Organic Syntheses, CV 9, 247
Submitted by Javier Gonzalez, Matthew J. Foti, and Seth Elsheimer
1.
Checked by Louis Portland, Tai-Nang Huang, and David L. Coffen.
1. Procedure
A.
(1,3-Dibromo-3,3-difluoropropyl)trimethylsilane (Note
1). A
250-mL pressure tube (Note
2) equipped with a
magnetic stirring bar is charged with
vinyltrimethylsilane (20 g, 30.8 mL, 0.20 mol),
ethanolamine (6.11 g, 6.04 mL, 0.10 mol),
dibromodifluoromethane (83.9 g, 36.5 mL, 0.4 mol),
copper(I) chloride (0.18 g, 1.8 mmol), and
tert-butyl alcohol (15 mL) (Note
3) and (Note
4). The tube is sealed and stirred for 20 hr in an
oil bath at 90°C (Note
5). The reaction mixture is combined with that from another run at the same scale and diluted with
40 mL of hexane (the mixture separates into a cloudy supernatant and a brown resin). The
hexane layer is separated and the resinous precipitate extracted with two
20-mL portions of hexane. The combined solutions are filtered through a bed of silica gel on a
60-mL fritted glass funnel and the resulting clear filtrate is concentrated by rotary evaporation using a
water aspirator. The crude material is fractionally distilled to afford
71.9–78.3 g (
58–61%) of the dibromide as a colorless oil, bp
78–79°C (12 mm) [lit.
2 bp
95°C (25 mm)] (Note
6).
B.
(3-Bromo-3,3-difluoropropyl)trimethylsilane. A
1-L, four-necked flask is equipped with a
mechanical stirrer,
thermometer,
Claisen adapter,
septum inlet,
reflux condenser (the top of which is connected to a
calcium chloride drying tube), and a solid
addition funnel. The flask is charged with
(1,3-dibromo-3,3-difluoropropyl)trimethylsilane (78.3 g, 0.25 mol), and anhydrous
dimethyl sulfoxide (200 mL), and the solid addition funnel is charged with
sodium borohydride (11.5 g, 0.30 mol) (Note
7) and (Note
8). The stirred solution is warmed to 80°C, and
sodium borohydride is added at a rate sufficient to maintain a reaction temperature of 80–90°C (Note
9). Toward the end of the addition, an additional portion of
dimethyl sulfoxide (200 mL) is added via syringe to lower the viscosity of the reaction mixture. After the addition is complete, the mixture is cooled in an
ice-water bath, diluted with
100 mL of pentane, and
cautiously quenched with
12 M hydrochloric acid until no further gas evolution occurs. The mixture is transferred to a
separatory funnel and washed with three
100-mL portions of 5% brine. The
pentane extract is dried over
calcium chloride and the solvent removed through a
15-cm Vigreux column. Further fractionation yields
41.5 g (
72%) of
3-bromo-3,3-difluoropropyltrimethylsilane, bp
139–141°C (Note
10).
Additional product is obtained by extractive workup of the residue. The cooled residue is acidified by adding
50 mL of 3 N hydrochloric acid and the resulting solution is extracted with
50 mL of pentane. The
pentane layer is washed with 2 × 50 mL of water, dried over
sodium sulfate, filtered and concentrated at 35°C under ca. 30 mm vacuum. The remaining liquid is distilled using a short-path distillation head to afford an additional
1.77 g of product (bp
86–95°C). The combined product, weighing
13.65 g (
70% yield), has a purity of 85–90% based on NMR and capillary GC analysis (Note
13).
2. Notes
1. This procedure is based on a report by Burton and Kehoe.
3
2. An Ace Model # 8648-83 tube with a FETFE O-ring was used.
5. The bottom third of the tube was immersed. The reaction mixture changed color from blue-green to brown during this period.
6. This material is 95–98% pure by GLC analysis (20% DC 200 on 80-100 mesh Chromosorb P, 4' × 0.25" column, 200°C). The presence of a lower-boiling impurity,
3-bromo-3,3-difluoro-1-propenyltrimethylsilane, does not affect the yield of the subsequent steps.
8. Other polar aprotic solvents
(HMPA, DMPU) were used successfully in place of
DMSO in small-scale runs.
