Organisilicon Compounds as Water Scavengers in Reactions of Carbonyl Compounds
Organisilicon Compounds as Water Scavengers in Reactions of Carbonyl Compounds
Folder:
Journal:
Year:
Article keywords:
Abstract:
The literature data on the application of organosilicon compounds as water scavengers in reactions of carbonyl com- pounds is surveyed. The reactions leading to both carbon–carbon (in particular, aldol-type condensations) and carbon–nitrogen bond formation, the synthesis of iminium salts by elimination reactions and heterocyclizations are considered.
DOI:
10.1002/chin.201010224
Type of document:
Language:
REVIEW
3719
Organosilicon Compounds as Water Scavengers in Reactions of Carbonyl
Compounds
ODmitriy M. Volochnyuk,*a,b Sergey V. Ryabukhin,a Andrey S. Plaskon,a Oleksandr O. Grygorenkoa,c
rganosilconCompoundsasWaterScavengers
a
Enamine Ltd., Alexandra Matrosova Street 23, Kyiv 01103, Ukraine
Fax +38(44)5024832; E-mail: D.Volochnyuk@enamine.net
b
Institute of Organic Chemistry, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, Murmanska Street 5, Kyiv 02660, Ukraine
c
Department of Chemistry, Kyiv National Taras Shevchenko University, Volodymyrska Street 64, Kyiv 01033, Ukraine
Received 16 July 2009; revised 6 August 2009
1
2
2.1
2.2
3
3.1
3.2
4
5
5.1
5.2
5.3
5.4
6
Introduction
Reactions Leading to Carbon–Carbon Bond Formation
Aldol-Type Condensations
Other Reactions
Reactions Leading to Carbon–Nitrogen Bond Formation
Two-Component Condensations
Three-Component Condensations
Formation of Iminium Salts by Elimination Reactions
Heterocyclizations
Synthesis of O- and O,N-Containing Heterocycles
Synthesis of Pyrimidines by Biginelli Reaction
Synthesis of Other N-Containing Heterocycles
Recyclization of 3-Formylchromones
Conclusions
Key words: carbonyl compounds, condensation, organosilicon
compounds, water scavengers, chlorotrimethylsilane
1
Introduction
The chemistry of carbonyl compounds has always attracted the attention of organic chemists because of their great
synthetic potential that has not yet been exhausted despite
the overwhelming amount of research performed in this
area. Most of the reactions of these compounds (e.g., aldol-type condensations, imine synthesis, heterocyclizations) result in water formation. Therefore, the successful
outcome of these reactions relies on the use of appropriate
reagents that can act not only as catalysts but also as water
scavengers. The early examples of the reagents of that
type included concentrated inorganic acids (H2SO4,
H3PO4, etc.) and alkalis [e.g., NaOH, KOH, Ba(OH)2].1
Despite the high catalytic and dehydrating activities of
these systems, they lack efficiency as most of the substrates are unstable under the reaction conditions. One
way to solve this problem is to use milder reagents such as
SYNTHESIS 2009, No. 22, pp 3719–3743xx. 209
Advanced online publication: 22.10.2009
DOI: 10.1055/s-0029-1217066; Art ID: E24909SS
© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York
organic acids (e.g., acetic, formic or p-toluenesulfonic) or
amines (triethylamine, piperidine, pyridine, etc.).2 However, the latter lack sufficient dehydrating activity, therefore they can be used only if the reaction equilibrium is
shifted towards the products. Otherwise, additional tools
should be applied to make the equilibrium state more favorable, such as azeotropic distillation of water and use of
ceolytes or anhydrous inorganic salts.
The methods mentioned above still find application;
nevertheless, they cannot satisfy the growing demands of
organic and medicinal chemistry. Therefore it is not surprising that water scavengers have evolved drastically
since the 19th century (Figure 1). Some examples of these
regents include Al2O3, MgO, TiCl4, cation-exchanged
zeolites, SiO2, calcite, fluorite, modified Mg-Al hydrotalcite, and Lewis acidic ionic liquids.3–7 Several criteria
for reagents that can be expected to be efficient as water
scavengers are formulated from both the literature data
and our own experience (the most critical are italicized):
– stability to air exposure and long-term storage;
– commercial availability and low cost;
– wide applicability;
– solubility in common organic solvents;
– high activity under normal conditions and the possibility
of use at elevated temperatures;
– simple and efficient synthetic protocols;
– high selectivity, conversion and yields in the reactions;
– simple procedures for the separation of the products
formed from the scavenger.
Organosilicon compounds satisfy most of the requirements cited above. The chemical behavior of these compounds is determined primarily by the tendency of the
silicon atom to expand its valence shell, giving rise to
five- and six-coordinate intermediates, therefore, they can
be considered as Lewis acids. Unlike many traditional
metal-centered activators, silicon Lewis acids are compatible with most synthetically valuable nucleophiles and are
not prone to aggregation, thus substantially simplifying
the analysis of the reaction mechanisms.8
Most of the organosilicon compounds discussed in this review are halogenosilanes (in particular, chlorotrimethylsilane). Apart from increasing the Lewis acidity of silicon
atom, the intrinsic role of the halogeno substituent is related to the high acceptability of Si–X bond towards hydrolysis which is explained by the strong preference of silicon
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
Abstract: The literature data on the application of organosilicon
compounds as water scavengers in reactions of carbonyl compounds is surveyed. The reactions leading to both carbon–carbon
(in particular, aldol-type condensations) and carbon–nitrogen bond
formation, the synthesis of iminium salts by elimination reactions
and heterocyclizations are considered.
3720
to form silicon–oxygen bonds. In addition, an easily removable hydrogen halide is formed upon hydrolysis of
halogenosilanes (Scheme 1), which increases the catalytic
activity of the system further. The advantages that halogenosilanes have as water scavengers in reactions of carbonyl compounds are summarized in Figure 2.
lCH 2 + O2)SMT(
O2H + lCSMT 2
Scheme 1
REVIEW
D. M. Volochnyuk et al.
Hydrolysis of chlorotrimethylsilane
The main goal of this review is to survey the literature data
on the application of organosilicon compounds as water
scavengers in the reactions of carbonyl compounds. The
reactions leading to carbon–carbon and carbon–nitrogen
bond formations, formation of iminium salts by elimination reactions, and heterocyclizations are all considered.
In some cases, related transformations resulting in elimination of small molecules other than water are also discussed. It should be noted that the use of polyphosphoric
acid trimethylsilyl ester (PPSE) and related compounds is
beyond the scope of this review, as the properties of this
water scavenger are defined by the P–O–P fragment and
are not related to the silicon atom.9
Dmitriy M. Volochnyuk
was born in 1980 in Irpen,
Kiev region, Ukraine. He
graduated from Kiev State
University, Chemical Department in 2002 and was
awarded an MS in chemistry. He recieved his PhD in
chemistry in 2005 from Institute of Organic Chemis-
try, National Academy of
Sciences of Ukraine under
the supervision of Dr. A.
Kostyuk with research concentration in the chemistry
of enamines. At present, he
divides his time between the
Institute of Organic Chemisty, as deputy head of the
Organophosphorus Depart-
ment, senior scientific
worker, and Enamine Ltd
(Kiev, Ukraine), as Director
of Chemistry. His main interests are fluoroorganic, organophosphorus,
heterocyclic and combinatorial
chemisiry. He is co-author
of 61 papers.
Sergey V. Ryabukhin was
born in Kirovograd in 1979.
He received his MS in
chemistry (2001) and PhD
in organic chemistry (2007)
from Kyiv National Taras
Shevchenko University under the supervision of Prof.
