Carbon Dioxide-Catalyzed Stereoselective Cyanation Reaction

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Abstract

We report a Michael-type cyanation reaction of coumarins by using CO2 as a catalyst. The delivery of the nucleophilic cyanide was realized by catalytic amounts of CO2, which forms cyanoformate and bicarbonate in the presence of water. Under ambient conditions, CO2-catalyzed reactions afforded high chemo- and diastereoselectivity of β-nitrile carbonyls, whereas only low reactivities were observed under argon or N2. Computational and experimental data suggest the catalytic role of CO2, which functions as a Lewis acid, and a protecting group to mask the reactivity of the product, suppressing byproducts and polymerization. The utility of this convenient method was demonstrated by preparing biologically relevant heterocyclic compounds with ease.

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Roy, T., Kim, M. J., Yang, Y., Kim, S., Kang, G., Ren, X., … Lee, J. W. (2019). Carbon Dioxide-Catalyzed Stereoselective Cyanation Reaction. ACS Catalysis, 9(7), 6006–6011. https://doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.9b01087

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