9. Shortly after starting the addition, the exothermic reaction causes an increase in temperature, and external heating is discontinued. Care should be taken not to add the
sodium borohydride too rapidly, as temperatures above 92°C have resulted in the formation of an over-reduced product,
3,3-difluoropropyltrimethylsilane. It is advisable to have an ice bath available in case the reaction requires external cooling.
10. This compound has the following spectral properties:
1H NMR (200 MHz, CDCl
3) δ: 0.02 (s, 9 H, Me
3Si), 0.72–0.83 (m, 2 H, H-1), 2.14–2.38 (m, 2 H, H-2);
13C NMR δ: −1.94 (Me
3Si), 10.8 (C-1), 40.0 (t, C-2, J = 22.6), 125.4 (t, J = 307, CF
2Br).
12. On a smaller scale the reaction was run in a round-bottomed flask and the product isolated at this stage by direct distillation of the reaction mixture through a short-path distillation head.
13. This product has the following spectroscopic properties:
1H NMR (200 MHz, CDCl
3) δ: 0.00 (s, 9 H, Me
3Si), 1.2 (dt,
3J
HH = 8.9,
4J
FH = 1.5, 2 H, CH
2), 4.1 (dtd,
3J
FH (trans) = 25.2,
3J
HH = 8.9,
3J
FH (cis) = 2.7, 1 H, =CH);
13C NMR δ: −2.25 (Me
3Si), 10.8 (unresolved m, CH
2), 74.6 (t,
2J
FC = 23.0, =CH), 156.3 (dd,
1J
FC = 284, CF
2); IR (film) cm
−1: 1740 s (C=CF
2). The
1H NMR and IR data are consistent with those previously reported.
4
Waste Disposal Information
All toxic materials were disposed of in accordance with "Prudent Practices in the Laboratory"; National Academy Press; Washington, DC, 1995.
3. Discussion
Radical addition of
dibromodifluoromethane to alkenes followed by
sodium borohydride reduction is a convenient two-step method for the introduction of the difluoromethyl group.
5 Either one or both carbon-bromine bonds in the intermediate dibromides may be reduced, depending on the reaction conditions. In the case of
acyclic dibromodifluoromethane-alkene adducts, the reduction occurs
regioselectively to yield the relatively inaccessible bromodifluoromethyl-substituted alkanes. The latter are potential building blocks for other fluorinated compounds. For example, they may be dehydrohalogenated to 1,1-difluoroalkenes; an example of this methodology is illustrated in this synthesis of
(3,3-difluoroallyl)trimethylsilane.
(3,3-Difluoroallyl)trimethylsilane was first prepared in low yield from the high-temperature reaction of
vinyltrimethylsilane with
chlorodifluoromethane.
6 An improved synthesis involving the insertion of difluorocarbene into the requisite β-silyl ylide has been reported.
4 Although the yield is excellent, the reaction consumes a mole of the valuable Wittig reagent (it forms the phosphonium salt which must be recycled) in generating difluorocarbene from
chlorodifluoromethane. Other (3,3-difluoroallyl)silanes have been synthesized via the S
N2' reactions of silyl anions with 3,3,3-trifluoropropenes.
7
(3,3-Difluoroallyl)silanes are of interest as carbon-carbon bond forming building blocks in organofluorine chemistry.
4,7,8
Appendix
Compounds Referenced (Chemical Abstracts Registry Number)
brine
HMPA
DMPU
calcium chloride (10043-52-4)
hydrochloric acid (7647-01-0)
sodium sulfate (7757-82-6)
copper(I) chloride (7758-89-6)
Pentane (109-66-0)
ethanolamine (141-43-5)
hexane (110-54-3)
dimethyl sulfoxide,
DMSO (67-68-5)
tert-butyl alcohol (75-65-0)
sodium borohydride (16940-66-2)
1,8-diazabicyclo[5.4.0]undec-7-ene (6674-22-2)
(3,3-Difluoroallyl)trimethylsilane,
Silane, (3,3-difluoro-2-propenyl)trimethyl- (40207-81-6)
(1,3-Dibromo-3,3-difluoropropyl)trimethylsilane (671-80-7)
Vinyltrimethylsilane (754-05-2)
dibromodifluoromethane (75-61-6)
(3-Bromo-3,3-difluoropropyl)trimethylsilane,
3-bromo-3,3-difluoropropyltrimethylsilane (134134-62-6)
3-bromo-3,3-difluoro-1-propenyltrimethylsilane
3,3-difluoropropyltrimethylsilane
chlorodifluoromethane (75-45-6)
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