Chai Linxiang / Shanghai Institute of organic chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Li Chaozhong / Chinese Academy of Sciences;Shanghai Institute of organic chemistry
The Arbuzov reaction (also known as Michaelis–Arbuzov reaction) is one of the most fundamental transformations in organic chemistry and has been extensively used for the synthesis of organophosphorus compounds for over a century. However, the reaction generally requires an elevated temperature and is applicable mainly to primary alkyl halides with poor functional group tolerance. We report herein a radical alternative to the conventional nucleophilic substitution reaction. Thus, new radical phosphonylation reagents, 9-fluorenyl o-phenylene phosphite and benzhydryl o-phenylene phosphite, are developd for this purpose. The photoredox-catalyzed reaction of a wide range of alkyl bromides or iodides with 9-fluorenyl (or benzhydryl) ophenylene phosphite followed by workup with methanol (or ethanol) provides the corresponding dimethyl (or diethyl) alkylphosphonates in satisfactory yields at room temperature under mild conditions. The method is applicable to primary, secondary and even tertiary alkyl iodides and bromides and exhibits an excellent functional group tolerance, thereby enabling the late-stage modification of complex molecules and rapid syntheses of phosphonate-containing natural products and drug molecules. A mechanism involving the formation and subsequent β-scission of phosphoranyl radicals is proposed.