Title: The Peterson Olefination
1The Peterson Olefination
Olefination chemistrys stepchild
2Overview
- General mechanism
- Stereochemistry of alkylation
- ?-Silyl-carbanions
- Non-classical-Peterson-Olefination
- Nice reagents
- Comparison to other olefination methods
3Concerted reaction pathway
4Mechanism alkyl substituents
5Alkyl substituents anti - elimination
- Normally ?-hydroxy-silanes can be isolated
- Stereochemistry of olefination can be directed by
reaction conditions - Treatment of anti- ?-hydroxy-silanes with acid
gives E-double bonds
6Alkyl substituents syn elimination
- Covalent bound cations (Li, Mg, Cr) stop the
reaction at intermediate hydroxsilane - Change to an ionic cations (Na, K) facilitates
syn-elimination - Treatment of anti- ?-hydroxy-silanes with base
gives Z-double bonds
7Approach models
L SiR3 MLPh SSH
Stepwise reaction1
Concerted reaction2
1 Bassindale et al., Perkin Trans.II, 1986,
593 2 Bassindale et al. J. Chem. Res. S., 1996, 34
T. Kawashima, R. Okazaki, Synlett, 1996, 600
8Preparation of a-Silyl-carbanions 1
- Direct deprotonation
- Normally quite harsh conditions required
- silyl group stabilizes carbanion
- TMEDA (or HMPA) as additive necessary to achieve
deprotonation -
- Metal-Halogen exchange
- Usual Grignard-conditions applicable
- a-lithio-silanes available both from Li-metal and
Li-organyls - Problem Availability of a-halo-silanes
9Preparation of a-Silyl-carbanions 2
- From Vinylsilanes
- Alkyllithiums add regioselectively at the
ß-position (Tripenylvinylsilanes work best!) - Reaction is susceptible to steric effects (both
alkene termini) - a-lithio-vinylsilanes1 are much less basic and
provide access to allenes2
T.H.Chan, E.Chang., J.Org.Chem., 39, 3264
1 R.B.Miller, A.I.Al-Hassan, J.Org.Chem., 48,
4113-4116 2T.H.Chan et al. J.Org.Chem., 43, 1526
10Preparation of a-Silyl-carbanions 3
- a- Silyl-Esters and a-Silyl-Ketones
- Direct silylation of ketones or esters
problematic (O-Silylation!) - Ways out use of bulky t-butylester or HMPA as
(co-)solvent - Indirect methods Cuprat-Addition to Acyl
chlorides
T.Kaiho, S. Masamune, JOC, 47, 1612
- Direct silylation of ketones or esters
problematic (O-Silylation!) - Normally preference of the E-Isomer
- Exceptions Use of bulky Si-groups or use of HMPA
as solvent - a-Silyl-Lactones give good selectivities!
11Preparation of a-Silyl-carbanions 4
a- Silyl-Thiols
D.J.Ager, Perkin Trans. I, 1986, 183
- Using method b) or c) disubstituted
a-silyl-thioethers are accessible - Silanols are isolable
- Silyl-Thiols (or product enol-thioethers) can be
oxidized to sulfones subsequent
Julia-Olefination possible!
12Terminal Dienes
- Allylsilanes
- Problem Bidentate nucleophile ? gives preferably
?-TMS-alcohols - WAYS OUT
- Di-TMS-Allylcompounds
- Ti-Complexes
- Chromium chemistry
T.H. Chan, J.S.Li., Chem. Comm. 1982, 969
M. Sato et al., T.L., 23, 4589 M. Sato et. al,
Chem. Comm. 1983, 921
Paterson et al., Synlett, 1995, 498-500
13Non-classical Peterson olefinations
- C-C single bond is already present prior to
olefination reaction - Conversion of functional groups rather than
disconnection
?-Silyl-ketones
Nozaki et al., JOC, 41, 2941
14Non-classical Peterson olefinations
- Vinyl-silanes and ?-Silyl-epoxides
- Vinyl silanes can be oxidised to epoxides
- Nucleophilic opening of epoxides occurs at
a-position
Cuifolini et al., JACS, 104, 2308
Kulkarni et al. JOC, 45, 4444
15Useful reagents
- TMSCH2M(X)
- TMSCH2Cl commercially available (25g 43)
- Methylenation reagent for the tough cases
- Still sterically demanding, but less than Wittig!
Silver et al., T.L., 1973, 3497
W.C.Still, JACS, 101, 2493 (1979)
- Problems with easily enolizable ketones
- (a-silyl-carbanions are quite basic)
Ronald et al., JOC, 47, 2792 (1982)
16Johnson modification
- Transmetallation to cerium!
Cohen et al. Tetrahedron, 50, 12793 (1994)
- Esters can be converted to Allylsilanes
Harmata et al. JOC, 1997, 62, 1578-1579
- Acyl silanes can be converted to Vinylsilanes
Fürstner et al. J. Organet. Chem, 414, 295 (1991)
17Useful reagents
- Imine serves as protecting group for aldehyde
- Use of TES instead of TMS suppresses
N-silylation during preparation
Corey et al. JACS, 102, 1439 (1980) Corey, E. J.,
Enders, D. Bock, M. G. T.L. 1976, 7
Colvin et al. Chem. Comm. 1973, 151 Aoyama, T.,
Shioiri, T., et al. Synlett, 1994, 107
Imam et al. T.L., 1977, 2613
18Useful reagents
- Product ketene-thioacetal has a very broad
chemical spectrum1 - Commercially available
- Always 1,2 addition useful for diene-synthesis
Brinkmeyer, R.S., T.L., 1979, 207
- Can be deprotonated with sec-butyllithium
- Stereochemistry of product?
1 Seebach, D., Synthesis, 1969, 17Seebach et
al., Synthesis, 1977, 357
19Comparison
- PRO
- After work-up, TMS2O is a volatile byproduct
- Most atom-economical olefination method (TMSOH
90g/mol) - For alkyl substituents, double bond geometry can
be tuned - Unusual compounds obtainable
- LIMITATIONS
- Not the method of choice for coupling of large
fragments - Not all silyl-carbanions are easily obtainable
- Selectivity not always tunable
(Electron-withdrawing substituents) - Sometimes basicity of a-silyl-carbanions can be
a problem
20Literature
- Ager, D.J. Org. React., 38, 1-224 (1990)
- van Staden, F.L., Gravestock, D., Ager, D.J.,
Chem. Soc. Rev, 2002, 31, 195-200 - Science of Synthesis, 2002, 4, 789-809
- and all references on the slides!