Dr. Sci. Andrey A. Tolma-
chev. At present, he works
in Enamine Ltd. (Kyiv,
Ukraine) as a director of the
Combinatorial Chemistry
Department and lectures
about combinatorial chemistry in Kyiv National Taras
Shevchenko University. His
scientific interests include
combinatorial
chemistry,
molecular design, drug discovery, modern methods in
organic synthesis, chemistry
of heterocyclic compounds,
bioorganic and medicinal
chemistry. He is co-author
of 30 papers.
Andrey S. Plaskon was
born in 1982 in Kalush,
Ukraine. He received his
MS in chemistry in 2004
and PhD in organic chemistry in 2009 from Kyiv
National Taras Shevchenko
University under the super-
vision of Prof. Dr. Sci.
Andrey A. Tolmachev. At
present he divides his time
between Kyiv National
Taras Shevchenko University as scientific worker and
as researcher in the Combinatorial Chemistry Depart-
ment at Enamine Ltd (Kyiv,
Ukraine). His scientific interests are focused on chemistry of heterocycles and
combinatorial
chemistry.
He is co-author of 28 papers.
Oleksandr O. Grygorenko
was born in Brody in 1982.
He received his MS in
chemistry (2004) and PhD
in organic chemistry (2007)
from Kyiv National Taras
Shevchenko University under the supervision of Prof.
Dr. Sci. Igov V. Komarov.
At present, he divides his
time between Kyiv National
Taras Shevchenko University as Assistant Professor,
and Enamine Ltd. (Kiev,
Ukraine) as researcher in the
Custom Synthesis Department. His scientific interests
include modern methods in
organic synthesis, molecular rigidity concept, chemistry of amino acids and
related compounds, bioorganic and medicinal chemistry. He is co-author of 8
papers.
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
Biographical Sketches
REVIEW
3721
Evolution of water scavengers
O
O
O
O
TMSCl
+
R1
H
R2
O
R2
20 °C, 72 h
R1
R1
,
= n-Bu, R2 = OEt
, R1 = n-C7H15, R2 = OEt
, R1 = Ph, R2 = OEt
, R1 = n-Bu, R2 = Me
d1
c1
b1
a1
Scheme 2
Figure 2
2
Advantages of chlorotrimethylsilane as water scavenger
Reactions Leading to Carbon–Carbon Bond
Formation
In this section, silicon-promoted reactions of aldehydes
and ketones with carbon nucleophiles such as carbonyl
compounds, activated alkenes and aromatic compounds
are considered. Most of the reactions discussed include
the use of chlorotrimethylsilane itself, or as a reagent
component, as water scavengers.
2.1
Aldol-Type Condensations
One of the first literature examples of chlorotrimethylsilane-mediated aldol-type condensation was reported by
Zav’yalov and co-workers.10a Aliphatic and aromatic aldehydes reacted with ethyl acetoacetate under mild conditions to give Knoevenagel adducts 1 in 70–75% yields
(Scheme 2).
The method was extended to some other carbonyl compounds.10b In particular, Knoevenagel adduct 1d was obtained in condensation of butyraldehyde and
acetylacetone. Reaction of benzaldehyde with diethyl malonate or p-bromoacetophenone in the presence of chlorotrimethylsilane required the use of zinc chloride as cocatalyst; compounds 2a,b were obtained from these reactions in 60–70% yields. Reaction of benzaldehyde with
acetylacetone, acetophenone and a-bromoacetophenone
afforded the b-chloro ketones 3, 4a and 4b, respectively
(Scheme 3).
A chlorotrimethylsilane–N,N-dimethylformamide system
was applied to the synthesis of 5-(arylmethylene)hexahydropyrimidine-2,4,6-triones 5 (from barbituric acid and
the corresponding aromatic aldehydes) possessing immunosuppressive, fungicidal and anti-inflammatory activities (Scheme 4).11
Combinations of chlorotrimethylsilane with other Lewis
acids (e.g., SnCl2,12–14 BF3·OEt2,13 TiCl415 or InCl316) were
found to be efficient as promoters for the addition reactions of aldehydes, acetals and a,b-unsaturated ketones
with p-donor alkenes (enol silyl ethers, dihydropyrans,
styrenes) as well as for Knoevenagel-type condensations
under very mild conditions.8 For example, adduct 6 was
obtained in 64% yield by the reaction of 3-phenyl-1,1dimethoxypropane (7) and 3,4-dihydropyran in the presence of chlorotrimethylsilane and tin(II) chloride at 0 °C
(Scheme 5).12
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
Figure 1
Organosilicon Compounds as Water Scavengers
3722
REVIEW
D. M. Volochnyuk et al.
O
O
rA
rA
tEO
+
%09–97
h 5 ,FMD
n
O
O
lCSMT ,C/dP
H
rA
1 = n ,b8
0 = n ,a8
O
O
+
tEO
H
OtE
hP
OtE
O
n
O
2lCnZ
lCSMT
hP
a2
O
O
O
O
O
lCSMT ,C/dP
rA
%58–07
h 5 ,FMD
+
H
O
2lCnZ
lCSMT
hP
+
H
hP
rB
rB
rA
b2
O
9
lC
Scheme 6
O
lCSMT
hP
O
O
+
H
hP
O
)%95( 3
O
lC
2lCnZ
Reaction of acetophenones and aromatic aldehydes under
the conditions described above allowed for the substituted
alkylideneacetophenones 10 to be obtained, whereas the
analogous transformation in the case of cycloalkanones
and aliphatic aldehydes led to the 2-alkylidenecycloalkanones 11 (Scheme 7). These products were also
obtained when a chlorotrimethylsilane–ytterbium(III) triflate system was used as reaction promoter.18
hP
1rA
h 5 ,FMD
O
O
+
2
H
1
rA
rA
H
hP
)%29( rB = X ,b4
)%44( H = X ,a4
O
FMD–lCSMT
NH
2rA
hP
X
O
O
lCSMT ,C/dP
O
+
X
R
O
O
,lCSMT
hP
Scheme 3
H
N
O
O
NH
+
R
H
O
H
N
O
)%29–58( 5
01
O
O
Scheme 4
O
lCSMT ,C/dP
R
h 5 ,FMD
H
+
R
eMO
n
11
lC
lykla = R
eMO
lCSMT
n
hP
eMOSMT –
eMO
hP
7
Scheme 7
2lCnS
a,a¢-Bis(benzylidene)cycloalkanones 8 were also obtained, in 70–95% yields, by the reaction of alicyclic ketones and aromatic aldehydes in the presence of
iodotrimethylsilane, generated in situ from chlorotrimethylsilane and sodium iodide in acetonitrile (Scheme 8).19
eMO
+
3lCnS +
–
eMO
O
hP
2lCnS
–
hP
lC
O
lCSMT –
eMOSMT
O
rA
O
rA
IaN ,lCSMT
+
H
n
eMO
O
rA
n
hP eMO
8
Scheme 8
O
6
Scheme 5
Recently, a system of chlorotrimethylsilane, N,N-dimethylformamide and palladium-on-carbon was shown to be
an efficient catalyst in the aldol condensation of aldehydes
with cycloalkanones and acetophenones.17 In particular,
the reaction of cyclopentanone and cyclohexanone with
aromatic aldehydes led to the formation of the 2:1 adducts
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
The chlorotrimethylsilane-induced condensation of 2,5dihydro-2,5-dimethoxyfuran (12) and aromatic or heteroaromatic aldehydes led to the formation of the corresponding g-arylidene-a,b-butenolides 13 in 17–62%
yields (Scheme 9).20,21
All of the procedures described above for Knoevenageltype condensations are limited in scope due to the volatil-
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
8 in high yields. In the case of cyclooctanone, the 1:1 adducts 9 were obtained exclusively (Scheme 6).
