Organic Syntheses, CV 9, 730
Submitted by Ruo Xu and Ronald Breslow
1.
Checked by Rebecca Calvo and Robert K. Boeckman, Jr..
1. Procedure
1,2,3-Triphenylcyclopropenium bromide. A
flame-dried, 500-mL, three-necked, round-bottomed flask, equipped with a
magnetic stirring bar and a
reflux condenser fitted with an
argon inlet vented through a
mineral oil bubbler,
glass stopper, and
rubber septum, is flushed with
argon and charged with a solution of
diphenylacetylene (3.92 g, 0.022 mol) (Note
1) and
potassium tert-butoxide (9.97 g, 0.089 mol) in dry
benzene (100 mL) (Note
2). Efficient magnetic stirring is initiated, and
5.8 mL of α,α-dichlorotoluene (7.2 g, 0.045 mol) (Note
3) is added dropwise over

5 min via a syringe under
argon (Note
4). The reaction mixture is then heated under reflux for 3 hr during which time the precipitate dissolves (Note
5). After the reaction mixture is cooled to room temperature, 100 mL of water is added to remove inorganic salts. The organic layer is separated and the aqueous layer is extracted with portions of
ether (2 × 50-mL). The organic layers are combined, dried over
magnesium sulfate, and filtered. The filtrate is saturated with anhydrous
hydrogen bromide (Note
6), whereupon a light yellow precipitate forms that is collected to afford
6.8–7.2 g (
89–93%) of essentially pure
triphenylcyclopropenium bromide (Note
7). The material prepared in this manner provides a satisfactory elemental analysis,
2 but it can be further purified by recrystallization from
acetonitrile, if desired.
2. Notes
2.
Benzene is obtained from the Fisher Scientific Company and purified by distillation from
CaH2.
4. The reaction mixture is observed to bubble, fume, become brown in color, and deposit a precipitate. When the reaction is carried out in the air rather than under
argon, the conversion is only 50%.
5. Slightly lower conversion is consistently realized when the reflux period is shortened to 1 hr.
6. When the usual preparative procedure was interrupted before the addition of water, and the inorganic material was removed by filtration, concentration of the solution and addition of dry
hexane caused crystallization of
1,2,3-triphenylcyclopropenyl tert-butyl ether as white prisms.
2 The checkers did not observe reprecipitation of the salts upon cooling the reaction mixture.
7. The crude product is quite pure and has the following spectral characteristics:
1H NMR (300 MHz, CD
3NO
2) δ: 7.99 (t, 6 H, J = 8), 8.12 (t, 3 H, J = 8), 8.71 (d, 6 H, J = 8);
13C NMR (75 MHz, CD
3NO
2) δ: 119.65, 130.18, 135.40, 138.18, 155.26; IR (CHCl
3) cm
−1: 3382, 1712, 1594, 1505, 1410. On heating it decomposes without a defined melting point.
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
According to this procedure, with proper choice of reaction conditions, a sizeable amount of
diphenylacetylene can be converted quantitatively to
triphenylcyclopropenium bromide in a few hours. The reaction is of wide generality and can be applied to
p-anisylphenylacetylene and to
di-p-anisylacetylene, or with
p-anisal chloride instead of
α,α-dichlorotoluene, to prepare p-methoxy derivatives of the title compound.
2 Since the initial preparation of this derivative of the cyclopropenyl cation by a less efficient procedure,
3 many aryl-, alkyl- and heteroatom-substituted derivatives of this simplest cyclic aromatic system have been synthesized,
4 5 6 including the parent cyclopropenyl cation itself.
7 They have been used for various physical studies,
8 and for the preparation of derivatives such as covalent cyclopropenes and metal coordination complexes.
9,10
The cyclopropenyl cation is the simplest aromatic system, and thus of some theoretical interest. In addition, the chemistry of cyclopropene derivatives is full of interesting rearrangements to other novel structures,
11 reflecting the great strain energy of the cyclopropene ring.
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