Thioarylation of Alkynes to Generate Dihydrothiopheniums through Gold(I)/(III)-Catalyzed Cyclization-Cross-Coupling.
Joseph A KaplanJonghyun WonSuzanne A BlumPublished in: The Journal of organic chemistry (2024)
A thioarylation method is developed for the synthesis of 2,3-dihydrothiopheniums through an electrophilic-cyclization-cross-coupling mechanism, harnessing the gold(I)/(III) cycle of the recently developed MeDalPhosAuCl catalyst. Single-crystal X-ray crystal structural analysis of the dihydrothiophenium products characterized the antiaddition of the sulfur and Csp 2 group to the alkyne and a preference for 5-endo dig cyclization. The dihydrothiophenium products are demonstrated as synthetic building blocks for stereodefined acyclic tetrasubstituted alkenes upon ring-opening reaction with amines. Intramolecular competition experiments show the favorability of Csp 3 tether cyclizations over Csp 2 tethers, preferentially generating dihydrothiopheniums over thiopheniums. Intermolecular competition experiments of alkyne aryl groups and an intermolecular aryl iodide competition suggest a rate-determining reductive elimination step in the gold(I)/gold(III) catalytic cycle. This rate-determining step is further supported by HRMS analysis of reaction intermediates that identify the catalyst resting state under turnover conditions. Catalyst poisoning experiments provide evidence of substrate inhibition, further consistent with these conclusions.
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