High-Valent Cobalt-Difluoride in Oxidative Fluorination of Saturated Hydrocarbons

Angew Chem Int Ed Engl. 2024 Dec 17:e202421157. doi: 10.1002/anie.202421157. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

The heme paradigm where Fe=O acts as the C-H oxidant and Fe-OH rebounds with the formed carbon-centered radical guides the design of the prototypical synthetic hydroxylation catalyst. We are exploring methods to evolve beyond the metal-oxo oxidant and hydroxide rebound, to incorporate a wider array of functional group. We have demonstrated the application of CoII(OTf)2 (10 mol% catalyst; OTf = trimfluoromethanesulfonate) in combination with polydentate N-donor ligands (e.g. BPMEN = N,N'-dimethyl-N,N'-bis(pyrid-2-ylmethyl)ethane-1,2-diamine) and Selectfluor in the oxidative fluorination of saturated hydrocarbons in high yields. The addition of CsF to the reaction mixture induced near-quantitative yields of fluorinated saturated hydrocarbons (>90% yield of fluorinated product). For 1-hydroxy, 1-acetyl, 1-carboxy-, and 1-acetamido-adamantane, we demonstrated fluorination at the 3-position. We propose two mechanisms for the CoII-catalyzed reaction: either (i) an N-radical, derived from Selectfluor, acted as the C-H oxidant followed by radical rebound with CoIII-F; or (ii) a CoIV-(F)2 species was the C-H oxidant followed by radical rebound with CoIII-F. Our combined spectroscopic, kinetic, and chemical trapping evidence suggested that an N-radical was not the active oxidant. We concluded that a CoIV-(F)2 species was the likely active oxidant and CoIII-F was the likely F-atom donor to a carbon centered radical producing a C-F bond.

Keywords: Bioinorganic Chemistry, High-Valent Oxidant, Nonheme Iron and Cobalt, Hydrocarbon Oxidation.