Organic Syntheses, CV 5, 598
Submitted by Harold Hart, Richard M. Lange, and Peter M. Collins
1.
Checked by A. S. Pagano and William D. Emmons.
1. Procedure
Caution! The preparation and handling of
peroxytrifluoroacetic acid should be carried out behind a safety screen. Precautions to be observed with 90%
hydrogen peroxide are described in (Note
3) and should be followed carefully.
To a
300-ml. three-necked flask equipped with a
glass Trubore stirrer and two
loose-fitting ground-glass stoppers are added
46.2 g. (0.22 mole) of trifluoroacetic anhydride and
50 ml. of methylene chloride (Note
1). The stirred solution is cooled in an
ice bath, and
5.40 ml. (0.20 mole) of 90% hydrogen peroxide is added from a 10-ml. graduated cylinder in
ca. 1-ml. portions over a period of 10 minutes (Note
2),(Note
3), and (Note
4). When the mixture has become homogeneous, it is allowed to warm to room temperature for a few minutes and is then cooled once more in an ice bath to 0°.
A solution of
24.2 g. (0.15 mole) of hexamethylbenzene in
300 ml. of distilled methylene chloride is prepared in a
1-l. three-necked flask equipped with
two ice-jacketed addition funnels (Note
5) and a
thermometer. The solution is cooled to 5° in an
ice-ethanol bath and is agitated by a
magnetic stirrer. The cold
peroxytrifluoroacetic acid solution is added at a constant rate to the
hexamethylbenzene solution from one of the ice-jacketed addition funnels at the same time that
63.3 ml. of technical (48%) boron trifluoride etherate is added from the second addition funnel. The additions require
ca. 45 minutes, and as far as possible they should be completed at the same time. During this period the temperature of the reaction mixture is maintained between 0° and 5° (Note
6) and (Note
7).
The mixture is stirred at 0–5° for 1 hour after addition is complete and then is hydrolyzed with 100 ml. of water, which is added quickly. The reaction mixture is extracted consecutively with two 100-ml. portions of water, three
100-ml. portions of saturated aqueous sodium bicarbonate, one
75-ml. portion of aqueous 5% sodium hydroxide, and two 75-ml. portions of water. The organic phase is dried over anhydrous
magnesium sulfate, and the solvent is removed on a
rotary evaporator. The residue, a mobile yellow oil, is distilled through a
6-in. Vigreux column under reduced pressure to give pure (Note
8)
2,3,4,5,6,6-hexamethyl-2,4-cyclohexadien-1-one, b.p.
85–87° (1.0 mm.). The yield is
22–24 g. (
82–90%) (Note
9) and (Note
10).
2. Notes
1. Excess anhydride is used to remove water introduced during the addition of 90%
hydrogen peroxide.
2. Available from FMC Corp., Inorganic Chemicals Division, 808 Gwynne Building, Cincinnati 2, Ohio.
3. The precautions to be observed with
90% hydrogen peroxide have been described in detail.
2 In essence it is important to prevent contact of this reagent with any easily oxidizable substrates, such as wood, alcohols, and sugars and with heavy-metal salts, since the latter catalyze its decomposition. Storage of
hydrogen peroxide in the laboratory should be arranged in such a way that, even if the bottle containing the reagent breaks, the
hydrogen peroxide does not come into contact with any materials of this kind. Small samples of
90% hydrogen peroxide are regularly shipped in vented glass bottles provided with a protective outside
metal container, and it is desirable to use this container while storing the reagent in the laboratory. If spillage of the reagent occurs, dilution with at least several volumes of water is recommended. In weighing out
90% hydrogen peroxide it is good practice never to return excess reagent to the stock bottle; rather it should be diluted with water and discarded to avoid any possibility that the stock bottle will be contaminated.
4. The
hydrogen peroxide may be added in one portion, but then an appreciable exotherm is noted.
5. A simple procedure for the construction of a jacketed addition funnel has been described.
3
8. This material should be at least 98% pure by vapor-phase chromatography (
SE-30 column at 180–200°). It usually crystallizes if stored in a refrigerator. Unreacted
hexamethylbenzene, present if insufficient oxidant is used, can best be removed by column chromatography on alumina with
pentane as eluant.
10. One can use a solution of
90% hydrogen peroxide (
Caution! see (Note
3) in
acetic-sulfuric acid as the oxidant in place of
peroxytrifluoroacetic acid-boron trifluoride. The reaction is less exothermic, therefore easier to control. The generality of the procedure for other polyalkylbenzenes has not been tested. A typical procedure is as follows: To a well-stirred slurry of
100 g. (0.618 mole) of hexamethylbenzene in
200 ml. of methylene chloride,
400 ml. of glacial acetic acid, and
300 ml. of concentrated sulfuric acid maintained at 0–10° there is added, during 30 minutes, a solution of
28 ml. (0.75 mole) of 90% hydrogen peroxide in
45 ml. of glacial acetic acid and
30 ml. of concentrated sulfuric acid. After addition, the mixture is stirred at 0° for 4 hours before workup, which is essentially as described in the original procedure. The yield of
hexamethyl-2,4-cyclohexadienone is
95 g. (
88%). The procedure is derived from that of Hart, Collins, and Warning
4 (private communication from H. Hart).
3. Discussion
The method described is that of Waring and Hart.
5 Dienones of this type have not been available by any previously described synthetic route.
4. Merits of the Preparation
Dienones of this class are useful starting materials for the preparation of bicyclic compounds via Diels-Alder reactions
5 and for the synthesis of small ring compounds.
6 The 2,4-dienone can be converted quantitatively to the 2,5-isomer by treatment with fuming
sulfuric acid and subsequent hydrolysis.
7 The oxidation procedure is also applicable to the conversion of
mesitylene to
mesitol or of
isodurene to
isodurenol,
8 and can be used to convert
tetramethylethylene quantitatively and directly to
pinacolone.
9 A review which includes references to many applications of the procedure described here is available.
10
Appendix
Compounds Referenced (Chemical Abstracts Registry Number)
acetic-sulfuric acid
sulfuric acid (7664-93-9)
acetic acid (64-19-7)
sodium hydroxide (1310-73-2)
sodium bicarbonate (144-55-8)
carbon tetrachloride (56-23-5)
Pinacolone (75-97-8)
hydrogen peroxide (7722-84-1)
Mesitylene (108-67-8)
Pentane (109-66-0)
methylene chloride (75-09-2)
tetramethylethylene (563-79-1)
magnesium sulfate (7487-88-9)
Durene (95-93-2)
Hexamethylbenzene (87-85-4)
Isodurene (527-53-7)
boron trifluoride (7637-07-2)
boron trifluoride etherate (109-63-7)
peroxytrifluoroacetic acid
trifluoroacetic anhydride (407-25-0)
mesitol (527-60-6)
2,3,4,5,6,6-Hexamethyl-2,4-cyclohexadien-1-one,
2,4-Cyclohexadien-1-one, 2,3,4,5,6,6-hexamethyl-,
hexamethyl-2,4-cyclohexadienone (3854-96-4)
hexaethyl-2,4-cyclohexadienone
hexaethylbenzene (604-88-6)
3,4,6,6-tetramethyl-2,4-cyclohexadienone
peroxytrifluoroacetic acid-boron trifluoride
isodurenol
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