Title: REAGENTS WITH CARBONMETAL BONDS ORGANOMETALLIC SYNTHESIS OF ALCOHOLS
1REAGENTS WITH CARBON-METAL BONDSORGANOMETALLIC
SYNTHESISOF ALCOHOLS
2Assignment
- DO Sections 15.0 through 15.7
- READ Sections 15.8 and 15.10
- SKIP Section 15.9
- DO Section 15.11
- DO Problems
3Problem Assignment
- In Text Problems
- 15-1 through 15-13
- End-of-Chapter Problems
- 1 through 3
4Reagents with Carbon-Metal Bonds
- How do we make large molecules when most of our
available reagents are relatively simple in
structure? - How do we dock two large molecular fragments
together? - What we need are methods of forming carbon-carbon
bonds.
5- Up to now, we really havent looked at methods of
forming C-C bonds. Weve formed C-O bonds, C-Cl
bonds, and C-Br bonds in many examples, but what
about C-C bonds?
6Can anyone suggest a C-C bond formation reaction
that we have already encountered?
The Diels-Alder reaction!
7Lets go back to a very familiar reaction,
nucleophilic substitution
Now, if our nucleophilic atom were carbon, we
would have a method that we could adapt and
develop.
8Consider
Here is the theme of this chapter. It introduces
a new class of reagents that are capable of
acting as carbon nucleophiles, opening the door
to our being able to combine small molecular
fragments and build large molecules from them.
9Generalized Method
10Formation of Organolithium Reagents
11Example
- Typical solvents
- diethyl ether
- tetrahydrofuran (THF)
- hydrocarbons (pentane, hexane, etc.)
12- Some important points to consider
- organosodium and organopotassium reagents are
difficult to form -- this method is best for
organolithium reagents. - E2 dehydrohalogenation is an important side
reaction, especially if the alkyl halide is
secondary or tertiary. This problem is
particularly serious with R-Nas or R-Ks.
Who knows why E2 dehydrohalogenation happens in
this reaction?
13Formation of Grignard Reagents
14Example
- Typical solvents
- Diethyl ether (b.p. 35 C)
- Tetrahydrofuran -- THF (b.p. 65 C)
- Dioxane (b.p. 101 C)
15An ether is required to form a stable Grignard
complex.
Formation of this complex is exothermic the
reaction is sufficiently exothermic to boil the
solution without having to add external heat!
16Why might you need different solvents?
This reaction is too slow at 35 C.
17The complete structure of the Grignard reagent is
quite complex. It is probably an equilibrium
mixture of the type
While this may be more correct, it is easier to
treat the Grignard reagent as if it were R-MgX,
which is what we shall do in this course.
18Owing to the electronegativity difference between
the metal and carbon, the carbon-metal bond has a
great deal of partial ionic character. The bonds
are polar covalent in nature. This means that we
can write
19In fact, we can treat the Grignard (or any
organometallic) reagent according to
Thus, the organometallic reagent acts as a source
of R-, which is the conjugate base of an
alkane. We therefore expect the organometallic
reagents to be very basic and strongly
nucleophilic.
20If the organometallic reagents are basic, then we
should see them react readily with acids.
Any source of H will bring about this
reaction acids, carboxylic acids, water,
alcohols, amines, even atmospheric moisture
21We can use the reaction of organometallic
reagents with sources of proton deliberately
22Do You Remember This?
Why does the nucleophile go to the CH2 group and
not the R-CH group?
23Reaction with Epoxides
- Notice that
- whatever the length of the carbon chain in R, the
product has added two carbons - the product is a terminal alcohol
24Crude outline of a mechanism
25Examples
26Reasoning by analogy, you could do...
27Reaction with Carbonyl Compounds
28Crude outline of the mechanism of carbonyl
addition
29Outcome of the reaction of an organometallic with
carbonyl compounds
30Example
The product is a secondary alcohol
31Example 2
The product is a tertiary alcohol.
32From PLKE-Micro-3...
33Preparation of Alkanes
Wurtz Reaction
34Example of a Wurtz Reaction
35The reaction occurs in two steps
The second step is an SN2 reaction with the
organosodium compound acting as the nucleophile.
36Characteristics of the Wurtz Reaction
- Characteristically poor yields
- Worst Reaction
- Works only with primary alkyl halides
- With secondary and tertiary alkyl halides, all
you get is alkene. - Why?
- Only even-numbered alkanes can be prepared --
both halves have to be the same.
37The Wurtz Reaction is an example of an Alkylation
Reaction
- Alkylation a reaction to attach an alkyl group
to some other atom. - Other alkylations we have encountered include
- Williamson ether synthesis (alkylation of oxygen)
- Wurtz reaction (alkylation of carbon)
- Alkylation of amines (nitrogen)
- S-AdM (biological methylation)
38- Can we do an alkylation of carbon?
- Can we do it better?
- Can we make odd-numbered alkanes?
39- Obviously, the answer to the previous questions
is yes! - A new type of organometallic reagent, a lithium
dialkylcuprate, affords us the possibility of
alkylating carbon in good yield - We also have a route to the synthesis of an odd
numbered alkane -- the two halves being joined do
not have to be the same.
40Lithium Dialkylcuprates
a lithium dialkylcuprate
41Example
42The dialkylcuprate is a very good alkylating
agent.
- This reaction is known as the Corey-House
synthesis. - Note that the two alkyl groups do not have to be
identical! -- (unlike the Wurtz reaction)
43Example
44This wouldnt work by a Wurtz synthesis...
45Also...
- In general, allylic halides are unreactive in
organometallic reactions. - Not here!
46This would be impossible by other methods
Stereospecific!
47Also...
48Synthesis of Manicone
Manicone is a pheromone secreted by certain male
ants as they swarm. It causes female ants of the
same species to swarm at the same time the males
do. This facilitates mating!
49Alkynylorganometallic Compounds
Section 15.8 -- assigned as reading
50Other Organometallic Reagents
We can also make R-Zn, R-Sb, R-As, R-Be,
R-Ca, R-Hg, R-Sn, reagents. We choose other
metals for different degrees of reactivity and
for greater selectivity.
Organozinc reagents are used in synthesis owing
to their greater selectivity (see J. Vyvyan)
51If the reaction of alkyl halide with metal is too
slow, one can make a metal alloy with sodium or
potassium. For example, lead, by itself is too
unreactive. But we can do...
Tetraethyllead (TEL) used to be used in gasoline
as an anti-knock agent.
52Reactions with Metal Salts
- We can transfer an R group from one metal to
another. - Generally this works when we transfer an alkyl
group from a more active to a less active metal
(from a negative E to a positive E) - This reaction is energetically favorable --
exothermic - We need to consider reduction potentials
53Example
We are transferring the R group from Mg to
Cd. Mg E - 2.38 volts Cd E - 0.40
volts Organocadmium reagents are very useful (see
Chapter 17), but they cannot be made directly.
54Preparation of Tetraphenyltin
Na E -2.71 volts Sn E 0.01 volts
55Preparation of an Organosilane
How would you make TMS?
56Speculate
Na E - 2.71 volts Pb E - 0.13
volts Perhaps an organosodium reagent is formed
initially, and then the ethyl group is
transferred from the sodium to the lead.