Experimental Demonstration and Density Functional Theory Mechanistic Analysis of Arene C-H Bond Oxidation and Product Protection by Osmium Tetroxide in a Strongly Basic/Nucleophilic Solvent.
Anjaneyulu KoppakaJustin K KirklandRoy A PerianaDaniel H EssPublished in: The Journal of organic chemistry (2022)
Reactions that result in the oxy-functionalization of sp 2 C-H bonds to give phenols are relatively rare. Here we report experiments and density functional theory (DFT) calculations that demonstrate selective C-H bond hydroxylation of nitroarenes to their corresponding mono-phenoxide as the exclusive product using OsO 4 in a highly basic solvent mixture of water, hydroxide, and pyridine. DFT calculations using a mixed explicit/continuum solvent approach indicate that there is likely a mixture of OsO 4 -hydroxide/pyridine ground-state structures that have competitive reactivity and that the mechanism involves the nucleophilic addition of an anionic metal-oxo species to the arene followed by a hydride transfer process that is different from the standard [3 + 2] mechanism often invoked for the OsO 4 oxidation of σ and π bonds. This work demonstrates the utility of using a strongly basic solvent for C-H bond oxidation reactions as this effectively converts any reactive phenolic product into the corresponding phenoxide, which is protected and essentially inert to further oxidation by the nucleophilic metal-oxo species.