Characterization and Reactivity Studies of a Terminal Copper-Nitrene Species.
Teresa CoronaLídia RibasMireia RoviraErik R FarquharXavi RibasKallol RayAnna CompanyPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2016)
High-valent terminal copper-nitrene species have been postulated as key intermediates in copper-catalyzed aziridination and amination reactions. The high reactivity of these intermediates has prevented their characterization for decades, thereby making the mechanisms ambiguous. Very recently, the Lewis acid adduct of a copper-nitrene intermediate was trapped at -90 °C and shown to be active in various oxidation reactions. Herein, we describe for the first time the synthesis and spectroscopic characterization of a terminal copper(II)-nitrene radical species that is stable at room temperature in the absence of any Lewis acid. The azide derivative of a triazamacrocyclic ligand that had previously been utilized in the stabilization of aryl-CuIII intermediates was employed as an ancillary ligand in the study. The terminal copper(II)-nitrene radical species is able to transfer a nitrene moiety to phosphines and abstract a hydrogen atom from weak C-H bonds, leading to the formation of oxidized products in modest yields.