Highly Efficient Synthesis of 2-Substituted Benzo[ b ]furan Derivatives from the Cross-Coupling Reactions of 2-Halobenzo[ b ]furans with Organoalane Reagents was written by Wen, Chang;Wu, Chuan;Luo, Ruiqiang;Li, Qinghan;Chen, Feng. And the article was included in Synthesis in 2021.SDS of cas: 27469-60-9 This article mentions the following:
A highly efficient and simple route for the synthesis of benzo[ b]furans was developed by palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling reaction of 2-halobenzo[ b]furans with aryl, alkynyl, and alkylaluminum reagents. Various 2-aryl-, 2-alkynyl-, and 2-alkyl benzo[ b]furans was obtained in 23-97% isolated yields using 2-3 mol% PdCl 2/4-6 mol% XantPhos as the catalyst under mild reaction conditions. The aryls beared electron-donating or electron-withdrawing groups in 2-halobenzo[ b]furans gave products in 40-97% isolated yields. In addition, aluminum reagents containing thienyl, furanyl, trimethylsilanyl, and benzyl groups worked efficiently with 2-halobenzo[ b]furans as well, and three bioactive mols. with benzo[ b]furans skeleton were synthesized. Furthermore, the broad substrates scope and the typical maintenance of vigorous efficiency on gram scale made this protocol a potentially practical method to synthesize benzo[ b]furans. On the basis of the exptl. results, a possible catalytic cycle was proposed. In the experiment, the researchers used many compounds, for example, 4,4-Difluorobenzhydrylpiperazine (cas: 27469-60-9SDS of cas: 27469-60-9).
4,4-Difluorobenzhydrylpiperazine (cas: 27469-60-9) belongs to piperazine derivatives. Piperazine belongs to the family of medicines called anthelmintics. Two common salts in the form of which piperazine is usually prepared for pharmaceutical or veterinary purposes are the citrate, 3C4H10N2.2C6H8O7 (i.e. containing 3 molecules of piperazine to 2 molecules of citric acid), and the adipate, C4H10N2.C6H10O4 (containing 1 molecule each of piperazine and adipic acid).SDS of cas: 27469-60-9
Referemce:
Piperazine – Wikipedia,
Piperazines – an overview | ScienceDirect Topics