posted on 2002-07-20, 00:00authored byYiqian Wan, Mathias Alterman, Mats Larhed, Anders Hallberg
Dimethylformamide (DMF) acts as an efficient
source of carbon monoxide and dimethylamine in the palladium-catalyzed aminocarbonylation (Heck carbonylation)
of p-tolyl bromide to provide the dimethylamide. Addition
of amines to the reaction mixture in excess delivers the
corresponding aryl amides in good yields. The amines
employed, benzylamine, morpholine, and aniline, all constitute good reaction partners. The reaction proceeds smoothly
with bromobenzene and more electron-rich aryl bromides,
but electron-deficient aryl bromides fail to undergo aminocarbonylation. The reactions are conducted at 180−190
°C for 15−20 min with microwave heating in a reaction
mixture containing imidazole and potassium tert-butoxide:
the latter is required to promote decomposition of the DMF
solvent at a suitable rate. The beneficial effects of controlled
microwave irradiation as an energy source for the rapid
heating of the carbonylation reaction mixture are demonstrated. The carbonylation procedure reported herein, which
relies on the in situ generation of carbon monoxide, serves
as a convenient alternative to other carbonylation methods
and is particularly applicable to small-scale reactions where
short reaction times are desired and the direct use of carbon
monoxide gas is impractical.