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Rhodium-Promoted C-H Bond Activation of Quinoline, Methylquinolines, and Related Mono-Substituted Quinolines.

Laura A de Las HerasMiguel A EsteruelasMontserrat OlivánEnrique Oñate
Published in: Organometallics (2022)
The C-H bond activation of methylquinolines, quinoline, 3-methoxyquinoline, and 3-(trifluoromethyl)quinoline promoted by the square-planar rhodium(I) complex RhH{κ 3 -P,O,P-[xant(P i Pr 2 ) 2 ]} [ 1 ; xant(P i Pr 2 ) 2 = 9,9-dimethyl-4,5-bis(diisopropylphosphino)xanthene] has been systematically studied. Results reveal that the activation of the heteroring is preferred over the activation of the carbocycle, and the activated position depends upon the position of the substituent in the substrate. Thus, 3-, 4-, and 5-methylquinoline reacts with 1 to quantitatively form square-planar rhodium(I)-(2-quinolinyl) derivatives, whereas 2-, 6-, and 7-methylquinoline quantitatively leads to rhodium(I)-(4-quinolinyl) species. By contrast, quinoline and 8-methylquinoline afford mixtures of the respective rhodium(I)-(2-quinolinyl) and -(4-quinolinyl) complexes. 3-Methoxyquinoline displays the same behavior as that of 3-methylquinoline, while 3-(trifluoromethyl)quinoline yields a mixture of rhodium(I)-(2-quinolinyl), -(4-quinolinyl), -(6-quinolinyl), and -(7-quinolinyl) isomers.
Keyphrases
  • molecular docking
  • magnetic resonance
  • ionic liquid
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • genome wide
  • drug induced
  • genetic diversity
  • electron transfer