Cyanation

In organic synthesis, cyanation is the attachment or substitution of a cyanide group on various substrates. Such transformations are high-value because they generate C-C bonds. Furthermore nitriles are versatile functional groups.

Cyanation to form sp3 nitriles

Typically, alkyl nitriles are formed via SN1 or SN2-type cyanation with alkyl electrophiles. Illustrative is the synthesis of benzyl cyanide by the reaction of benzyl chloride and sodium cyanide.[1] In some cases cuprous cyanide is used instead of sodium cyanide.[2]

Cyanation of ketones or aldehydes yields the corresponding cyanohydrins, which can be done directly with the cyanide ion (the cyanohydrin reaction) or by using bisulfite, followed by displacement of sulfite:[3][4]

Cyanation of aldehyde with bisulfite

A related reaction is hydrocyanation, which installs the elements of H-CN.

Cyanation of arenes

Cyanation of arenes offers access to benzoic acid derivatives, as well as the utility of aryl nitriles themselves in as fine chemicals:

A variety of mechanistically distinct pathways are known to cyanate arenes:

With arene as two-electron electrophile

While the classical Rosenmund Von-Braun reaction utilizes stoichiometric copper(I) cyanide as a cyanation source,[5] newer variants have been developed that are catalytic in copper:[6]

In addition, palladium-catalyzed cyanations of aryl halides have been extensively explored. Generally, KCN or its less toxic surrogate Zn(CN)2 are used as nucleophilic cyanide sources. To further diminish toxicity concerns, potassium ferricyanide has also been used as a cyanide source. Catalytic cycles are believed to proceed through a standard Pd (0/II) pathway with reductive elimination forging the key C-C bond. Deactivation of Pd(II) with excess cyanide is a common problem.[7] Palladium catalysis conditions for aryl iodides, bromides, and even chlorides have been developed:[8]

Nickel-catalyzed cyanations avoid the use of precious metals, and can take advantage of benzyl cyanide or acetonitrile as a cyanide source, via reductive C-C bond cleavage:[9]

Sandmeyer cyanation is a means of converting aniline derivatives to benzonitriles.[10] The cyanation is generally postulated to be two-electron, while with radical mediators in absence of metals, the reaction is likely radical.[11]

With arene as a two-electron nucleophile

Metalated arenes can be cyanated with electrophilic cyanide sources, including cyanamides, cyanates, dimethylmalononitrile, or ethyl (ethoxymethylene)cyanoacetate. These methods can proceed with or without transition metal mediation:[12]

With arene as a radical electrophile

Radical approaches to arene C-H cyanation are known. Photoredox mediators (metallic or organic) are most common:[13][14]

References

  1. ^ Adams, Roger; Thal, A. F. (1922). "Benzyl cyanide". Organic Syntheses. 2: 9. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.002.0009.
  2. ^ J. V. Supniewski; P. L. Salzberg (1928). "Allyl Cyanide". Org. Synth. 8: 4. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.008.0004.
  3. ^ Mowry, David T. (1948). "The Preparation of Nitriles". Chemical Reviews. 42 (2): 189–283. doi:10.1021/cr60132a001. ISSN 0009-2665. PMID 18914000.
  4. ^ Corson, B. B.; Dodge, R. A.; Harris, S. A.; Yeaw, J. S. (1926). "Mandelic Acid". Org. Synth. 6: 58. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.006.0058.
  5. ^ Warzecha, Klaus-Dieter. "cyanide substitution of bromobenzene".
  6. ^ Wu, Jeff (2002). "Catalytic Rosenmund–von Braun reaction in halide-based ionic liquids". Tetrahedron Letters. 43 (3): 387–389. doi:10.1016/s0040-4039(01)02168-2.
  7. ^ Cohen, Daniel (2015). "Mild Palladium-Catalyzed Cyanation of (Hetero)aryl Halides and Triflates in Aqueous Media". Organic Letters. 17 (2): 202–205. doi:10.1021/ol5032359. PMC 4301087. PMID 25555140.
  8. ^ Jin, Fuqiang (2000). "Palladium-catalyzed cyanation reactions of aryl chlorides". Tetrahedron Letters. 41 (18): 3271–3273. doi:10.1016/s0040-4039(00)00384-1.
  9. ^ Ueda, Yohei (2019). "Nickel-catalyzed cyanation of aryl halides and triflates using acetonitrile via C–CN bond cleavage assisted by 1,4-bis(trimethylsilyl)-2,3,5,6-tetramethyl-1,4-dihydropyrazine". Chemical Science. 10 (4): 994–999. doi:10.1039/c8sc04437f. PMC 6349056. PMID 30774893.
  10. ^ H. T. Clarke; R. R. Read (1925). "o-Tolunitrile and p-Tolunitrile". Org. Synth. 4: 69. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.004.0069.
  11. ^ Barbero, Margherita (2016). "Copper-free Sandmeyer cyanation of arenediazonium o-benzenedisulfonimides". Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry. 14 (4): 1437–1441. doi:10.1039/c5ob02321a. hdl:2318/1554335. PMID 26676962.
  12. ^ Reeves, Jonathan (2015). "Transnitrilation from Dimethylmalononitrile to Aryl Grignard and Lithium Reagents: A Practical Method for Aryl Nitrile Synthesis". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 137 (29): 9481–9488. doi:10.1021/jacs.5b06136. PMID 26151426.
  13. ^ Ravelli, Davide; Protti, Stefano; Fagnoni, Maurizio (2016). "Carbon-Carbon Bond Forming Reactions via Photogenerated Intermediates". Chemical Reviews. 116 (17): 9850–9913. doi:10.1021/acs.chemrev.5b00662. PMID 27070820.
  14. ^ Li, Jie Jack (2015). C-H Bond Activation in Organic Synthesis. CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group.