REVIEW
Organosilicon Compounds as Water Scavengers
3723
tic acid derivatives, hetaryl acetonitriles, cycloalkanones
[in this case, a,a¢-bis(arylidene)cycloalkanones 8 were
obtained] and cyclic methylene active compounds
(Scheme 10).
R
O
+
O
R
H
eMO
)%26–71( 31
O
21
Scheme 9
1R
O
FMD ,lCSMT
rA
h 6–5.0 ,C° 001
2
R
RHN
The condensation proceeds in a stereoselective manner affording exclusively alkenes that possess a trans disposition of the aryl substituent and the possible silylation site
(circled in Scheme 11) even if such a product is not the
most thermodynamically stable of the two possibilities (as
in the case of compound 18a).22
CN
tEOOC
H
+
rA
CN
NC
2R
1R
CN
O
3
O
R
CN
3R
O
S
CN
O
3R
The method discussed above was successfully applied to
less reactive substrates such as aryl methyl ketones and
methyl derivatives of p-acceptor heterocycles
(Scheme 12).22
N
N
NC
NC
NC
N
O
2eMN
N
N
O
NC
X
S
R
N
Other methylene active compounds were also used as substrates in chlorotrimethylsilane-mediated Knoevenageltype condensations, including hydroxymethyl, chloromethyl and tosyloxymethyl derivatives of heterocycles
(Scheme 13 and Scheme 14).23 The latter transformations
allowed for the preparation of chlorovinyl derivatives 19
that are difficult to obtain by other methods.
HN
N
NC
NC
N
N
N2H
)C2H(
3
O
N
O
HN
3R
R
O
3
O
NH HN
3R
n
O
X
3R
X
3
R
N
O
3
O
R
R
OO
S
O
hP
hP
O
O
O
3
N
O
N
R
O
O
3R
O
X
N
3
R
O
Scheme 10 Selected examples of methylene active compounds
R1CH2R2 are given
ity of chlorotrimethylsilane (bp 57 °C). In the case of the
substrates possessing low reactivity, a modification of
the water scavenger is needed; for example, introducing a
second Lewis acid as a co-reagent. An alternative
approach22 includes performing the reactions in sealed reactors, which allows heating of the reaction mixture to the
desired temperature without loss of chlorotrimethylsilane
or hydrogen chloride from the reaction mixture. The optimized reaction conditions [TMSCl (3 equiv), DMF, 100
°C, 0.5–6 h] allowed for the execution of Knoevenageltype condensations of aromatic aldehydes with cyanoace-
When o-dialkylamino aldehydes were used as carbonyl
components
in
chlorotrimethylsilane-mediated
Knoevenagel-type condensations, the reactions were accomplished by way of ring fusion; this is referred to as the
T-amino effect (Scheme 15).24,25A set of methylene active
compounds was successfully applied to this transformation
under
optimized
reaction
conditions
[TMSCl (4 equiv), DMF, 100 °C, 12 h]. In the case of pyridine as a solvent, benzylidene derivatives were obtained
as a result of the usual Knoevenagel reaction. Thus, free
hydrogen chloride, which is formed in N,N-dimethylformamide and not in pyridine as a solvent, is essential for
the T-amino effect.
When aldehydes processing cyclic dialkylamino moieties
were applied to these conditions, tricyclic fused heterocycles 20 were obtained.
When Meldrum’s acid (21) was used as a substrate in the
reaction described above, fused nipecotic acid derivatives
22 were obtained in a one-pot procedure (Scheme 16).26
In the latter reaction, moderate diastereoselectivity was
observed (de ~60%).
A system comprising chlorotrimethylsilane, sodium iodide, and acetonitrile–dichloromethane was successfully
applied to promote a reductive Knoevenagel-type condensation.27,28 The reaction results in C-arylmethylation of
the corresponding methylene active compound (e.g.,
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
eMO
O
lCSMT
The proposed mechanistic scheme for the reaction postulates a double function for chlorotrimethylsilane as activator for both the aldehyde and the methylene reaction
components, owing to the formation of the silyl derivatives 14a–c and 15a–c (Scheme 11). The latter react to
form intermediates 16a–c. In the next step, extrusion of
hexamethyldisiloxane (HMDS) and elimination of hydrogen chloride occur from 16a–c, giving the final products
17a–c.22
3724
REVIEW
D. M. Volochnyuk et al.
H
–lC
lC
O
N
SMT
SMT
+O
O
rA
rA
O
lC
c41
O
+N
SDMH –
1R
rA
SMT
41
1
R
rA
lCH –
2
a41
O
O
SMT
SMT
H
R
rA
SMT
b41
O
O–
)sic era spuorg lyra(
elbats ssel
a81
H
lCSMT
rA
2
lCSMT
1
1R
lC
R
O
O
2
R
lCH –
2
R
R
B:
a71
a51
a61
O
SMT
SMT
N
SDMH –
N
rA
X
41
X
rA
lCH –
2
SMT
N
H
R
R
N
lCSMT
X
lC
2
N
X
lCH –
2
2
R
R
B:
O
+N
b51
b61
SMT O
SMT
O–
N
demrof TON
elbats erom
b81
lCH –
SDMH –
rA
2R
rA
N
SMT
41
lC
H
2
lCH –
R
2
R
B:
c71
c61
N
lCSMT
N
2R
c51
Mechanistic scheme for the chlorotrimethylsilane-promoted Knoevenagel-type condensation
rA
lCSMT
N
FMD
S
N
O
R
O
H
rA
h 42–51 ,C° 001
S
HO
N
rA
Y
+
FMD
H
O
O
O
X
X
N
N
N
O
N
2
2ON
N
N
N
X
lC
S
R
N
X
lC
N
O
hP
N
S
lC
O
HN
lC
N
N
N
N
NH
NH
N
lC
N
N N
sTO
O
N
lC
S
O
N
H
N
2
rA
O N
O
HN
N
SeM
N
R
lC
O
R
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
Scheme 14
S
lC
N
O
CN
O
N
rA
acetylacetone or ethyl acetoacetate) thus leading to the
products 23. The proposed mechanism for this reaction is
shown in Scheme 17. The postulate is supported by the
isolation of intermediate 24a (68%) in the case where diethyl ether was used as the solvent.27
sTO
N
N
X
O
O
N
lC
S
O
sTO ,lC = X
91
HN
eMR
Y
rA
lC
lC
+
Scheme 12 Selected examples of compounds RMe are given;
X = O, S, NR1
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
lC
1rA
H
HO
N
O
lCSMT
O
FMD ,lCSMT
1rA
+
Scheme 13
Selected examples of heterocyclic derivatives are given
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
b71
Scheme 11
REVIEW
3725
Organosilicon Compounds as Water Scavengers
An example of a heterogeneous catalyst used in
Knoevenagel-type condensations is represented by silica
gel functionalized with amino groups; this catalyst was
prepared by the treatment of silica gel with (3-aminopropyl)trimethoxysilane (Scheme 18).29
2R
2
R
3R
3R
HO
O
h 21 ,C° 001
N
N
O
N
1
R
R
hP
1
N
1R
R
O
4
O
NC
S
NC
rA
O
R
N
O
O
N
O
4
R
O
N
4
R
N
N
NC
O
N
X
NC
N
O
N
O
R
NC
H
N
O
4
N
4R
N
S
N
4R
X
NC
O
lCSMT
+
rBaN
lCSMT
+
rBaN
+
rB
O
O
+
O
O
O
O
rB
Aldehydes of the formula RCH2CHO formed self-condensation products 26 in 78–89% yields in the presence of
iodotrimethylsilane. A mechanistic scheme of the reaction
was suggested. The key step of the transformation was
postulated to be the reaction between trimethylsilyliodohydrine 27 (formed by TMSI addition to the starting
aldehyde) and trimethylsilyl enolate 28 (formed from 27
by HI elimination) (Scheme 20).13
O
lCSMT
R
lCH –
N
O
I
NCeM
–I+
]HNCeM[ –
SMTO
R
R
12
HOOC
HOOC
+
N
R
N
R
R
1:4 ~
b22
a22
R
H
N
O2H
lCH
O
ISMT
R
O
+
O
R
R
R
O
Scheme 16
72
82
SMT
O
SMT +
SMTO
R
I
–
R
SMTO
I
R
SMTO
O
rA
R
SMTO
+
O
IaN ,lCSMT
O
O
+
+
NCeM
I
R
H
rA
R
O
SDMH –
I
ISMT –
R
R
O
SMTO
R
2)SMT(O
+
I
ISMT – – O
O2)SMT( –
R
O
O
R
IH
rA
rA
O
2I
IH –
R
R
62
O
eM = R ,b42
tEO = R ,a42
–
R
O
eM = R ,b32
tEO = R ,a32
Scheme 17
Scheme 20
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
4R
1R
N
N
1
Scheme 19
–
N
Scheme 15 Selected examples of aromatic aldehydes and methylene active compounds are given
SMTO
R
1R
O
R
In some cases, the Knoevenagel reactions discussed above
were accomplished by self-condensation of the starting aldehydes.13,17,30,31 Analogous halogenosilane-promoted
self-condensations of preparative significance were also
reported in the literature. Thus, acetone and cyclohexanone underwent self-condensation smoothly, in the presense of a chlorotrimethylsilane–sodium bromide system,
