Open Access Article
This Open Access Article is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence

Phosphonium acidic ionic liquid: an efficient and recyclable homogeneous catalyst for the synthesis of 2-arylbenzoxazoles, 2-arylbenzimidazoles, and 2-arylbenzothiazoles

Quang The Nguyena, Anh-Hung Thi Hanga, Thuy-Linh Ho Nguyenab, Duy-Khiem Nguyen Chaua and Phuong Hoang Tran*a
aDepartment of Organic Chemistry, Faculty of Chemistry, University of Science, Vietnam National University – Ho Chi Minh City, 721337, Viet Nam. E-mail: thphuong@hcmus.edu.vn
bCenter for Innovative Materials and Architectures, Vietnam National University – Ho Chi Minh City, 721337, Viet Nam

Received 26th February 2018 , Accepted 20th March 2018

First published on 27th March 2018


Abstract

A highly efficient and green strategy for the synthesis of 2-arylbenzoxazoles, 2-arylbenzimidazoles, and 2-arylbenzothiazoles catalyzed by phosphonium acidic ionic liquid has been developed via the condensation of o-aminophenol, o-phenylenediamines, and o-aminothiophenol, respectively, with aldehydes. The reaction has a good yield, the broad substrate scope, and mild condition. Triphenyl(butyl-3-sulphonyl)phosphonium toluenesulfonate catalyst was easily obtained from cheap and available starting materials through a one-pot synthesis. Its structure was identified by 1H NMR, 13C NMR, 31P NMR, and FT-IR techniques. Other properties including thermal stability and acidity were determined by TGA and Hammett acidity function method. Interestingly, the catalyst can maintain its constantly outstanding performance till the fourth recovery.


Introduction

Benzoxazole, benzimidazole, and benzothiazole are well-known heterocyclic scaffolds commonly found in various anticancer, antimicrobial, antidiabetic, anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, anticonvulsant, and analgesic agents due to their wide-spectrum biological and pharmaceutical properties.1–12 To date, there have been two pathways for the preparation of these compounds.13 The first one relying on the metal-catalyzed cross-coupling is more competent.14 However, it has several drawbacks such as expensive catalysts,15 addition of auxiliary reagents,16 harsh reaction condition,17 prolonged reaction time,18 low yields,18 volatile organic solvents,19 which cause a greatly negative impact on the environment as well as an impediment in the scaling up for industrial production. The second synthetic pathway involves the condensation of 2-aminophenol with aldehydes or carboxylic acids under acidic condition.7,20–24 Similarly to metal-catalyzed cross-couplings, major defects including the use of expensive chemicals and volatile organic solvents, long reaction times, and tedious work-up procedures have been still unsolvable. Therefore, the development of an efficient, reusable, and green catalyst is eventually favorable to facilitate the large-scale production of these important heterocyclic compounds.

In recent years, ionic liquids (ILs) have received increasing interest as environmentally benign media owing to their special properties such as thermal stability, biodegradability, and non-volatility.25–29 They have been widely used as catalysts for a large number of organic transformations.30–39 However, their application as catalysts for the synthesis of 2-arylbenzoxazole, 2-arylbenzimidazoles, and 2-arylbenzothiazoles via the condensation of aldehydes with o-aminophenols, o-phenylenediamine, and o-aminothiophenols, respectively, has not been known in the literature. In the continuation of our study in ionic liquids application, we reported herein the use of phosphonium acidic ionic liquid as a green and efficient catalyst for the synthesis of the above mentioned arylated heterocycles. The merits of this method are short reaction time, high yield, wide substrate scope, and recyclability of the catalyst.

Results and discussion

Initially, the condensation of o-aminophenol and benzaldehyde is chosen as the model reaction for optimization study. The results were shown in Table 1.
Table 1 Optimization data for the synthesis of 2-phenylbenzoxazole

image file: c8ra01709c-u1.tif

Entrya Catalyst, (mol%) Time, (min) Temperature, (°C) Yieldb (%)
a Reaction conditions: 2-aminophenol (1 mmol), benzaldehyde (1 mmol), solvent-free.b Isolated yields by column chromatography (acetone/petroleum ether = 1/19).
1 10 360 r.t. Trace
2 10 360 60 47
3 10 90 80 85
4 10 20 100 75
5 10 30 100 92
6 10 40 100 94
7 10 20 120 89
8 7 30 100 91
9 6 30 100 82
10 5 30 100 75
11 0 360 100


The effect of temperature, reaction time, and phosphonium ionic liquid loading was investigated by conducting the reaction at various values of each parameter (r.t. −120 °C, 20–360 min, and 0–10 mol%). It was indicated that best condition at 100 °C, 20 min, and 7 mol% of catalyst could afford the desired 2-phenylbenzoxazole in an excellent yield of 91%. In the absence of the catalyst, the failure in the formation of this product was observed as a result.

