Abstract

A thorough mechanistic investigation has been performed on the reactions of primary and secondary amines with diazoacetates, which proceed uniquely quickly and efficiently when catalyzed by iron(III) corroles and porphyrins. Two major differences in relation to other metal-based catalysts are that the iron complexes are not poisoned by excess amine and that metal-carbene intermediates are apparently not involved in the reaction pathway. The results instead point towards nitrogen ylide intermediates formed by nucleophilic attack of the amines on diazoacetate-coordinated iron complexes. Nitrogen ylides are also formed when allyl- and propargyl-substituted tertiary amines react with diazoacetates, a scenario that smoothly leads to 2,3-rearrangement reaction products with catalytic amounts of the iron(III) complexes. Similar findings regarding the superiority of the iron(III) complexes (in terms of catalyst loading, chemical yields, and reaction conditions) were obtained with thiols (S--H insertion) and sulfides (2,3-rearrangement reactions), which suggest similar mechanisms operate in these cases.

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