to give the corresponding b-bromo ketones
(Scheme 19).30
O
1
+
3R
1R
1
HO
O
N
O
2HN3)2HC(iS3)OeM(
2HN3)2HC(iS
R
02
n 2
) HC(
HO
O
1
N
O
FMD ,lCSMT 2R
Scheme 18
REVIEW
D. M. Volochnyuk et al.
HO
3
R
HO
HO
lCSMT
1R
1R
+
C° 4–0 ,6H6C ,21H6C
2
R
3
R
)%77–04( 33
Complexes of chlorotrimethylsilane with Lewis acids appeared to be more efficient as promoters of aldehyde selfcondensations than iodotrimethylsilane. That can be explained by lower nucleophilicity of complex anion
[LA·Cl]– (where LA is Lewis acid) comparing to iodide
ion. Trimethylsilyl triflate (TMSOTf) appeared to be the
most efficient among the reagents used for this reaction.13
23
Other Reactions
HO
Apart from the aldol-type condensations discussed above,
the transformations considered in this section include reactions of C-electrophiles with activated alkenes and aromatic compounds.
HO
lCSMT
+
OeM
OeM
)%06( 53
43
Scheme 22
HO
HO
O
lCH –
SMTO
lCSMT
HO
+C
SMTO
–
O
lC
2
rA
lCH
R
HO
1
rA
R
1rA
ISMT
1rA
R
92
1rA
O
+
2rA
H
R
2rA
O
lCH –
+
C
O
H
–lC
O
O
+
03
HO
O
rA
2
73
eMO
O
lC
hP
83
63
lCSMT
hP
).tac( 2lCnS
eMO
hP +
hP
eMO
13
Scheme 21
Scheme 23
Chlorotrimethylsilane is a convenient catalyst in Friedel–
Crafts reactions.32,33 In particular, it was applied successfully in the condensation of alcohols 32 and substituted
phenols that led to diarylmethanes 33. In an analogous reaction of o-cresol and secondary alcohol 34, compound 35
was obtained in 60% yield (Scheme 22).32
sations with secondary amines affording iminium salts are
also discussed.
2HN
FMD–lCSMT
2
R
1R
R
H ,eM = 1R
eMOOC ,tEOOC ,eM ,H ,lC = 2R
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
)%09–07( 93
1
O
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
1R
In this section, two-component condensations of aldehydes and ketones with various nitrogen-containing compounds (e.g., primary amines, amides, ureas, and
hydrazines) leading to the formation of imines or derivatives thereof are under consideration. Analogous conden-
H
N
+
Two-Component Condensations
R
3.1
1
O
Reactions Leading to Carbon–Nitrogen
Bond Formation
O
3
2R
A chlorotrimethylsilane-promoted reaction of salicylic aldehyde and 1-methylfuran allowed (2-hydroxyphenyl)difurylmethane (36) to be obtained in 90% yield
(Scheme 23).33
A chlorotrimethylsilane–N,N-dimethylformamide system
was successfully applied in the reaction of cyclic b-diketones (cyclohexane-1,3-dione, dimedone) and aromatic
amines to give N-arylenamino ketones 39, which are intermediates in the syntheses of some analgesics
(Scheme 24).34
Scheme 24
Use of chlorotrimethylsilane as the reaction promoter allowed Schiff bases to be obtained, even from weakly basic
amines. An example of this is shown in Scheme 25.35
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
O
H
The reaction of aliphatic aldehydes with 1,1-diarylethylenes led to the formation of complex mixtures that include
1,1-bis(2,2-diarylethylenyl)alkanes 29 and cyclic ketals
30 as the main products.13 In contrast, chlorides 31 were
the only products formed, in 80% yield, in the reaction of
acetals and styrene in the presence of chlorotrimethylsilane–tin(II) chloride (Scheme 21).12
HO
2.2
2R
3726
REVIEW
3727
Organosilicon Compounds as Water Scavengers
O
2R
N
2
X
N
2X
3R
1
R
1X
N
h 2 ,C° 001
yp ,)viuqe 4( lCSMT
1
3R
2HN
X
)%57–84( 44
The proposed mechanistic scheme suggests silylated aminal 45 as a key reaction intermediate. A [1,6]-hydride
shift in 45 accompanied by silicon–oxygen bond formation affords iminium salt 46, which undergoes fast cyclization into the final product (Scheme 29).38
1R
R
H
H
H
N
2
X
1
X
2
N
2X
SMTO
1
O
R
1
X
H
lCSMT
N
N
4OlC
–
O
4
– OlC
%07
N
H
lCSMT
N
O
O
+
N
N
O
O
eM
N
H
N
04
N
O
N
O
N
N
O
2HN
eM
1R
R
N
+
N
NCeM
O
O
eM
eM
lCSMT
14
2
2HN
SMT
R
54
1
1R
1
R
R
N
2X
SDMH –
N
1
R
H
N
N
1X
SMTO
–
iS3eM
2
R
2X
2R
Tetraethylorthosilicate [Si(OEt)4] was proven to be an efficient reagent in the synthesis of sterically hindered
ketimines 42 and 43 (Scheme 27).37 This water scavenger
does not form acidic products upon hydrolysis; thus, an
excess of the amine is not needed in the reaction.
1X
+H
64
.tac ,4)tEO(iS
2HNR
+
h 61 ,C° 061
Scheme 29
O
RN
2hPHC
)%09–27( 24
+H
RN
,hPeMHC ,rA = R
O
.tac ,4)tEO(iS
2HNR
hP
hP
)%89–26( 34
h 57–4 ,C° 061
+
hP
hP
,2)hP(HC ,rA = R
Scheme 27
Reactions of o-(dialkylamino)anilines and aromatic aldehydes performed in sealed reactors at 100 °C resulted in
the T-amino effect, thus leading to the formation of dihydrobenzimidazoles 44. To avoid the acid-catalyzed dis-
Carbonyl compounds and amides or ureas were found to
react with chlorotrimethylsilane–N,N-dimethylformamide at room temperature to afford the corresponding
condensation products in good yields (67–92%). The reaction of benzaldehyde and benzamides allowed for
arylidenebisbenzamides 47 to be obtained, whereas acetylacetone and ethyl acetoacetate led to enamine derivatives
48 (Scheme 30).39
This method was modified for the synthesis of tosylformamides 49 – substituted tosylmethylisonitrile precursors.