Table 2 Synthesis of 2-arylbenzoxazoles, 2-arylbenzimidazoles, and 2-arylbenzothiazoles catalyzed by [(C6H5)3P(CH2)4SO3H][OTs]a

image file: c8ra01709c-u2.tif

Entry RR, X, and Ar Product Temperature (°C) Time; (min) Yieldb (%)
a Reaction conditions: 2-aminophenol (1 mmol), or 2-aminothiophenol (1 mmol), or o-phenylenediamine (1 mmol); aldehyde (1 mmol); solvent-free.b Isolated yields by column chromatography (acetone/petroleum ether = 1/19 or ethyl acetate/hexanes = 1/19).c Water (0.2 mL) was added to the reaction mixture.
1 1a: R = H, X = OH, 2a: Ar = Ph image file: c8ra01709c-u3.tif 100 30 91
2 2b: Ar = 4-MeC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u4.tif 100 45 90
3 2c: Ar = 4-t-BuC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u5.tif 100 45 92
4 2d: Ar = 4-MeOC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u6.tif 100 50 93
5 2e: Ar = 4-FC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u7.tif 100 45 81
6 2f: Ar = 4-ClC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u8.tif 100 45 91
7c 2g: Ar = 4-O2NC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u9.tif 120 50 75
8 2h: Ar = 3-FC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u10.tif 100 40 80
9 2i: Ar = 3-BrC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u11.tif 100 45 89
10 2j: Ar = 2-FC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u12.tif 100 45 78
11 2k: Ar = 2-ClC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u13.tif 100 45 90
12 2l: Ar = 2-HOC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u14.tif 120 50 90
13 2m: Ar = 4-pyridinyl image file: c8ra01709c-u15.tif 100 50 82
14 1b: R = Me, X = OH, 2a: Ar = Ph image file: c8ra01709c-u16.tif 100 35 90
15 2b: Ar = 4-MeC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u17.tif 120 40 90
16 2c: Ar = 4-t-BuC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u18.tif 120 45 90
17 2d: Ar = 4-MeOC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u19.tif 120 50 92
18 2e: Ar = 4-FC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u20.tif 120 45 87
19 2f: Ar = 4-ClC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u21.tif 120 45 88
20 2m: Ar = 4-pyridinyl image file: c8ra01709c-u22.tif 120 50 85
21 2n: Ar = 4-HOC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u23.tif 120 60 81
22 1c: R = Cl, X = OH, 2a: Ar = Ph image file: c8ra01709c-u24.tif 100 25 95
23 2b: Ar = 4-MeC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u25.tif 100 45 94
24 2c: Ar = 4-t-BuC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u26.tif 100 50 95
25 2d: Ar = 4-MeOC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u27.tif 100 50 96
26 2e: Ar = 4-FC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u28.tif 100 45 92
27 2f: Ar = 4-ClC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u29.tif 100 45 95
28 2m: Ar = 4-pyridinyl image file: c8ra01709c-u30.tif 120 45 86
29 2n: Ar = 4-HOC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u31.tif 120 50 80
30 1d: R = NO2, X = OH, 2a: Ar = Ph image file: c8ra01709c-u32.tif 100, 120 75, 50 65, 79c
31 2b: Ar = 4-MeC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u33.tif 120 50 75
32 2c: Ar = 4-t-BuC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u34.tif 120 55 81
33 2d: Ar = 4-MeOC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u35.tif 120 50 81
34 2e: Ar = 4-FC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u36.tif 120 60 74
35 2f: Ar = 4-ClC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u37.tif 120 60 80
36 1e: R = H, X = SH, 2a: Ar = Ph image file: c8ra01709c-u38.tif 120 50 92
37 2b: Ar = 4-MeC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u39.tif 120 60 88
38 2d: Ar = 4-MeOC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u40.tif 120 60 90
39 2e: Ar = 4-FC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u41.tif 120 60 85
40 2f: Ar = 4-ClC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u42.tif 120 60 91
41 2g: Ar = 4-O2NC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u43.tif 120 70 75c
42 1f: R = H, X = NH2, 2a: Ar = Ph image file: c8ra01709c-u44.tif 120 90 89
43 2d: Ar = 4-MeOC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u45.tif 120 90 85
44 2e: Ar = 4-FC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u46.tif 120 90 90
45 2g: Ar = 4-O2NC6H4 image file: c8ra01709c-u47.tif 120 90 68c


