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Integrated Batch and Continuous Flow Process for the Synthesis of Goniothalamin

By Pastre, Julio C.; Murray, Philip R. D.; Browne, Duncan L.; Brancaglion, Guilherme A.; Galaverna, Renan S.; Pilli, Ronaldo A.; Ley, Steven V.

Published on CMKC

Abstract

An integrated batch and continuous flow process has been developed for the gram-scale synthesis of goniothalamin. The synthetic route hinges upon a telescoped continuous flow Grignard addition followed by an acylation reaction capable of delivering a racemic goniothalamin precursor (16) (20.9 g prepared over 3 h), with a productivity of 7 g·h–1. An asymmetric Brown allylation protocol was also evaluated under continuous flow conditions. This approach employing (−)-Ipc2B(allyl) provided an (S)-goniothalamin intermediate in 98% yield and 91.5% enantiomeric excess (ee) with a productivity of 1.8 g·h–1. For the final step, a ring-closing metathesis reaction was explored under several conditions in both batch and flow regimes. In a batch operation, the Grubbs second-generation was shown to be effective and highly selective for the desired ring closure product over those arising from other modes of reactivity, and the reaction was complete in 1.5 h. In a flow operation, reactivity and selectivity were attenuated relative to the batch mode; however, after further optimization, the residence time could be reduced to 16 min with good selectivity and good yield of the target product. A tube-in-tube reactor was investigated for in-situ ethylene removal to favor ring-closing over cross-metathesis, in this context. These results provide further evidence of the utility of flow chemistry for organometallic processing and reaction telescoping. Using the developed integrated batch and flow methods, a total of 7.75 g of goniothalamin (1) was synthesized.

Journal

ACS Omega. Volume 5, 2020, 18472–18483

DOI

10.1021/acsomega.0c02390

Type of publication

Peer-reviewed journal

Affiliations

  • University of Campinas—UNICAMP
  • University of Cambridge

Article Classification

Research Article

Classification Areas

  • Intermediate

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