It was shown that aromatic, heteroaromatic and aliphatic
aldehydes reacted with formamide (or acetamide) and
chlorotrimethylsilane in toluene–acetonitrile (1:1) at 50
°C to afford the corresponding condensation products. In
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
Scheme 28
1
N
Scheme 26
1R
+
N
2HN
The condensation of aromatic/heteroaromatic amines
with 1-methylparabanic acid was studied extensively. In
particular, reaction of 1-methylparabanic acid and preclathridin A (40) in the presence of chlorotrimethylsilane,
triethylamine, imidazole and DMAP afforded alkaloid
clathridin A (41) regioselectively in 73% yield
(Scheme 26).36
2R
+
N
Scheme 25
mutation of the final products, pyridine was used as
solvent. This transformation was extended to include the
use of acetophenones, cyclic ketones and heterocyclic aldehydes as the carbonyl components in the reaction
(Scheme 28). The reaction scope showed its limitations in
the case of electron-rich aldehydes; in this case, dismutation products were isolated from the reaction mixture. The
T-amino effect was also not observed in the case of o-piperidinylanilines as amine components; usual imine formation was observed instead.38
REVIEW
D. M. Volochnyuk et al.
O
2R
NH1R
N
lCSMT
H
O
O
O
HOcA
2R
+
NH1R
2HN
klA ,H = 1R
rA
O
hP
= rA ,b74
hP = rA ,a74
O
1R
NH1R
FMD–lCSMT
2
R
H
N
O
H
N
2HN
O
O
2R
2HN = R ,tEOOC = R ,c84
2
1
hP = 2R ,tEOOC = 1R ,b84
hP = 2R ,cA = 1R ,a84
)%09–06( 15
OHC
S
S
HOcA ,lCSMT .1
+
4HBaN
.2
2HN
R
NH1R
2
R
)%39–47( hPO ,tE ,rA = 1R ,35
)%56–05( H = 1R ,25
eMO ,uB-t =
1R
O
2R
2R
H
N
S2OloT
h 6–5 ,C° 05
NCeM–eneulot
Scheme 34
+
2
R
1
R
H
N2H
Recently, tetraethylorthosilicate was used as a reaction
promoter to obtain aromatic and heteroaromatic N-tosylaldimines 50 from p-toluenesulfonamide and corresponding aldehydes (Scheme 32).41
sT
4)tEO(iS
N
rA
h 21–4
C° 061–041
O
2HNsT-p
+
H
rA
)%58–64( 05
Scheme 32
Reductive alkylation of unsubstituted and monosubstituted ureas by aromatic aldehydes was achieved using
chlorotrimethylsilane in combination with sodium borohydride. It should be noted that monoalkylation products
51 were obtained only when a large excess (up to 20
equiv) of urea was used; otherwise, bis-alkylation occurred (Scheme 33). The reaction was carried out under
mild conditions, and the products were easily isolated
from the reaction mixture. However, the method was not
successful for enolizable or a,b-unsaturated aldehydes.42
An analogous reaction of aromatic aldehydes with thiourea and chlorotrimethylsilane followed by sodium borohydride reduction of the intermediate products afforded
monosubstituted thioureas 52. When N-monosubstituted
thioureas were subjected to these conditions, N,N¢-disubstituted thiuoreas 53 were formed in good yields
(Scheme 34).43
The chlorotrimethylsilane-mediated construction of hydrazones was used in the syntheses of various complex organic molecules, including the macrolide antibiotics
rutamycin B (obtained via intermediate 54)44,45 and oligo© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
mycin C (via 55),45,46 the spiroketal polyketide antibiotics
spirofungins A and B (via 56),47 the polyether antibiotic
X-206 (via 57)48 and the secondary metabolite ulapualide
A (via 58)49 (Scheme 35).
Reaction of aldehydes with primary or secondary amines,
a-amino esters, O-trimethylsilylhydroxylamine and N,Ndimethylhydrazine in the presence of chlorotrimethylsilane and lithium perchlorate followed by reduction of the
carbon–nitrogen double bond (BH3·NEt3) afforded
amines 59, a-amino esters 60, N-substituted hydroxylamines 61 and hydrazines 62, respectively (Scheme 36).50
An approach to the synthesis of iminium salts that includes the reaction of carbonyl compounds with dialkylaminotrimethylsilane and chlorotrimethylsilane has been
developed. The corresponding products 63 were stable
enough to be isolated in 75–93% yields and characterized
(Scheme 37, see also Scheme 41). The method was applied to non-enolizable and a,b-unsaturated aldehydes
and dimethylformamide. The procedure can also be utilized in the case of aldehydes capable of enolization if trimethylsilyl triflate is used instead of chlorotrimethylsilane.51,52
Reaction of the dialkylaminotrimethylsilane–chlorotrimethylsilane system with 3,3-dichloroacrolein afforded a
mixture of salts 64 and 65 (Scheme 38). Compound 66
was isolated in 75% yield as a perchlorate salt from a mixture obtained by the reaction of dimethylaminotrimethylsilane and the precursor dialdehyde in the presence of
chlorotrimethylsilane (Scheme 39).51
A modification of the method discussed above relies on
using dialkylamines and in situ generated iodotrimethylsilane.53,54 The first step of the reaction was amine silylation, leading to quantitative yield of the
dialkylaminotrimethylsilane which then reacted with the
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
)%39–26( 94
O
O
H2OSloT ,lCSMT
Scheme 31
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
2
1R
+
situ reaction of the latter with toluenesulfinic acid allowed
for compounds 49 to be obtained in excellent yields
(Scheme 31).40
H
N
hP
H
rA
2HN
4H6CN2O-2
4HBaN
2R
+
rA
H
N
H
N
O
O
FMD–lCSMT
Scheme 33
Scheme 30
1RHN
3728
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
aldehyde to give the iminium salt. This approach was used
in the synthesis of dialkylamino-9H-pyrrolo[1,2-a]indoles
68 obtained in 68–84% yields from 2-(pyrrolyl)benzaldehydes 67 and secondary amine hydrochlorides by action of chlorotrimethylsilane in combination with sodium
iodide and triethylamine, followed by intramolecular cyclization of the iminium salts thus formed (Scheme 40).54
