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Rhodium-Catalyzed [2+1+2+1] Cycloaddition of Benzoic Acids with Diynes through Decarboxylation and C≡C Triple Bond Cleavage.

Yusaku HonjoYu ShibataKen Tanaka
Published in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2019)
It has been established that an electron-deficient cyclopentadienyl rhodium(III) (CpE RhIII ) complex catalyzes the oxidative and decarboxylative [2+1+2+1] cycloaddition of benzoic acids with diynes through C≡C triple bond cleavage, leading to fused naphthalenes. This cyclotrimerization is initiated by directed ortho C-H bond cleavage of a benzoic acid, and the subsequent regioselective alkyne insertion and decarboxylation produce a five-membered rhodacycle. The electron-deficient nature of the CpE RhIII complex promotes reductive elimination giving a cyclobutadiene-rhodium(I) complex rather than the second intermolecular alkyne insertion. The oxidative addition of the thus generated cyclobutadiene to rhodium(I) (formal C≡C triple bond cleavage) followed by the second intramolecular alkyne insertion and reductive elimination give the corresponding [2+1+2+1] cycloaddition product. The synthetic utility of the present [2+1+2+1] cycloaddition was demonstrated in the facile synthesis of a donor-acceptor [5]helicene and a hemi-hexabenzocoronene by a combination with the chemoselective Scholl reaction.
Keyphrases
  • dna binding
  • electron transfer
  • energy transfer
  • solar cells
  • transition metal