Organic Syntheses, Vol. 76, 214
Submitted by Dominique Toussaint and Jean Suffert
1.
Checked by Robin R. Frey and Stephen F. Martin.
1. Procedure
A. and B. In a
dry, 500-mL, two-necked flask flushed with argon, fitted with a magnetic stirring bar and a 250-mL pressure-equalizing addition funnel is placed
18.65 g of (Z/E)-1-bromo-1-propene (0.15 mol) (Note
1) in
100 mL of tetrahydrofuran (THF, (Note 2)). The flask is cooled to −78°C with a
dry ice-acetone bath, and
140 mL of butyllithium (BuLi, 1.57 M in hexane, 0.22 mol) (Note
3) is added dropwise over 30 min. The funnel is rinsed with an additional
10-mL portion of THF. The milky white suspension (Note
4) is stirred at −78°C for another 2 hr. Freshly distilled
trans-cinnamaldehyde (13.21 g, 0.1 mol) in 50 mL of THF is added dropwise over 10 min, and the funnel is rinsed with
10 mL of THF. The solution is stirred for 30 min at −78°C (Note
5), quenched by the addition of
50 mL of aqueous saturated ammonium chloride (NH4Cl), allowed to warm to room temperature and poured into a
1-L separatory funnel containing 100 mL of water and
100 mL of ether. The layers are separated, and the aqueous phase is extracted with three
100-mL portions of ether. The combined organic layers are washed with two
100-mL portions of brine, dried over
anhydrous sodium sulfate and filtered. The solvent is removed by rotary evaporation leaving
17.17 g of a yellow oil that is almost pure based upon
1H NMR and GC (crude yield: >99%) (Note
6) and (Note
7). Extensive purification can be achieved by flash chromatography on
silica gel eluting with
20% ether in hexane (Note
8) to leave a yellow oil that solidifies in the freezer to yield
15.88 g of a pale yellow solid (mp
40-42°C, yield,
92%) (Note
9).
2. Notes
1.
1-Bromo-1-propene was purchased from Lancaster Synthesis Inc. (mixture of isomers, technical grade) and distilled prior to use (bp
58-62°C, 760 mm).
2. THF was distilled from
sodium/benzophenone ketyl under
nitrogen prior to use.
3.
Butyllithium was purchased from Aldrich Chemical Company, Inc., and titrated with
N-pivaloyl-o-toluidine.
2 The checkers observed that use of less concentrated solutions of BuLi resulted in longer reaction times.
4. In some cases no suspension was observed (only a yellowish solution was obtained), but the reactions worked equally well.
5. The progress of the reaction can be monitored by TLC by quenching an aliquot with a mixture of aqueous saturated NH
4Cl/ether and eluting with Et
2O/hexane 20/80 (R
f trans-cinnamaldehyde = 0.40, R
f product = 0.25). Visualization can be achieved with
vanillin (25 g/L of ethanol containing 1 mL of concd sulfuric acid) and heating on a hot plate.
6.
1H NMR (300 MHz) and
13C NMR (75 MHz) spectra were recorded in CDCl
3 solution on a Varian Unity Plus 300 MHz spectrometer.
7. The purity of the crude solid was determined to be 97% by GC (column conditions: SE-30 column, 25 m × 0.32 mm, He 0.8 kg/cm
2 carrier gas). The recovered oil solidified upon standing in the freezer. Attempts to recrystallize the resulting off-white material (in
cyclohexane or pentane/ethyl
acetate) only met with oiling.
8. An 8-cm diameter column packed with 15 cm of silica was used. Some decomposition is observed during purification.
9. This material was >99% pure as determined by GC (column conditions: SE-30 column, 25 m × 0.32 mm, He 0.8 kg/cm
2 carrier gas) and showed the following spectroscopic characteristics: IR (CHCl
3) cm
−1: 3597, 2242, 1632; MS (CI) m/z 173.0958 [C
12H
12O+H (M+1) requires 173.0966], 172, 155, 133.
1H NMR (300 MHz, CDCl
3) δ: 1.89 (d, 3 H, J = 2.1), 2.24 (d, 1 H, J = 5.9), 5.00-5.03 (br m, 1 H), 6.28 (dd, 1 H, J = 15.7, 5.9), 6.73 (d, 1 H, J = 15.7), 7.21-7.42 (comp, 5 H);
13C NMR (75 MHz) δ: 3.6, 63.1, 65.2, 82.8, 126.7, 127.9, 128.5, 128.7, 131.4, 136.1. Anal. Calcd for C
12H
12O: C, 83.64; H, 7.02. Found: C, 83.56; H, 6.96.
