Organic Syntheses, CV 6, 951
POLYMERIC CARBODIIMIDE. PREPARATION
[Benzene, diethenyl-, polymer with ethenylbenzene, [[[[(1-methylethyl)imino]methylene]amino]methyl]deriv.]]
Submitted by Ned M. Weinshenker
1, Chah M. Shen, and Jack Y. Wong.
Checked by A. Fukuzawa and S. Masamune.
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.
Polymeric benzylamine. A
300-ml., one-necked, round-bottomed flask equipped with a
reflux condenser and a
magnetic stirrer is charged with
125 ml. of N,N-dimethylformamide (Note
1) and
10.0 g. of chloromethylated polystyrene beads (
0.0106 mole of active chloride) (Note
2) and (Note
3). A gas-inlet is attached to the top of the condenser, and the system is maintained under a slight positive pressure of
nitrogen. The temperature is then raised to 100° with an
oil bath, and
2.95 g. (0.0159 mole) of potassium phthalimide (Note
4) and (Note
5) is added while the mixture is stirred. After stirring at 100° overnight, the mixture is cooled and filtered. The polymer beads are washed with
200 ml. each of distilled water and methanol and dried under reduced pressure, giving
11.70 g. of
phthalimido polymer.
The beads prepared above (
11.58 g.) are suspended in
175 ml. of boiling absolute ethanol, and
0.94 g. (0.016 mole) of 85% aqueous hydrazine monohydrate is added with stirring. The resulting mixture is refluxed for 10 hours, after which the polymer is collected by filtration and washed with
150-ml. portions of ethanol, aqueous
0.2 N sodium hydroxide, distilled water, and anhydrous
methanol. After vacuum drying at 60° for four hours, the yield of polymeric
benzylamine is
10.38 g.
B.
Polymeric urea. A
10.0-g. portion of the benzylamine polymer beads prepared in Part A and
125 ml. of tetrahydrofuran (Note
6) are combined in a
300-ml., three-necked, round-bottomed flask equipped with a magnetic stirrer, a
dropping funnel, and a
condenser fitted with a gas-inlet tube. A
nitrogen atmosphere is established in the system, and the slurry is stirred while
1.35 g. (0.0159 mole) of 2-isocyanatopropane is added. An exothermic reaction ensues and subsides after about 20 minutes. The mixture is then stirred at room temperature for 22 hours, and at reflux for an additional 4 hours. The beads are collected by filtration, washed with
150-ml. portions of tetrahydrofuran (Note
6) and
methanol, and dried under reduced pressure over
calcium chloride, yielding
9.09 g. of the
2-propyl urea polymer.
C.
Polymeric carbodiimide. The polymeric
urea prepared above (9.09 g.) is combined with
100 ml. of dichloromethane in a 300-ml., three-necked, round-bottomed flask equipped with a magnetic stirrer, a condenser fitted with a gas-inlet tube, and a stopper. Under a blanket of
nitrogen,
5.76 g. (0.0570 mole) of triethylamine and
2.75 g. (0.0145 mole) of p-toluenesulfonyl chloride (Note
7) are added to the stirred reaction mixture. The resulting slurry is refluxed with stirring for 50 hours, cooled to room temperature, and filtered. The polymer beads are washed successively with
100-ml. portions of dichloromethane, ice water, 3:1 dioxane–water,
dioxane, and anhydrous
diethyl ether. Vacuum drying yields
8.61 g. of
polymeric carbodiimide, containing 0.98–1.01 millimoles of
carbodiimide per gram (Note
8).
2. Notes
2. The checkers used beads of
chloromethylated polymer available from Bio. Rad. Laboratories, Richmond, California (Bio Beads S·X2). Chlorine analysis (Note
3) showed that the resin contained 1.06 milliequivalents of
chlorine per gram, as specified by the manufacturer.
The submitters prepared the polymer as follows.
Caution! Chloromethyl methyl ether is a carcinogen and is listed as such on the OSHA list. Therefore, preparation of the chloromethylated resin must be performed in a fume hood, the operator must wear gloves, and the reagent must be disposed of in an appropriate manner. A slurry of
200 g. (1.93 moles) of polystyrene crosslinked with 2% divinylbenzene (Amberlite XE-305, obtained from the Rohm and Haas Company, Philadelphia) and
2.5 l. of chloroform was prepared in a 3-l., three-necked, round-bottomed flask equipped with a
dropping funnel, a condenser, and a
mechanical stirrer. After stirring for 0.5 hour at room temperature, the mixture was cooled in an
ice-water bath, and a mixture of
chloromethyl methyl ether (430 ml., 5.69 moles) and anhydrous
tin(IV) chloride (45 ml., 0.39 mole) was added dropwise with continuous stirring. After the addition was completed, the ice bath was removed, and the mixture was stirred for an additional 4 hours at room temperature. The beads were collected by filtration and washed successively with
2 l. of 3 : 1 dioxane–water,
2 l. of 3 : 1 dioxane–3 N hydrochloric acid,
1 l. of dioxane, 1 l. of water, and
1 l. of methanol. It is desirable to allow each of the solvents used in the washing procedure to be in contact with the beads for 5–10 minutes before filtration to ensure complete penetration. Drying over
calcium chloride under reduced pressure yields
252 g. of the
chloromethylated polymer. The
chlorine content was 15.50%, equivalent to 4.29 milliequivalents of
chlorine per gram of polymer (Note
3).
3. The
chlorine content can be determined by either
chlorine elemental analysis or a potentiometric titration using a chloride-ion electrode. For titration, about
0.2 g. of polymer is heated in
3 ml. of pyridine at 100° for 2 hours. This suspension is then transferred to a
50-ml. beaker containing
30 ml. of 50% acetic acid and
5 ml. of concentrated nitric acid, and the resulting mixture is titrated against aqueous
0.1 N silver nitrate.
4. All chemicals used were reagent grade unless otherwise specified. A 50% molar excess of reagents was employed throughout the synthesis in order to drive the reactions to completion.
8. The
maximum content of active
carbodiimide groups can be determined by a
nitrogen elemental analysis. The submitters determined the
minimum carbodiimide content by treating the reagent with excess
acetic acid:
ca. 1 g. of accurately weighed polymeric
carbodiimide was suspended in a mixture of
7 ml. of benzene,
3 ml. of ether, and
1.2 g. of acetic acid. After 20 hours of stirring, the conversion to
acetic anhydride was determined by GC using a
Carbowax 20M column operated at 160°. Triglyme was used as an internal standard. The final, deactivated polymer still showed a very strong absorption at 2140 cm.
−1 (KBr) in its IR spectrum. The checkers modified the above procedure slightly by using
glutaric acid instead of
acetic acid.
3. Discussion
The general procedure described here was originally published by the submitters,
2 who have used this insoluble reagent to prepare aldehydes and ketones under Moffat oxidation conditions.
3 A polymeric reagent offers two advantages: (a) when an oxidation is complete, the
urea by-product is cleanly separated from the products by a simple filtration; and (b) the deactivated
urea form of the polymer can be recycled efficiently to the
carbodiimide form, as outlined in Part C of the present procedure. The use of
polyhexamethylenecarbodiimide in peptide syntheses has been mentioned previously.
4
This preparation is referenced from:
Copyright © 1921-2002, Organic Syntheses, Inc. All Rights Reserved