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CONTEXT
Phenols are very
important intermediates in the chemical, pharmaceutical and materials industry.
More
than 7.2 megatons of phenol itself are produced per year, which is one of the
most important chemicals for industry. Nowadays about 90% of the world’s phenol
demand is being satisfied by the Hock process which corresponds to peroxidation
of cumene, itself obtained from benzene propylation. This industrial process,
which is not very efficient in yield (overall 5%) and energy consuming, also
produces large amounts of co-products. Alternative oxidation technologies that
avoid production of acetone have been proposed but none have succeeded in
replacing the Hock process.
For the
preparation of functionalized phenols, non-oxidative methods such as
traditional nucleophilic aromatic substitution are used; however the range of
substituents is often limited by the requisite harsh reaction conditions or by the
electronic requirements of the substrate. An Iridium based catalytic system for preparation of
non-ortho-substituted phenols involving a one-pot aromatic borylation/oxidation
sequence has been reported. Recently, have been developed systems based on
palladium/phosphine ligands catalysis allowing the selective formation of
phenols from different aryl halides. However, these systems are more expensive
than copper and not very favorable for toxicity issues.
So the development of a cheaper
copper catalyzed system enabling the direct hydroxylation of aryl halides has
become an important goal. There are however two critical problems to be
resolved: first, the direct copper catalyzed coupling reaction between
unactivated aryl halides and hydroxide has never been reported below
200°C. One study showed that
this reaction is very difficult even at 200-
300°C with microwave heating.
Secondly, copper catalyzed coupling between phenols and aryl halides is well
known. Hence, this reaction could be an important concurrent reaction once
phenol is formed in situ, so only symmetric diarylethers might be produced.
We here report that
the selective hydroxylation of both activated and unactivated aryl bromides and
iodides can be achieved by a very simple aqueous solution using hydroxide as
the base in a catalytic system in which low toxicity and inexpensive copper is
used together with simple bidentate ligands.
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