Waste Disposal Information
All toxic materials were disposed of in accordance with "Prudent Practices in the Laboratory"; National Academy Press; Washington, DC, 1995.
3. Discussion
The use of
1-propynyllithium in the synthesis of natural and unnatural compounds has been extensive, and a number of procedures have been reported for its generation. The most common method uses
propyne gas, which may be metallated with
lithium in liquid
ammonia and other solvents,
3 or
butyllithium4 or
lithium hydride in
dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO).
5 However,
propyne is expensive, and it is important to have a more economical source of
1-propynyllithium. In some cases,
propyne has been replaced by the inexpensive welding gas mixture MAPP (
Methyl Acetylene,
Propadiene, Propene), which contains up to 13.5% of
propyne.
6 The anion can also be prepared by direct metallation of
allene with BuLi at −78°C.
7 1-Propynyllithium has also been generated by the reaction of
1-chloro-1-propene with BuLi or sec-BuLi, but the subsequent reaction with
methyl iodide gave at best a 50% yield of product.
8 Moreover,
1-chloro-1-propene is expensive, and, because of its low boiling point (37°C), it is somewhat inconvenient to use. For example, the conditions required for generating
propynyllithium from
1-chloro-1-propene involve use of a liquid
nitrogen –
ethanol cooling bath (−110°C). This technical difficulty somewhat limits the scale and utility of this procedure. The method of Gribble, et al. for generating
1-propynyllithium uses
1,2-dibromopropane and 3 equiv of
lithium diisopropylamide (LDA).
9 The presence of such a large excess of base does not allow the addition of
1-propynyllithium to highly functionalized electrophiles. Recently a new procedure for generating
1-propynyllithium was reported that involved the reaction of an allenic telluride with BuLi at −70°C, followed by heating the mixture at 66°C and quenching the anion with an electrophile such as
benzaldehyde or
cyclohexenone.
10
The present procedure provides a method for the easy generation of
1-propynyllithium from an inexpensive, commercially available starting material. The anion is prepared in anhydrous THF in high yield by reaction of the commercially available mixture of
(Z/E)-1-bromopropene with BuLi at −78°C. Its reaction with various electrophiles such as aldehydes or Weinreb amides
11 is clean and efficient to afford secondary alcohols and ketones respectively (Method a, Table). The
1-propynyllithium generated in this way can be transmetallated with CeCl
312 (Method b, Table) or ZnCl
2 [in the presence of Pd(PPh
3)
4]), Method c, Table]
13 to add to enolizable ketones and acid chlorides, respectively. In all cases yields were high (see Table).
14
ADDITION OF 1-PROPYNLLITHIUM TO VARIOUS ELECTROPHILES
|
Entry
|
Starting Compound
|
Method
|
Product
|
Yield (%)
|
|
1 |
|
a |
3a |
|
94 |
2 |
|
a |
3b |
|
94 |
3 |
|
a |
3c |
|
95 |
4 |
|
b |
4a |
|
92 |
5 |
|
b |
4b |
|
89 |
6 |
|
b |
4c |
|
90 |
7 |
|
b |
4d |
|
95 |
8 |
|
b |
4e |
|
88 |
9 |
|
b |
4f |
|
86 |
10 |
|
a |
5a |
|
86 |
11 |
|
a |
5b |
|
89 |
12 |
|
c |
5c |
|
90 |
13 |
|
c |
5d |
|
78 |
|
Appendix
Chemical Abstracts Nomenclature (Collective Index Number);
(Registry Number)
1-Propynyllithium: Lithium, 1-propynyl- (8,9); 4529-04-8)
(Z/E)-1-Bromo-1-propene: 1-Propene, 1-bromo- (8,9); (590-14-7)
6-Phenylhex-2-yn-5-en-4-ol: 1-Hexen-4-yn-3-ol, 1-phenyl-, (E)- (10); (63124-68-5)
Butyllithium: Lithium, butyl- (8,9); (109-72-8)
trans-Cinnamaldehyde: Cinnamaldehyde, (E)- (8); 2-Propenal, 3-phenyl-, (E)- (9); (14371-10-9)
N-Pivaloyl-o-toluidine: Propanamide, 2,2-dimethyl-N-(2-methylphenyl)- (10); (61495-04-3)
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