Next, different catalysts were tested for their performance in the synthesis of 2-phenylbenzoxazole (see detailed experiments in the ESI). The desired product was achieved in the best yield using phosphonium acidic ionic liquid while much lower yields were observed in the same reaction mediated by other catalysts.

With the optimal condition in hand, we explored the reaction scope over a large number of aldehydes in the formation of 2-arylbenzoxazoles and other analogues (Table 2). In general, the reactions proceeded smoothly to give the corresponding products in good to excellent yields. Intuitively, the electronic properties of substituents of benzaldehydes exhibited a little effect on the reaction. As a common trend, electron-rich aldehydes gave the expected products in slightly better yields than electron-poor analogues. Only substrates bearing a powerful electron-withdrawing group such as p-nitro or o-fluoro can give rise to a dramatic yield decrease as low as 68–78% (entry 7, 10, 41, 45). Similarly, the substituents on 2-aminophenol have certain effect on the yields of the desired products. For 2-aminophenol bearing an electron-donating or a weak electron-withdrawing group such as methyl or chloro, respectively, their condensation with a variety of aldehydes could easily approach the completion with the yields of arylated products above 80%. However, a sharply adverse impact was seen for 2-amino-4-nitrophenol whose arylated products can be only isolated in lower yields of 74–81% compared to 81–93% reported for non-substituted 2-aminophenol (entries 30–35 and 1–6). Meanwhile, on examining the reactivity for a row consisting of eight common aldehydes (entries 14–21 and 22–29), both 2-amino-4-methylphenol and 2-amino-4-chlorophenol can be converted to corresponding heterocyclic adducts in closely similar yields (85–92% for 2-aryl-5-methylbenzoxazoles and 86–96% for 2-aryl-5-chlorobenzoxazoles) compared to those reported in the arylation of non-substituted 2-aminophenol (81–93%). For some arylations in which 2-amino-4-nitrophenol or 4-nitrobenzaldehyde was employed as starting materials, the unexpected solidification of the ongoing reaction mixture can slow down the reaction rate as the result of heterogeneity. Therefore, adding a small amount of DI water (0.2 mL) to the reaction mixture in combination with increasing temperature to 120 °C can be helpful to significantly facilitate the reaction (entries 30, 41, 45).

As our expectation, this synthetic campaign is well-suited for the preparation of not only 2-arylbenzoxazoles but also other heterocyclic analogues including 2-arylbenzimidazoles and 2-arylbenzothiazoles. While 2-aminothiophenol was able to undergo the arylation with the same ease as 2-aminophenol, o-phenylenediamine required a prolonged reaction time up to 90 min for a quantitative transformation into expected 2-arylbenzimidazoles. Nevertheless, this harsh condition did not work out in every case. For instance, the arylation of o-phenylenediamine by less reactive 4-nitrobenzaldehyde only afforded the desired product in 68% yield even as a small amount of water was added to the reaction mixture to maintain the homogeneity.

Phosphonium acidic ionic liquid was readily prepared via one-pot two-step procedure in high yield and used as the catalyst for esterification.40 However, to the best of our knowledge, no application of this ionic liquid as the catalyst for the condensation between 2-aminophenol, o-phenylenediamines or 2-aminothiophenol with aldehydes has been reported in the literature so far. Fig. 1 shows the thermal gravimetric analysis (TGA) of triphenyl(butyl-3-sulphonyl)phosphonium toluenesulfonate. The first weight loss of 11.64% below 200 °C merely corresponds to the loss of residual water in the sample. The phosphonium acidic ionic liquid then maintains its stability up to 220–225 °C before undergoing two consecutive thermal decomposition steps at 225–400 °C and 400–600 °C corresponding to the weight loss of 76.75 and 8.81%, respectively. From the data of TGA as well as latter FT-IR analysis (Fig. 2), it could be firmly assured that there is no structural deformation of the ionic liquid at the temperature range of the investigated arylation of benzoxazole and other analogues (100–120 °C).


