Checked by S. Yamamoto and W. Nagata.
1. Procedure
Caution!
Benzene has been identified as a carcinogen; OSHA has issued emergency standards on its use. All procedures involving
benzene should be carried out in a
well-ventilated hood, and glove protection is required.
A
1-l., three-necked, round-bottomed flask equipped with a
mechanical stirrer (Note
1), a
thermometer, a
dropping funnel, and an
argon-inlet tube is charged with
8.0 g. (0.060 mole) of N-chlorosuccinimide (Note
2) and (Note
3) and
200 ml. of toluene (Note
4). While a continuous positive
argon pressure is maintained, the solution is stirred and cooled to 0°, and
6.0 ml. (0.10 mole) of methyl sulfide (Note
2) is added. A white precipitate appears immediately after addition of the sulfide. The mixture is cooled to −25° using a
carbon tetrachloride-dry ice bath (Note
5), and a solution of
6.24 g. (0.0400 mole) of 4-tert-butylcyclohexanol (mixture of cis- and trans-) (Note
2) in
40 ml. of toluene is added dropwise over 5 minutes (Note
6). The stirring is continued for 2 hours at −25° ((Note
5)) before a solution of
6.0 g. (0.59 mole) of triethylamine (Note
2) in
10 ml. of toluene is added dropwise over 3 minutes (Note
7). The cooling bath is removed; after 5 minutes
400 ml. of diethyl ether is added (Note
8). The organic layer is washed with
100 ml. of 1% hydrochloric acid, then with two 100-ml. portions of water (Note
9), dried over anhydrous
magnesium sulfate, and evaporated under reduced pressure. The residue is transferred to a
50-ml., round-bottomed flask and distilled bulb to bulb at 120° (25 mm.), yielding
5.54–5.72 g. (
90–93%) of
4-tert-butylcyclohexanone, m.p.
41–45° (Note
10).
2. Notes
1. Efficient magnetic stirring could be used as well.
3. The checkers observed that, when
N-chlorosuccinimide of 93–95% purity, m.p. 128–132° (checked by iodometry), obtained from E. Merck A G, Darmstadt, was used without purification, the oxidation was incomplete, resulting in 93–94% yields of a product containing a 12–15% amount of the starting alcohol (a mixture of the
cis- and
trans-). The use of 98% pure
N-chlorosuccinimide, m.p.
150–151° (recrystallized from
benzene), resulted again in recovery of the alcohol in a considerable amount, mainly because of low solubility of the pure reagent in
toluene. Therefore, the checkers modified slightly the earlier part of the procedure as follows: the
98% pure N-chlorosuccinimide (8.0 g., 0.06 mole) m.p.
150–151°, is dissolved in
400 ml. of toluene (twice as much as the volume used by the submitters) at 40°, and the solution is cooled to room temperature, stirred under
nitrogen atmosphere, and cooled to 0–5°.
Methyl sulfide (6 ml., 0.10 mole) is added at this temperature and, after addition, the reaction mixture is stirred for an additional 20 minutes at 0–3°, during which time white precipitate appeared.
4.
Reagent grade toluene employed by the submitters was obtained from Mallinckrodt Chemical Works. The checkers used
reagent grade toluene purchased from Wako Pure Chemical Industries, Ltd., and dried over molecular sieves (4 Å) before use. Regarding the volume of the
toluene used by the checkers, see (Note
3).
5. The checkers observed that the internal temperature was −20° with this cooling mixture.
6. The checkers observed that the reaction was slightly exothermic as judged from an internal temperature rise of
ca. 5°.
7. The checkers needed a little longer time (3–5 minutes) for this operation to maintain the internal temperature at −15 to −20°.
8. The checkers successively added
100 ml. 1% hydrochloric acid to the reaction mixture.
10. An authentic sample from Aldrich Chemical Company, Inc., had m.p.
45–50°. The product was analyzed by GC at 80° on F & M Research chromatograph model 1810 with 3% OV-17 column, which indicated the contamination of the product by
4-tert-butylcyclohexanol (<2%) and
4-tert-butylcyclohexylmethyl methylthiomethyl ether (
<2%).
3 The submitters reported a yield of
6.0 g. (
96%) of purity greater than 96%.
The checkers recrystallized the product from petroleum ether (dissolved at room temperature and cooled to −20°) and obtained a pure product, m.p. 45–46° (88.5% recovery); IR (CHCl3) cm−1: 1712 (C=O); 1H NMR (CDCl3), δ (multiplicity, number of protons, assignment): 0.93 [s, 9H, C(CH3)3], 1.3–2.2 (m, 5H, CH2CHCH2), and 2.2–2.5 (m, 4H, CH2COCH2).
3. Discussion
The procedure described here is general for the oxidation of primary and secondary alcohols to carbonyl compounds,
3 but not for allylic and dibenzylic alcohols, which give halides in high yields.
4 The yields of carbonyl compounds are usually high, and the formation of methyl thiomethyl ether can be minimized in nonpolar media. Some examples are listed in Table I. The quantitative conversion of catechols to
o-quinones using this oxidation procedure has been reported.
5 For oxidation of allylic and dibenzylic alcohols to the corresponding carbonyl compounds, a
dimethyl sulfoxide–
chlorine reagent
6 is suitable.
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