Organic Syntheses, CV 6, 278
Submitted by Matilda Perkins, Charles F. Beam, Jr.
1, Morgan C. D. Dyer
2, and Charles R. Hauser
3.
Checked by H. W. Jacobson and R. E. Benson.
1. Procedure
Caution! This preparation should be carried out in an efficient hood.
A
2-l., three-necked, round-bottomed flask equipped with a
magnetic stirring bar, a
nitrogen-inlet tube, and a
250-ml. pressure-equalizing dropping funnel attached to a
calcium chloride tube is charged with
16.96 g. (0.1000 mole) of 4-chloroacetophenone oxime (Note
1) and
500 ml. of anhydrous tetrahydrofuran (Note
2). The flask is stoppered (Note
3) and cooled in an
ice-water bath (Note
4). In the
dropping funnel is placed
140 ml. (0.22 mole) of 1.6 M n-butyllithium in
hexane (Note
5), which is rapidly added dropwise to the stirred solution over a 12–15-minute period. The solution is stirred for 30 minutes after the addition is complete, and the addition funnel is replaced by a clean one (125-ml. capacity), fitted with a calcium chloride drying tube (Note
6). Cooling is continued, a solution of
8.31 g. (0.0501 mole) of methyl anisate (Note
7) and (Note
8) in
100 ml. of anhydrous tetrahydrofuran is added to the stirred mixture over a 6–10-minute period, and the resulting mixture is stirred for an additional 30 minutes (Note
9). At the end of this period,
300 ml. of 3 N hydrochloric acid is added. The nitrogen-inlet tube is removed and replaced by a
reflux condenser, and the dropping funnel is replaced by a
ground-glass stopper. The
ice bath is removed, and the mixture is heated under reflux for 1 hour. The flask is then cooled, and its contents are poured into a
2-l. Erlenmeyer flask, and solid
sodium hydrogen carbonate is added to the mixture until neutralization is complete (Note
10).
The resulting mixture consists of an organic phase and a lower aqueous phase containing a small amount of insoluble material. The mixture is transferred to a
2-l. separatory funnel and the phases are separated. The aqueous phase is extracted with
100 ml. of tetrahydrofuran, which is combined with the original organic phase and concentrated to dryness on a
rotary evaporator. Approximately
150 ml. of xylene is added to the flask and the contents of the flask are heated to reflux to remove any water present as the azeotrope. The resulting hot solution is filtered rapidly through a
large Büchner funnel with light suction. The volume is reduced to approximately 100 ml., and the solution is cooled in an ice bath. The tan crystals which separate are collected in a
Büchner funnel and washed with
10 ml. of ice-cold xylene. The crude product is recrystallized from
150 ml. of xylene (Note
11), yielding, after drying,
7.4–7.6 g. (
52–53%) of
3-(4-chlorophenyl)-5-(4-methoxyphenyl)isoxazole, m.p.
175–176° (Note
12).
2. Notes
1.
4-Chloroacetophenone oxime was prepared by a modification of the method described by Shriner, Fuson, and Curtin.
4 A mixture of
100 g. (0.647 mole) of reagent grade 4-chloroacetophenone, 300 ml. of water,
200 ml. of aqueous 10% sodium hydroxide,
50 g. (0.72 mole) of hydroxylamine hydrochloride, and
500 ml. of ethanol is heated at reflux in a
2-l., round-bottomed flask for 2 hours. The crystals that separate on cooling in an ice bath are recovered by filtration and air dried. The product is added to approximately
1 l. of hexane, and the mixture is heated to reflux to remove any remaining water as the azeotrope. The resulting solution is cooled, yielding
70–74 g. (
64–68%) of
4-chloroacetophenone oxime as white crystals, m.p.
96–97°.
3. Ground-glass stoppers proved most convenient.
5. The concentration of the
n-butyllithium obtained from Foote Mineral Company is generally close to the 1.6
M as quoted. An exact measurement of the volume (hypodermic syringe recommended) is not necessary, but a slight excess above the stoichiometrically required amount (0.20 mole) is needed. The submitters used
n-butyllithium available from Lithium Corporation of America, Inc. A recent modification utilizes
lithium diisopropylamide (0.33 mole) instead of
n-butyllithium (0.22 mole).
5 A
0.33-mole sample of n-butyllithium is cooled to 0° and blanketed with
nitrogen. To this base is added
0.33 mole of diisopropylamine dissolved in
150 ml. of tetrahydrofuran.
6. The purpose of the exchange is to provide a clean funnel for the addition of the ester solution. If the funnel is not changed, the yield is slightly lower. When
lithium diisopropylamide is used the ratio of the reagents is 2 oxime: 6 base: 2 ester.
7. The ratio of the reagents is 2 oxime:4 base: 1 ester and is consistent with similar procedures used for a modified Claisen condensation.
6 The yield is based on the ester. When a ratio of reagents of 1 oxime: 2 base: 1 ester was used, a yield of 21% based on the ester was obtained.
9. At least 30 minutes is required for an optimum yield of the
isoxazole.
10. Care should be taken to add the
sodium hydrogen carbonate in small amounts initially, in order to avoid excessive frothing. The mixture was tested with pH paper to establish complete neutralization.
11. The product can also be recrystallized from
ethanol, but a substantially larger volume of solvent is required.
12. The product has the following spectral properties; IR (KBr) cm.
−1: 3103 and 3006 (aromatic C-H), 2955, 2925, and 2830 (aliphatic C-H stretching), 1257 and 1032 (aromatic methyl ether), 841 and 812 (C-H out-of-plane bending of isoxazole C
4-
H and 4-substituted phenyl);
1H NMR (trifluoroacetic acid), δ (multiplicity, number of protons, assignment): 3.98 (s, 3H, OC
H3), 7.00–7.27 (m, 1H, isoxazole C
4-
H; and 2H, aryl
H), and 7.42–7.97 (m, 6H, aryl
H).
3. Discussion
This procedure has several advantages over previous methods. It provides a simple, direct route to unsymmetrically substituted isoxazoles in which the location of substituents is unequivocal. The method uses readily available starting materials and can be used for the synthesis of a variety of substituted isoxazoles in which the substituents are stable to
n-butyllithium. Examples of products synthesized by this method
7 are given in Table I.
TABLE I
ISOXAZOLES DERIVED FROM OXIMES7
|
|
R1 |
R2 |
Yielda(%) |
|
C6H5- |
C6H5- |
59 |
C6H5- |
4-CH3OC6H4- |
51 |
C6H5- |
4-ClC6H4- |
59 |
4-ClC6H4- |
C6H5- |
65 |
4-CH3OC6H4- |
4-ClC6H4- |
66b |
|
|
|
The use of dilithio reagents for the preparation of heterocyclic systems has been extended to the synthesis of 2-isoxazolin-5-ones
11 by carboxylation of a dilithioöxime, followed by cyclization, and the synthesis of pyrazoles from dilithiophenylhydrazones and trilithiothiohydrazones.
12,13 If the dilithiophenylhydrazones are formed in an excess of
lithium diisopropylamide, they can be treated with
diethyl carbonate, followed by cyclization to give 2-pyrazolin-5-ones.
14 Dilithioöximes formed in an excess of
lithium diisopropylamide can be condensed with electrophilic-nucleophilic reagents such as
methyl anthranilate.
15
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