image file: c8ra01709c-f1.tif
Fig. 1 TGA curve of triphenyl(butyl-3-sulphonyl)phosphonium toluenesulfonate.

image file: c8ra01709c-f2.tif
Fig. 2 FT-IR spectra of triphenyl(butyl-3-sulphonyl)phosphonium toluenesulfonate (a) and its recycled sample after the fourth run (b).

The FT-IR spectra of primitively prepared triphenyl(butyl-3-sulphonyl)phosphonium toluenesulfonate and its recovered sample are presented in Fig. 2. The broad peak at approximately 3450 cm−1 indicates the presence of hydroxyl group while overlapped shoulder peaks scattered from 2950 to 3100 cm−1 are assigned to alkyl and aromatic C–H stretching vibrations. The absorption band at about 1600–1486 cm−1 is paired with a number of C[double bond, length as m-dash]C stretching vibrations in aromatic rings. The signals at 1200 cm−1 and 1034 cm−1 are asymmetric and symmetric stretching vibrations of S[double bond, length as m-dash]O bond, respectively. Finally, the presence of phosphonium functional group is confirmed by two concomitant absorption bands at 1121 and 1410 cm−1 corresponding with P–Ar and P–CH2 bond deformation, respectively. A close similarity in pattern between two FT-IR spectra reinforced the above statement on the thermal stability of phosphonium acidic ionic liquid within the temperature range of arylation.

The acidity of triphenyl(butyl-3-sulphonyl)phosphonium toluenesulfonate was examined by means of Hammett acidity function method using 4-nitrodiphenylamine as an indicator. H0 values of ionic liquid solutions with a concentration range of 5–10 mol% were calculated from the [In]/[InH+] ratio which was determined by UV-Vis spectroscopy. Technically, this ratio is directly proportional to the absorbance difference of the indicator in its monocomponent solution and its cosolution with a given quantity of ionic liquid. As can be seen from the Table 3 and Fig. 3, the 7 mol% solution of triphenyl(butyl-3-sulphonyl)phosphonium toluenesulfonate has H0 value of −1.78 claiming that this ionic liquid is about 50 times more acidic than [1,2-DiMIMPs][OTs] analogue with an H0 value of −0.11 as reported by Yang et al.41 It could be noted that two analogues almost resemble each other except their cation centers. For the imidazolium-based sulfonic acid ionic liquid, the delocalization of positive charge over imidazole ring gives rise to a lessen acidity of the sulfonic acid moiety. Meanwhile, the sulfonic acid functional group tethered to a localized positive-charged center as triphenylphosphonium can behave with more acidic property owing to a better inductive electron-withdrawing effect of positive charge onto Brønsted sulfonic acid group.

Table 3 Hammett acidity function values of various concentrations of investigated IL
Entry IL (mol%) Amax [In] (%) [InH+] (%) H0
1 0 0.361 100 0  
2 5 0.347 96.20 3.80 −1.40
3 6 0.345 95.59 4.41 −1.46
4 7 0.329 91.22 8.78 −1.78
5 10 0.315 87.28 12.72 −1.96



image file: c8ra01709c-f3.tif
Fig. 3 The UV/Vis spectra of 4-nitrodiphenylamine indicator measured in its cosolutions with IL at different concentrations.

The recyclability of triphenyl(butyl-3-sulphonyl)phosphonium toluenesulfonate was surveyed on the optimized arylation of 2-aminophenol by benzaldehyde. Upon completion of the reaction, the recovered ionic liquid was easily separated from other organic matters by washing many times with diethyl ether. It was subsequently dried in vacuo at 80 °C for 30 min before the reuse for consecutive cycles. It can be seen from Fig. 4 that only a very minor loss of catalytic performance was observed over four times of its reuse in the same condensation of benzaldehyde with 2-aminophenol.


image file: c8ra01709c-f4.tif
Fig. 4 Recycling test of the catalyst.

