Organic Syntheses, CV 8, 323
Submitted by Teruaki Mukaiyama and Koichi Narasaka
1.
Checked by Kathleen Hug and Clayton H. Heathcock.
1. Procedure
A
500-mL, three-necked flask is fitted with a
stirring bar, a
rubber stopper, a
100-mL pressure-equalizing dropping funnel, and a
three-way stopcock that is equipped with a balloon of
argon gas (Note
1). The flask is charged with
140 mL of dry methylene chloride (Note
2) and cooled in an
ice bath.
Titanium tetrachloride (11.0 mL) (Note
3) is added by a syringe with stirring by a magnetic stirrer, and a solution of
6.5 g of acetone in
30 mL of methylene chloride is added dropwise over a 5-min period. On completion of this addition a solution of
19.2 g of acetophenone trimethylsilyl enol ether (Note
4) in
15 mL of methylene chloride (Note
5) is added dropwise over a 10-min period, and the mixture is stirred for 15 min.
The residue is dissolved in
30 mL of benzene, and the solution is transferred to a chromatographic column (50-mm diameter) consisting of
600 mL of silica gel. The product is eluted sequentially with (a)
1 L of 4 : 1 (v/v) hexane : ethyl acetate and (b)
1.5 L of 2 : 1 (v/v) hexane : ethyl acetate (flash chromatography) (Note
6).
The initial ca. 900 mL of the eluent is discarded. Concentration of the later fractions (ca. 1.3 L) under reduced pressure yields the pure product as an oil (Note
7). The total yield is
12.2–12.8 g (
70–74%).
2. Notes
1. All apparatuses should be oven-dried before use.
4. The
silyl enol ether may be obtained from the Fluka Chemical Corp., 255 Oser Avenue, Hauppauge, NY 11788. Alternatively, it may be prepared by the following modification of the procedure of Walshe and co-workers.
2 The Walshe procedure is followed exactly with
36 g (0.30 mol) of acetophenone,
41.4 g (0.41 mol) of triethylamine,
43.2 g (0.40 mol) of chlorotrimethylsilane,
60 g (0.40 mol) of sodium iodide, and
350 mL of acetonitrile. After extraction, the organic layer is dried over
potassium carbonate and then concentrated with a rotary evaporator under reduced pressure. The crude product is a mixture of
97% of the desired silyl enol ether and
3% of acetophenone, as shown by gas chromatography. The crude product is distilled in a
Claisen flask at a pressure of about 40 mm. After a small forerun (ca. 3 g),
52.3 g (
91%) of silyl enol ether, bp
124–125.5°C, is obtained. The purity of this material is approximately 98%, as judged by gas chromatography and
1H NMR spectroscopy.
5. Submitters report using
60 mL of hexane.
7. The initial fractions are sometimes contaminated with a less polar by-product. These fractions are condensed and purified again by column chromatography using
6 : 1 (v/v) hexane : ethyl acetate and then
2 : 1 (v/v) hexane : ethyl acetate as developing solvents. The NMR spectrum (CDCl
3) shows singlets at δ 1.33 (6 H, CH
3), 3.12 (2 H, CH
2), 4.12 (broad, OH) and complex signals between 7.24–8.01 (5 H).
3. Discussion
This procedure illustrates a general method for the preparation of crossed aldols. The aldol reaction between various silyl enol ethers and carbonyl compounds proceeds smoothly according to the same procedure (see Table 1). Silyl enol ethers react with aldehydes at −78°C, and with ketones near 0°C.
3 Note that the aldol reaction of silyl enol ethers with ketones affords good yields of crossed aldols, which are generally difficult to prepare using lithium or boron enolates. Lewis acids such as
tin tetrachloride and
boron trifluoride etherate also promote the reaction; however,
titanium tetrachloride is generally the most effective catalyst.
TABLE I
PREPARATION OF CROSSED ALDOLS
|
|
Substituents |
|
R1 |
R2 |
R3 |
R4 |
Yield of Aldols (%) |
|
-(CH2)4- |
|
Me2CH |
H |
92 |
|
|
PhCH2 |
PhCH2 |
64 |
-(CH2)3- |
|
PhCH2 |
H |
95 |
Ph |
H |
Me2CH |
H |
94 |
Ph |
Me |
Me |
H |
92 |
Ph |
Me |
PhCO |
H |
83 |
Ph |
Me |
Me |
(CH2)2CO2Me |
53 |
|
Ketene alkyl silyl acetals may also be used as nucleophiles for the formation of β-hydroxy esters.
4 The present reaction can be carried out equally well on large or small (mmole) scales. For small scale applications, it is convenient to prepare a stock solution of
titanium tetrachloride in
methylene chloride. (A rubber stopper is gradually destroyed by
titanium tetrachloride; therefore, a
Teflon stopper should be used.)
Titanium tetrachloride also promotes the aldol-type reaction between silyl enol ethers and acetals to give β-alkoxy carbonyl compounds.
5.
This preparation is referenced from:
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