Synlett 2005(5): 0877-0878  
DOI: 10.1055/s-2005-864790
SPOTLIGHT
© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Nickel(0) Catalysts in Organic Synthesis

Ze Zhang*
C/O Prof. G.-W. Wang, Laboratory of Fullerene Chemistry and Green Organic Synthesis, Department of Chemistry, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei 230026, P. R. China
e-Mail: zhangze@mail.ustc.edu.cn;

Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
09 March 2005 (online)

Biographical Sketches

Ze Zhang was born in Anhui (China) in 1976. He achieved his Bachelor degree from Anhui University in China. He is currently in the fifth year of his Master-PhD through-train studies in the Department of Chemistry, University of Science and Technology of China (USTC), where he is working on solid-state organic synthesis using mechanical milling techniques, under the supervision of Professor G.-W. Wang.

Introduction

With the rapid expansion of the utility of palladium catalysts in organic synthesis, nickel catalysts, including nickel(0) catalysts, have been arousing great attention and efforts in recent years. A great deal of work has demonstrated that the Ni(0)-catalyzed carbon-carbon bond forming reaction is an extremely powerful tool in organic synthesis. [1] Using Ni(0) catalysts, it is often possible to invoke reactivity with substrates that are not activated by palladium analogues, or to perform reactions using less forcing conditions. In addition, nickel is a significantly cheaper alternative to palladium. In recent years, they have been applied in a wide range of organic transformations. Even though the use of Ni(0) catalyst in organic synthesis is still in its early stages compared to the widespread utility of Pd catalysts, it is certain that future work from various research groups will greatly expand the use of this chemistry both in industry and academia.

Due to their high air sensitivity, Ni(0) catalysts are most commonly generated in situ first by the reduction of stable Ni(II) complexes with strong reducing reagents and then by association with bulky ligands.

Abstracts

(A) Transfer hydrogenation of imines to the corresponding amines was efficiently catalyzed by a Ni(0)-NHC (N-heterocyclic carbene) complex. Using this catalyst, a variety of aldimines and ketimines were reduced in good to excellent yields under mild conditions. [2]
(B) Buchwald and Zhang [3] reported a Ni(0)-catalyzed process for the transformation of enynes to bicyclic cyclopentenones. This method is tolerant of a variety of functional groups including ­esters, ketones, nitriles, ethers, and amines. It is also more effective with more highly substituted olefins than is the corresponding ­titanium procedure.
(C) The Ni(0)-catalyzed cross-coupling of vinyl triflates with alkyl Grignard reagents have been achieved in good to excellent yield by Busacca and co-workers. The effects of triflate substitution, solvent and especially ligands have been investigated. [4]
(D) Louie and co-workers used Ni(0)-imidazolylidene complexes to catalyze the coupling reactions of various symmetrical diynes with CO2 under mild conditions to produce pyrones. [5a] They later reported the Ni(0)-catalyzed cycloaddition of CO2 with various asymmetrical diynes to afford regioisomeric mixtures of pyr­ones. [5b]
(E) The cross-coupling reaction of aryl mesylates or chloroarenes with arylboronic acids proceeded efficiently in the presence of a Ni(0) catalyst and K3PO4, and various biaryls were synthesized in high yields. [6]
(F) Dehalogenation of aryl halides was efficiently performed in ­refluxing THF using a catalytic combination composed of Ni(0)-NHC-b-hydrogen-containing alkoxide. A Ni(0)-IMes·HCl-(i-Pr)ONa combination proved to be efficient for the dehalogenation of aryl chlorides, bromides, and iodides in short ­reaction times and under mild conditions. [7]
(G) Some stable Ni(0) catalysts, such as Ni[P(OPh)3]4 and Ni[P(OEt)3]4, were employed to efficiently promote the Heck reactions of aryl and vinyl halides with olefins and alkynes. [8]
(H) The selective synthesis of N-aryl- or N,N¢-diarylpiperazines and trimethylene (bis)piperidines from the corresponding diamines and aryl chlorides was achieved using a catalyst combination of Ni(0) associated to 2,2¢-bipyridine. The Ni(0)/2,2¢-bipyridine catalyst is also effective for the sequential arylation of piperazine. [9]
(I) A Ni(0) catalyst was used for the direct arylation of malononitrile, a b-difunctionalized compound, from halogenated aromatic substrates. The catalytic system is quite simple: Ni(PPh3)3, generated in situ from NiBr2(PPh3)2, PPh3 and zinc. Good yields and ­excellent selectivities have been obtained in a-arylmalononitriles from iodobenzene, but also from bromo- or chloro-aromatic substrates. [10]