A comparative study of the present method with previous literatures was reported in Table 4. The phosphonium acidic ionic liquid-catalyzed condensation between 2-aminophenol and benzaldehyde afforded the 2-phenylbenzoxazole product in excellent yield under a mild condition without the demand for any additives as in previous reports (Table 4). Furthermore, no loss of catalytic activity in the recycling test of this catalyst is the most prominence of the present method.

Table 4 The comparison of the present method with previous literatures in the synthesis of 2-phenylbenzoxazole

image file: c8ra01709c-u48.tif

Entry Catalyst Condition Yield (%)
1 TiO2–ZrO2 (10 mol%), acetonitrile 60 °C, 15 min 91 (ref. 42)
2 Hf-MOF (1 mol%), solvent-free 140 °C, 6 h 95 (ref. 43)
3 NaCN (10 mol%), DMF, air 80 °C, 24 h 74 (ref. 44)
4 Sm(OTf)3 (10 mol%), ethanol–water 50–60 °C, 2 h 92 (ref. 21)
5 Poly(melamine-formaldehyde) (10 mg), oxygen, toluene 110 °C, 24 h 91 (ref. 45)
6 Present work: triphenyl(butyl-3-sulphonyl)phosphonium toluenesulfonate (7 mol%), solvent-free 100 °C, 30 min 91


Experimental

Chemicals, supplies, and instruments

All starting materials were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich and employed without further purification. Silica gel (230–400 mesh) for flash chromatography was obtained from HiMedia Laboratories Pvt. Ltd. (India). TLC (silica gel 60 F254) was purchased from Merck. Ethyl acetate (purity ≥ 99.5%) and hexanes (≥95%) were obtained from Xilong Chemical Co., Ltd (China). Chloroform-d (99.8 atom% D, stab. with Ag) was obtained from Armar (Switzerland). GC-MS spectra were taken on an Agilent GC System 7890 equipped with a mass selective detector Agilent 5973N and a capillary DB-5MS column (30 m × 250 μm × 0.25 μm). FT-IR spectra were recorded in the form of KBr pellets by a Bruker Vertex 70. 1H and 13C NMR spectra were recorded on a Bruker Advance II 500 MHz.

Preparation of triphenyl(butyl-3-sulphonyl)phosphonium toluenesulfonate

Triphenyl(butyl-3-sulphonyl)phosphonium toluenesulfonate catalyst was obtained by the one-pot method as depicted in Scheme 1 (97%).11–14 Its structure was then authenticated by 1H-NMR, 13C-NMR, FT-IR and TGA. An equimolar mixture of triphenylphosphine and 1,4-butane sultone in toluene solvent (10 mL) was stirred and heated at reflux for 12 h to obtain the zwitterion as a white solid. Then p-toluenesulfonic acid was added dropwise to the resulting zwitterion until a separated clear and colorless liquid layer was formed at the bottom of the round bottom flask after approximately 6 h. After completion of the reaction, the crude product was washed with diethyl ether (5 × 20 mL) to remove non-ionic residues. Finally, the ionic liquid was obtained in 97% yield after the removal of solvent in vacuo.
image file: c8ra01709c-s1.tif
Scheme 1 The synthetic pathway of triphenyl(butyl-3-sulphonyl)phosphonium toluenesulfonate.

General procedure for the synthesis of 2-arylbenzoxazole derivatives

2-Aminophenol (109 mg, 1.0 mmol) was treated with benzaldehyde (106 mg, 1.0 mmol) in the presence of triphenyl(butyl-3-sulphonyl)phosphonium toluenesulfonate (20.5 mg, 7 mol%) in a 10 mL glass tube at 100 °C under solvent-free magnetic stirring. Upon completion of the reaction as indicated by TLC after 30 min, the mixture was diluted and extracted with diethyl ether (10 × 5 mL). Then the ethereal solution was washed with water (2 × 20 mL) and dried over Na2SO4. The final product was obtained after solvent removal by a rotary evaporator followed by the purification on a silica gel column chromatography using acetone/petroleum ether (1/19) as an eluent solvent. The structural characterization was performed using 1H, 13C-NMR, and GC-MS. The recovered catalyst was reactivated by heating under reduced vacuum at 80 °C for 30 min and reused for next cycles.

