenge in synthetic chemistry. We describe a strategy that enables three of the most commonly used cross-coupling processes to occur with high site-selectivity on dichloroarenes that bear acidic functional groups. We have achieved this by repurposing an established sulfonylated phosphine ligand to exploit its inherent bifunctionality. Mechanistic studies suggest that the sulfonate group engages in attractive electrostatic interactions with the cation associated with the deprotonated substrate, guiding cross-coupling to the chloride at the arene meta position. This counterintuitive combination of anionic ligand and anionic substrate demonstrates an alternative design principle when considering the application of noncovalent interactions to direct catalysis.