C-N cleavage of secondary amide to access primary amide by a Co(II)/Oxone oxidation system.
Haixing ZhangChaoyue SunXuan ZhangXuan ChengGuiwen GuoWang GengPeiwei GongShumiao ZhangMianran ChaoDuyi ShenPublished in: Organic & biomolecular chemistry (2024)
Cleavage of the C-N bond of a secondary amide could provide alternative access to primary amides; however, this strategy remains challenging due to oxidation resistance of the amide. Herein, we employed the cobalt(II)/Oxone catalytic system, one of the advanced oxidation processes (AOPs), to make it available to break the strong C-N bond of various secondary (sulfon)amides, especially those bearing electron-poor or ortho -substituted N -arenes, en route to desirable primary (sulfon)amides. Control experiments showed that it was probably not the generally-considered persulfate anion radical in the cobalt/peroxymonosulfate (Co/PMS) system but the proposed high-valent cobalt-oxo intermediate that should be the major active species for the initial N-H oxidation of N -aryl amides. In the case of N -alkylated secondary amides, the α-C-H bond, rather than the N-H bond, should be oxidized first by both the reactive radicals and high-valent cobalt-oxo species. This work not only establishes an efficient method for removing the N -substituents of secondary amides at low cost, with readily available and eco-friendly reagents, but also demonstrates further synthetic application and provides more insight into intermediates for metal-based AOPs in environmental remediation.