Conclusions

In summary, a green and efficient pathway to access to 2-arylbenzoxazoles, 2-arylbenzimidazoles, and 2-arylbenzothiazoles from o-aminophenol, o-phenylenediamines, and o-aminothiophenol, respectively, via the condensation with aldehydes has been successfully developed by outstanding catalytic performance of triphenyl(butyl-3-sulphonyl)phosphonium toluenesulfonate. Not only did this ionic liquid work out on a wide range of substrates and reagents, but it also expressed excellent sustainability of remaining reactivity after four times of recycling. A simple work-up step allowing to isolate the desired products as well as simultaneously recover the ionic liquid catalyst is also an apparent advantage of this process.

Conflicts of interest

There are no conflicts to declare.

Acknowledgements

This research is funded by Viet Nam National University, Ho Chi Minh City (VNU-HCM) under grant number 562-2018-18-03. We thank Hoang-Tan Le Doan and Ngoc-Mai Hoang Do for their valuable discussions.

References

  1. L. A. Nguyen, Q. A. Ngo, P. Retailleau and T. B. Nguyen, Green Chem., 2017, 19, 4289–4293 RSC.
  2. K. Kuroda, S. Tsuyumine and T. Kodama, Org. Process Res. Dev., 2016, 20, 1053–1058 CrossRef CAS.
  3. S. Yamada, K. Murakami and K. Itami, Org. Lett., 2016, 18, 2415–2418 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  4. Q. Zhou, J. F. Zhang, H. Cao, R. Zhong and X. F. Hou, J. Org. Chem., 2016, 81, 12169–12180 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  5. A. Srivastava, G. Shukla and M. S. Singh, Tetrahedron, 2017, 73, 879–887 CrossRef CAS.
  6. D. Wang, J. Albero, H. García and Z. Li, J. Catal., 2017, 349, 156–162 CrossRef CAS.
  7. R. Gupta, P. K. Sahu, P. K. Sahu, S. K. Srivastava and D. D. Agarwal, Catal. Commun., 2017, 92, 119–123 CrossRef CAS.
  8. M. S. Gerova, S. R. Stateva, E. M. Radonova, R. B. Kalenderska, R. I. Rusew, R. P. Nikolova, C. D. Chanev, B. L. Shivachev, M. D. Apostolova and O. I. Petrov, Eur. J. Med. Chem., 2016, 120, 121–133 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  9. R. P. Lester, T. Bham, T. W. Bousfield, W. Lewis and J. E. Camp, J. Org. Chem., 2016, 81, 12472–12477 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  10. M. A. Abdelgawad, R. B. Bakr and H. A. Omar, Bioorg. Chem., 2017, 74, 82–90 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  11. D. Kim, H. Y. Won, E. S. Hwang, Y. K. Kim and H. P. Choo, Bioorg. Med. Chem., 2017, 25, 3127–3134 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  12. W. Zhang, J. Liu, J. M. Macho, X. Jiang, D. Xie, F. Jiang, W. Liu and L. Fu, Eur. J. Med. Chem., 2017, 126, 7–14 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  13. K. Chanda, S. Rajasekhar and B. Maiti, Synlett, 2017, 521–541 CrossRef.
  14. L. Yang and H. Huang, Chem. Rev., 2015, 115, 3468–3517 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  15. X.-B. Shen, Y. Zhang, W.-X. Chen, Z.-K. Xiao, T.-T. Hu and L.-X. Shao, Org. Lett., 2014, 16, 1984–1987 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  16. F. Zhu, J.-L. Tao and Z.-X. Wang, Org. Lett., 2015, 17, 4926–4929 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  17. L. Tang, X. Guo, Y. Yang, Z. Zha and Z. Wang, Chem. Commun., 2014, 50, 6145–6148 RSC.
  18. F. Derridj, S. Djebbar, O. Benali-Baitich and H. Doucet, J. Organomet. Chem., 2008, 693, 135–144 CrossRef CAS.
  19. J. Roger, S. Mom, M. Beaupérin, S. Royer, P. Meunier, V. V. Ivanov, H. Doucet and J.-C. Hierso, ChemCatChem, 2010, 2, 296–305 CrossRef CAS.