)%38–56( 26
rP ,uB-t ,rA = 1R
2eMN
N
H
56
2RN
+
N2R +
1R
HO
2eMN-N2H
SMTO-N2H
46
2
+ RN
lC
–lC
lC
1R
)%88–56( 16
uB-t ,teH ,rA = 1R
HN
Scheme 38
–lC
lCSMT
lC
O
SMTN2R
lC
H
lC
Scheme 36
h 1 ,.t.r ,O2tE
H
3
3HB
)%09–58( 06
2HC2HCSeM ,rA = R
2
uB-t ,teH ,rA = 1R
⋅NEt
lCSMT
1R
O
eMO
eMO
2R
O
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
HN
Scheme 37
R
1
O
2R
2HN
O
N ,
36
H
–lC
N
,2eMN = 22RN
2 RN
2
1R
)%59-08( 95
ro lC = X
X
H
R
1
O2)SMT( –
2 RN
2
+
lCSMT
H
2 RNSMT
2
O
1R
tE ,uB-t ,hP = 3R
tE ,H = 2R
rP-i ,uB-t ,rA =
1R
R
R
N
1
2
3R
R
O
3
SMT
H
N
R
2
Scheme 35
85
OBMP
OBMP
2eMN
O
N
2eMN-2HN
O
O
lCSMT
O
O
75
eMO
eMO
eM
O
2eMN
N
O
N
eM
O
2eMN-2HN
OeM
O
O
lCSMT
N
OeM
O
O
65
O
2eMN
O
2eMN-2HN
OSBT
N
OeM
lCSMT
OSBT
O
OeM
55
2eMN
2eMN-2HN
N
O
lCSMT
OSPDBT
O
O
OSPDBT
O
O
45
2eMN
O
N
2eMN-2HN
lCSMT
OSPDBT
SBTO nBO
OSPDBT
SBTO nBO
Organosilicon Compounds as Water Scavengers
REVIEW
3729
3730
REVIEW
D. M. Volochnyuk et al.
lCSMT
2HN
4OlCiL
eMOOC2HCnZrB
O
+
+
+
hP
.t.r ,O2tE
N2eM
rA
H
N
2eMN
N
H
eMO
N
H
eMO
4
– OlC
rA hP
rA H
O
O
lCSMT ,SMTN2eM .1 H
N2eM
4OlCaN .2
hP
2
+
H
O
O
+
2eMN
H
N
lC
)%57( 66
hP
)%09–57( 17
lCSMT
2HN
4OlCiL
uN +
.t.r ,O2tE
O
+
hP
–
rA
H
X
N
2 RN
+ 3
ro N3tE ,IaN
,lCSMT ,–lC2H+N23R
N
2 RN
3
N
H
uN
H
uN
+
rA hP
lC
hP
Scheme 39
N
H
1R
1R
rA H
2R
2R
hP
)%08–06( 27
O
N
.t.r/C° 0 ,NCeM
lC HN3tE ,IaN
– +
,lCSMT ,HN23R
1
86
76
klA = 3R ,H = 2R ,lC = 1R ,eMO = 2R = 1R ,H = 2R = 1R
rBnZ
rBnZ
R
2R
= uN
,
Scheme 40
Scheme 42
4OlCiL
,lCSMT
.t.r ,O2tE
rA
3) RO(P
2
O
+
2HN R
1
+
H
rA
tE ,eM = 2R ;uB ,hP = 1R
)%89–58( 37
Scheme 43
A system comprising chlorotrimethylsilane, sodium iodide and triethylamine was used in the synthesis of b-amino ketones 74 from secondary amines, aldehydes and
enamines (Scheme 44). The reaction resulted in high
yields and diastereoselectivity; however, its use was limited to non-enolizable aldehydes.53
5
RN
O
3
2 RN
1
R
4
3
R
2R
)%89–86( 47
R
4
R
2 RN
1
+
–I
2R
.t.r ,NCeM ,N3tE
lCSMT ,IaN
O
+
H
2 RNH
1
2R
H
2 RN
2
uN
M-uN
1R
2R
O
1R
N
Scheme 44
+
R
OiL ,iL3R ,rBgM3R ,nZ2tE = M-uN
2 RN
2
O
H
M-uN
1R
1
H
2R
)%08–06( 96
uN
2 RNSMT
2
2R
N
1R
)%58–56( 07
2RHNSMT
+
H
1R
tEOOC2HCnZrB ,iL3R = M-uN
Scheme 41
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
H
Chlorotrimethylsilane–lithium perchlorate in diethyl
ether is a mild reagent for Mannich-type three-component
condensations, and has allowed for the corresponding
products to be obtained in high yields.50,55–57 First, it was
shown that aromatic and heteroaromatic aldehydes were
aminoalkylated by trimethylsilylamines in the presence of
lithium perchlorate.58–63 Imines or iminium salts formed
in the first step of the reaction were trapped by the corresponding nucleophile to afford corresponding amines 69,
70 (Scheme 41). Later, the approach was modified in order to allow trimethylsilylamines to be generated in situ.
In particular, reaction of aromatic aldehydes and (R)-aphenylethylamine in the precence of chlorotrimethylsilane–lithium perchlorate led to the formation of chiral
imines which reacted with organozinc compounds to give
chiral amino esters 71 or amines 72 (Scheme 42).55 It
should be noted that moderate to high diastereoselectivities were achieved in these transformations (90% de for
71 and 40% de for 72).
a-Aminophosphonates 73 were obtained in an analogous
manner when trialkylphosphites were used as nucleophiles (Scheme 43).56 This was a one-pot procedure and
resulted in high yields and diastereoselectivities of the
products, even in the case of a,b-unsaturated and some
enolizable aldehydes.
1RHN
The transformations discussed in this section proceed in
two steps: first, an imine or an iminium salt is formed, and
this then reacts with a nucleophile to afford the three-component condensation product.
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
3-Functionalized indoles 75 were prepared in high yields
by the three-component reaction of aliphatic aldehydes,
O-trimethylsilylhydroxylamine and indole by action of
chlorotrimethylsilane in 5 M ethereal lithium perchlorate
solution
(Scheme 45).53
a-(Hydroxylamino)alkyl/
arylphosphonates 76 possessing antibacterial properties
were obtained in an analogous manner (Scheme 46).56
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
Three-Component Condensations
2) RO(OP
2
3.2
REVIEW
silane or trichloro(methyl)silane and dialkyl(alkoxymethyl)amines, as well as dichlorodimethylsilane or
trichloro(methyl)silane and aminals were detected by
spectral methods. However, in the case of chlorotrimethylsilane and aminals, the iminium ion was not observed.
SMTO
h 2 ,.t.r ,O2tE
lC2R+N
2HCN2R
lCiS3eM + 2RN2HCN2R
a97
3eMiS
klA = R
)%69–09( 57
HO
R
2)eMO()O(P
)%89–07( 67
2R
eMN ,O = X
–lC
X
2RN
lCiS3eM + HN2R
3eMiS-N2R –
lCH –
18
–
lC 3eMiS–+N2R
R
H
R
3
N
H
3
nim 5 ,.t.r
NCeM
R
3lCiSeM
+
N
O1R
2R
)%89–58( 77
a97
X
H
klA ,teH ,rA = R
X
2RN
38
N2R
lCH + 3eMiS–N2R
3
3
R
5R
4R
SMTO
O
4R
N22R
R
5R
C° 0
–
lC
2 RN
2
+
H
H
3lCiSeM
C° 01
NCeM
2 RN
2
O1R
87
The approach was extended to other chlorosilanes
(Me3SiCl, Me2SiCl2) and aminals.66,67 Formations of iminium salts from chlorotrimethylsilane, dichlorodimethyl-
a28
h 1 ,.t.r ,O2tE
+ SMTO-N2H +
Scheme 48
+ lCH +
O
3)eMO(P
The method was successfully applied to the regioselective
aminomethylation of ketones. Thus, Mannich bases 78
were obtained in the reaction of silyl ethers and pre-generated iminium salts (Scheme 48).65
3eMiS–N2R
4OlCiL–lCSMT
NH
Scheme 47
Scheme 49
In the case of dichlorodimethylsilane and trichloro(methyl)silane, the chlorine atom(s) present in the corresponding silylammonium salts 79b weaken the neighboring
carbon–nitrogen bond, thus activating the compounds towards formation of iminium salts 80. On the other hand,
(di)chloromethylsilylamines 82b are not basic enough to
capture the hydrogen chloride formed. The latter protonates amines 81, thus preventing their further reaction
with 80, hence monosubstituted heterocycles 81 are obtained as the final products (Scheme 50).
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
–
R
H
H
N
The first example of an iminium salt synthesis by elimination reaction involving the use of organosilicon compounds was reported in 1986 and included the reaction of
dialkyl(alkoxymethyl)amines and trichloromethylsilane
(Scheme 47). The corresponding iminium salts 77 were
isolated in 85–98% yields and characterized.64
X
H
N
In the previous section, condensations of carbonyl compounds leading to the formation of iminium salts were
mentioned. Another approach to the synthesis (or in situ
generation) of iminium salts relies on the elimination of
an alcohol or amine molecule from the corresponding aamino ethers or aminals. These transformations bear resemblance to those discussed in the previous section;
hence they are considered herein despite their being beyond the main goal of this review.
