Copper-Catalysed Aryl-Chloride Amination: A Quality-by-Design Approach Based on Improved Mechanistic Understanding

Lead Research Organisation: Imperial College London
Department Name: Chemistry

Abstract

Recently copper salts and complexes have shown themselves to be Green, economical and versatile reagents for cross-coupling reactions with breadth of scope similar to that of palladium, and reported applications in carbon-carbon, carbon-heteroatom, and even carbon-hydrogen and carbon-metal bond formation. However, the use of copper in coupling protocols has mainly been limited to small-scale studies in research labs and has not commonly been employed on larger-scale batch preparations. Underpinning this is a current lack of understanding of the mechanism of these reactions, and questions on the role of the ligand and base in both the rate determining step and catalyst deactivation pathways. This project will seek to address these shortfalls with the following main objectives:

Build a deeper mechanistic understanding of copper catalysed amination reactions using a wide range of experimental, spectroscopic, and kinetic methods
Determination of the roles and interdependencies of the ancillary ligand, base, and solvent in both the catalytic cycle and off-cycle events including catalyst deactivation
Utilise mechanistic and rate information to develop new and improved ancillary ligand systems for copper-catalysed aryl-chloride activation, initially focussing upon oxalic diamide ligands
Transition learning to systems of high interest including the application of amine, amide, sulphonamide, and nucleophilic carbon substrates and progression towards scaled-up processes

Publications

10 25 50

Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
EP/R513052/1 01/10/2018 30/09/2023
2275542 Studentship EP/R513052/1 01/10/2019 30/12/2023 Tania Di Felice
EP/T51780X/1 01/10/2020 30/09/2025
2275542 Studentship EP/T51780X/1 01/10/2019 30/12/2023 Tania Di Felice