  20. J. Azizian, P. Torabi and J. Noei, Tetrahedron Lett., 2016, 57, 185–188 CrossRef CAS.
  21. V. Ingle, P. Gorepatil and Y. Mane, Synlett, 2013, 2241–2244 CrossRef.
  22. D. Dev, J. Chandra, N. B. Palakurthy, K. Thalluri, T. Kalita and B. Mandal, Asian J. Org. Chem., 2016, 5, 663–675 CrossRef CAS.
  23. V. S. Padalkar, B. N. Borse, V. D. Gupta, K. R. Phatangare, V. S. Patil, P. G. Umape and N. Sekar, Arabian J. Chem., 2016, 9, S1125–S1130 CrossRef CAS.
  24. R. V. Chikhale, A. M. Pant, S. S. Menghani, P. G. Wadibhasme and P. B. Khedekar, Arabian J. Chem., 2017, 10, 715–725 CrossRef CAS.
  25. J. P. Hallett and T. Welton, Chem. Rev., 2011, 111, 3508–3576 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  26. A. S. Amarasekara, Chem. Rev., 2016, 116, 6133–6183 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  27. K. Goossens, K. Lava, C. W. Bielawski and K. Binnemans, Chem. Rev., 2016, 116, 4643–4807 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  28. P. C. Marr and A. C. Marr, Green Chem., 2016, 18, 105–128 RSC.
  29. H. Niedermeyer, J. P. Hallett, I. J. Villar-Garcia, P. A. Hunt and T. Welton, Chem. Soc. Rev., 2012, 41, 7780–7802 RSC.
  30. V. I. Parvulescu and C. Hardacre, Chem. Rev., 2007, 107, 2615–2665 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  31. M. A. Martins, C. P. Frizzo, D. N. Moreira, N. Zanatta and H. G. Bonacorso, Chem. Rev., 2008, 108, 2015–2050 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  32. B. Zhen, Q. Jiao, Y. Zhang, Q. Wu and H. Li, Appl. Catal., A, 2012, 445–446, 239–245 CrossRef CAS.
  33. M. A. Martins, C. P. Frizzo, A. Z. Tier, D. N. Moreira, N. Zanatta and H. G. Bonacorso, Chem. Rev., 2014, 114, PR1–PR70 CrossRef PubMed.
  34. A. Chinnappan, H. Bandal, S. Ramakrishna and H. Kim, Chem. Eng. J., 2018, 335, 215–220 CrossRef CAS.
  35. Q. Hou, M. Zhen, L. Liu, Y. Chen, F. Huang, S. Zhang, W. Li and M. Ju, Appl. Catal., B, 2018, 224, 183–193 CrossRef CAS.
  36. L. C. Player, B. Chan, P. Turner, A. F. Masters and T. Maschmeyer, Appl. Catal., B, 2018, 223, 228–233 CrossRef CAS.
  37. M.-M. Li, C.-S. Duan, Y.-Q. Yu and D.-Z. Xu, Dyes Pigm., 2018, 150, 202–206 CrossRef CAS.
  38. K. Kumar, F. Parveen, T. Patra and S. Upadhyayula, New J. Chem., 2018, 42, 228–236 RSC.
  39. M. Zhang, R. Ettelaie, T. Yan, S. Zhang, F. Cheng, B. P. Binks and H. Yang, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2017, 139, 17387–17396 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  40. A. C. Cole, J. L. Jensen, I. Ntai, K. L. T. Tran, K. J. Weaver, D. C. Forbes and J. H. Davis, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2002, 124, 5962–5963 CrossRef CAS PubMed.
  41. J. Yang, H. Zhou, X. Lu and Y. Yuan, Catal. Commun., 2010, 11, 1200–1204 CrossRef CAS.
  42. M. R. Patil, J. T. Bhanushali, B. M. Nagaraja and R. S. Keri, C. R. Chim., 2018, 21, 399–407 CrossRef CAS.
  43. L. H. T. Nguyen, T. T. Nguyen, H. L. Nguyen, T. L. H. Doan and P. H. Tran, Catal. Sci. Technol., 2017, 7, 4346–4350 CAS.
  44. Y. H. Cho, C.-Y. Lee, D.-C. Ha and C.-H. Cheon, Adv. Synth. Catal., 2012, 354, 2992–2996 CrossRef CAS.
  45. D. Yang, P. Liu, N. Zhang, W. Wei, M. Yue, J. You and H. Wang, ChemCatChem, 2014, 6, 3434–3439 CrossRef CAS.

Footnote

Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c8ra01709c

This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018
Click here to see how this site uses Cookies. View our privacy policy here.