+
O
+ SMTO-N2H +
Synthesis of Iminium Salts by Elimination
Reactions
To explain the results obtained, a mechanistic scheme was
proposed for the transformations (Scheme 49). The first
step of the reaction is supposed to be reversible aminal silylation. In the case of chlorotrimethylsilane, the concentration of the silylammonium salt 79a is not high enough
to generate iminium salt 80 due to the lowered stability of
79a. In the presence of a nucleophile, quaternary salt 79a
reacts rapidly and irreversibly to give the product 81 and
trimethylsilylamine 82a. The hydrogen chloride formed
in this step of the reaction then protonates amine 82a, thus
regenerating chlorotrimethylsilane; in other words, the
latter acts as a catalyst. Compound 81 is a stronger nucleophile than the starting heterocycle, and hence reacts with
quaternary ammonium salt 79 to give the 2,5-disubstituted
heterocyclic derivatives 83 (Scheme 49).
08
+ –lC2HC N2R
4OlCiL
lCSMT
Scheme 46
3eMiS–N2R
NH
R
The reaction of chlorotrimethylsilane with aminals and
electron-rich aromatic heterocycles (i.e., N-methylpyrrole, furans) led to the formation of 2,5-disubstituted derivatives 83, with chlorotrimethylsilane thus showing
catalytic behavior. In the case of dichlorodimethylsilane
and trichloro(methyl)silane, monosubstituted heterocycles 81 were isolated as hydrochlorides.66,67
Scheme 45
4
3731
Organosilicon Compounds as Water Scavengers
3732
REVIEW
D. M. Volochnyuk et al.
eM
2
R
3R
N
O
2
2R N
+
R
lCSMT
1R
3lCiSeM
ro
+
O
NeM
3
1R
O
R
HO
hP = 3R ,eM = 2R = 1R ,c78
H=
= 2R ,eM = 1R ,b78
H = 3R = 2R = 1R ,a78
hP =
,eM = 2R ,b68
H = 3R = 2R ,a68
3R
2lCXiSeM
2HCN2R
b97
lCXeMiS
+
2RN2HCN2R
eM ,lC = X
b28
lCXeMiS-N2R –
eM ,H = 1R
3R
–
lC2HC
Scheme 52
X
+
lCH +
N2R
08
X
eMN ,O = X
2RN
18
salt 89 was synthesized preliminarily. That fact could be
explained by generation of iminium salt 92 from the secondary amine 90. For example, amine 91a (R = n-Bu) was
obtained from N,N-bis(methoxymethyl)butylamine (88a;
R = n-Bu), 2-methylfuran and trichloro(methyl)silane in
87% yield.70
X
lC2RHN
+
–
Scheme 50
R
+
MO
N
H
lCSMT
+
eMO
N
N
–
O
H
–lC
eMO
O
lC
R
88
eMO
N
R
eM
N
+
–lC
lCSMT
SMT
O
O
tEO
lCSMT
N
)%68( 48
O
O
N
+
h 84
O
09
2 RN
1
lCSMT
–lC
R
O
eM
N
+
N
H
N
O
R
O
O
h 02
2
RO
N21R
+
N
eM
)%98( 2tEN = 21RN ,a58
H
19
29
)%39( O
N = 21RN ,b58
Scheme 53
Scheme 51
O
3lCSMT
N
1R
n 2
) HC(
)%09–65( 2 = n ,b39
)%99–57( 1 = n ,a39
tE2OC
h 02 ,.t.r ,NCeM
1R
2
R
N
+
n 2
) HC(
tEO
OtE
2HC=HC-2HC- ,H = R
2
nB ,klA = 1R
2 ,1 = n
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
2R
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
Scheme 54
tE2OC
N,N-Bis(alkoxymethyl)alkylamines such as 88 reacted
with chlorosilanes to form a-alkoxymethyleneiminium
salts 89 which are more reactive than their methyleneiminium counterparts.69,70 In particular, a mixture of
amines 90 and 91 was formed from 89 and 2-methylfuran
at ambient temperature (Scheme 53). When the reaction
time was increased or when an excess of chlorosilane was
used, tertiary amine 91 became the main product even if
This approach was recently extended to cyclic b-keto
esters71–73 and cycloalkanones.74 In the case of cyclic bketo esters, 3-azabicyclo[3.2.1]octanes 93a and 3-azabicyclo[3.3.1]nonanes 93b were obtained (Scheme 54);71,72
these were then used in the synthesis of the alkaloid methyllycaconitine and its analogues. The method was also applied to the chiral N,N-bis(ethoxymethyl)(1¢-phenylethyl)amine. Despite it not being possible to separate the
diastereomers of the amino ketones obtained (93, R1 = 1¢phenylethyl), the presence of the chiral auxiliary in the
molecules was exploited in their further transformations.73
O
1,3-Oxazolidines 86 were also shown to react with nucleophilic aromatic substrates in the presence of chlorotrimethylsilane,
dichlorodimethylsilane
or
trichloro(methyl)silane. In particular, reaction of 3-methyl1,3-oxazolidine (86a), furan and trichloro(methyl)silane
allowed monosubstitution product 87a to be obtained in
75% yield. Amino alcohol 87b was obtained in 73–87%
yields from 86a, 2-methylfuran and either trichloro(methyl)silane or chlorotrimethylsilane. An analogous transformation of 3,4-dimethyl-5-phenyl-1,3-oxazolidine (86b)
afforded the expected product 87c in 80% yield
(Scheme 52).68
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
98
R
R
eMO
H
Reaction of dialkyl(alkoxymethyl)amines with 1-methylpyrrole, 2-methylfuran and 1-methylindole afforded
monosubstituted heterocycles as the main products
(Scheme 51).66
REVIEW
lCSMT
1RHN
a)%59( eM = 3R ,H = 2R ,eM = 1R ,c99
)%09( H = 3R ,H = 2R ,eM = 1R ,b99
)%95( eM =
3R = 2R ,H = 1R ,a99
O
3R
R
HO
Scheme 57
An analogous transformation involving salicylic acid
amides or N-methylamides and paraform, paraldehyde or
acetone led to the formation of benzo-1,3-oxazine[2H]-4ones 99 (Scheme 57).75,76
2R
4R
1R
N
O
2RHN
lCSMT ,OC4R3R
)%98( eM = 4R = 3R ,sT = 2R ,uB-i = 1R ,d001
)%68( H = 4R = 3R ,sT = 2R ,eM = 1R ,c001
)%06( H = 4R = 3R ,cA = 2R ,uB-i = 1R ,b001
)%07( H = 4R = 3R ,cA = 2R ,rP-i = 1R ,a001
4-Acetyl-2,2,5-trimethyl-2,3-dihydrofuran (101) was obtained in quantitative yield in a one-pot reaction involving
acetylacetone, isobutyric aldehyde, a chlorotrimethylsilane–sodium iodide system and a stoichiometric amount
of water. The overall process was a Knoevenagel condensation followed by cyclization (Scheme 59).27
O
O
IaN ,lCSMT
O
enaxeh
)viuqe 1( O2H
O
N
.t.r ,h 84
tEO
N
OtE
O
+
101
+
R
n 2
) HC(
O
klA = R ;2 ,1 = n
)%59–47(
2 = n ,59
1 = n ,49
O
HO
O
R
NCeM ,lCSMT
1R
Scheme 58
Scheme 59
An analogous transformation of dimedone led to the
formation
of
1,8-dioxooctahydroxanthenes
102
(Scheme 60). The reaction steps included a Knoevenagel
condensation, a Michael addition and a cyclodehydration.77
4-Iodo-2,6-disubstituted tetrahydropyrans 103 were obtained at first by Prins cyclization of homoallyl alcohols
104 and aromatic aldehydes in the presence of in situ generated iodotrimethylsilane. The reaction was carried out in
acetonitrile at ambient temperature for three to eight min-
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
In the case of N-acetyl a-amino acids, the reaction required harsher conditions: for example, N-acetylvaline or
N-acetylleucine reacted with paraform in an acetic acid–
chlorotrimethylsilane mixture only under reflux. On the
other hand, corresponding N-tosyl derivatives easily underwent cyclization at ambient temperature to give oxazolidinones 100 (Scheme 58).76
3R
O
n 2
) HC(
An early example of chlorosilane-mediated heterocyclization goes back to 1985 when it was shown that hydroxy
and amino acid derivatives undergo cyclization upon
treatment with chlorotrimethylsilane and a carbonyl compound (e.g., formaldehyde, acetaldehyde or acetone).75
Thus, heating of paraform, lactic or mandelic acid and an
excess of chlorotrimethylsilane afforded dioxolanone derivatives 96.76 Oxazolidines 97 and 98 were obtained from
glycolic or lactic acid methylamides and acetone or formaldehyde (Scheme 56).75,76
N
2
Synthesis of O- and O,N-Containing Heterocycles
2R
X
O
lCSMT ,OC3R2R
HX
O
3
R
3R
2R
O
1R
1R
.eMN = X ,eM = 3R = 2R ,H ro eM = 1R ,89
eMN = X ,H = 3R = 2R ,H ro eM = 1R ,79
O = X ,H =
=
,hP ro eM =
,69
HO
2
eM ,H = 3R
eM ,H = R
1
R
hP ,eM ,H = 1R
eMN ,HN ,O = X
Scheme 56
O
5.1
,OC3R2R
In this section, chlorotrimethylsilane-mediated heterocyclizations are under consideration. Modifications of classical transformations, such as the Biginelli reaction,
Hantzsch and Friedlander syntheses, are among those discussed. In a separate section, 3-formylchromone recyclizations are illustrated. Some of the heterocyclization
reactions
were
also
mentioned
previously
(Schemes 15, 16, 28, 54 and 55).
