Chemical Science 2018-04-09

Iron-catalyzed urea synthesis: dehydrogenative coupling of methanol and amines

Elizabeth M. Lane, Nilay Hazari, Wesley H. Bernskoetter

Index: 10.1039/C8SC00775F

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Substituted ureas have numerous applications but their synthesis typically requires the use of highly toxic starting materials. Herein we describe the first base-metal catalyst for the selective synthesis of symmetric ureas via the dehydrogenative coupling of methanol with primary amines. Using a pincer supported iron catalyst, a range of ureas was generated with isolated yields of up to 80% (corresponding to a catalytic turnover of up to 160) and with H2 as the sole byproduct. Mechanistic studies indicate a stepwise pathway beginning with methanol dehydrogenation to give formaldehyde, which is trapped by amine to afford a formamide. The formamide is then dehydrogenated to produce a transient isocyanate, which reacts with another equivalent of amine to form a urea. These mechanistic insights enabled the development of an iron-catalyzed method for the synthesis of unsymmetric ureas from amides and amines.

Latest Articles:

Electrochemical Imaging of Cells and Tissues

2018-04-09

[10.1039/C8SC01035H]

Why One Can Expect Large Rectification in Molecular Junctions Based on Alkane Monothiols and Why Rectification Is So Modest

2018-04-09

[10.1039/C8SC00938D]

9,10-Azaboraphenanthrene-Containing Small Molecules and Conjugated Polymers: Synthesis and Their Application in Chemodosimeters for the Ratiometric Detection of Fluoride Ions

2018-04-09

[10.1039/C8SC00688A]

Aldehyde group driven aggregation-induced enhanced emission in naphthalimides and its application for ultradetection of hydrazine on multiple platforms

2018-04-06

[10.1039/C8SC00643A]

A thioether-directed palladium-cleavable linker for targeted bioorthogonal drug decaging

2018-04-06

[10.1039/C8SC00256H]

More Articles...