O
Heterocyclizations
R
Scheme 55
1
The method was also applied to some cycloalkanones, including cyclooctanone, cycloheptanone and substituted
cyclohexanones. In particular, azabicyclo[4.3.1]decanones 94 and azabicyclo[5.3.1]undecanone derivatives
95 were obtained from the corresponding cyclic ketones
by treatment with chlorotrimethylsilane in acetonitrile at
ambient temperature (Scheme 55). The scope and limitations of the approach were established; it was shown that
variation of the substituent at nitrogen in N,Nbis(alkoxymethyl)alkylamine as well as the ring size or
alkyl substituents a to the ketone did not affect the reaction progress significantly, whereas introduction unsaturated substituents or heteroatoms at that position lowered
the yield of the product.74
5
3733
Organosilicon Compounds as Water Scavengers
REVIEW
D. M. Volochnyuk et al.
The reaction was also extended to N- and N,N¢-(di)substituted ureas. Thus, N-substituted 3,4-dihydropyrimidine2-(1H)-ones 107 were obtained in 77–97% yields using
chlorotrimethylsilane (4 equiv) and N,N-dimethylformamide at room temperature for one to three days
(Scheme 63).82
NCeM ,lCSMT
h 01–8 ,xulfer
+
rA
H
O
O
)%48–27( 201
I
H
O
HO
IaN ,lCSMT
1
O
+
R nim 8–3 ,.t.r ,NCeM
2
1R
2
R
R
401
)%69–07( 301
rA ,klA = 1R
)eMO = 2R
)4H6COH-4(2HC2HC = 1R(
HnS3uB ,NBIA
O
O2R
N
1
R
3R
lCSMT
.t.r ,FMD
O
O2HCrA +
O
+
HN
4R
NH
3
2RO
O
O
1R
R
OeM
HO
)%39( 501
)%79–77( 701
5.2
N
O
O
Scheme 61
Scheme 63
Synthesis of Pyrimidines by Biginelli Reaction
One of the prevalent applications of chlorotrimethylsilane
as a water scavenger is related to the Biginelli reaction and
involves a three-component condensation of b-dicarbonyl
compounds, aldehydes and ureas leading to the formation
of 3,4-dihydropyrimidine-2-(1H)-one derivatives 106. An
original method included refluxing of a mixture of the
starting matherials in ethanol in the presence of hydrochloric acid as a catalyst and allowed the condensation
products to be obtained in 20–60% yields (Scheme 62).79
3
R
H
O
O
O
H
N
+
+
xulfer ,+H
O2R
HN
O
O
HOtE
2HN
N2H
2RO
O
1R
3
R
1R
)%06–02( 601
Scheme 62
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
Cycloalkanones can be used in the chlorotrimethylsilanemediated Biginelli reaction in place of the b-dicarbonyl
compounds. Depending on the structure of the starting
compounds, three types of products can be obtained in this
reaction: fused heterobicyclic structures 108, benzylidene
heterobicyclic compounds 109 or spiroheterotricyclic pyrimidines 110 (Scheme 64). In particular, cyclopentanone, urea and most aromatic aldehydes reacted in the
presence of the chlorotrimethylsilane–acetonitrile–N,Ndimethylformamide system to afford pyrimidines 109.
Under these conditions, p-fluorobenzaldehyde gave a
mixture of 109 and 110 in an 87:13 ratio.83
Aliphatic aldehydes were less reactive in these transformations: the corresponding condensation products were
formed in satisfactory yields only under reflux. Cyclopentanone reacted with aliphatic aldehydes and ureas or thioureas to give the products 110, whereas higher
cycloalkanones afforded fused heterobicyclic pyrimidines
108.83
Condensation of butyric or valeric aldehydes and urea in
a chlorotrimethylsilane–acetonitrile–N,N-dimethylformamide system led to the formation of 5,6-dihydropyrimi-
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
It was found that 3,4-dihydropyrimidine-2-(1H)-one derivatives 106 could be obtained in high (76–97%) yields
using chlorotrimethylsilane in a mixture of acetonitrile
and N,N-dimethylformamide (2:1). The method was applied to various aromatic, aliphatic and a,b-unsaturated
aldehydes, ureas and thioureas, acetylacetone and ethyl
acetoacetate. The products were separated from the reaction mixture simply by filtration.81
O
O
utes to afford products 103 as mixtures of diastereomers.
The all-cis isomer of 103 was the main product of the reaction, presumably due to its greater thermodynamic stability. The method appeared to be ineffective in the case
of aliphatic aldehydes; however, it was successfully applied in the synthesis of the antibiotic (±)-centrolobine
105 (Scheme 61).78
rA
rA
O
Scheme 60
In 1992, Zav’yalov and Kulikova showed that using a system of chlorotrimethylsilane and N,N-dimethylformamide allowed for the process to be carried out at ambient
temperature. Products were obtained in 62–80% yields
from aromatic aldehydes and in 32–37% from aliphatic aldehydes. The procedure included two steps: first, the b-dicarbonyl compound and the aldehyde underwent aldol
condensation to give an a,b-unsaturated ketone, then urea
was introduced into the reaction mixture to react with the
product of the previous step. The final products were isolated and purified chromatographically.80
4R
3734
REVIEW
3735
Organosilicon Compounds as Water Scavengers
rivative 114 predominating in the mixture, ortho- and
meta-substituted benzaldehydes gave only the octahydroquinazolines 115 (Scheme 66).84
R
R
HN
O
NCeM–FMD
lCSMT
X
+
N2H
2HN
n 2
) HC(
O
H
+
2
1
R
O
rA ,klA = 2R
n )2HC(
R
R
901
801
H
eM ,H = 1R
O
O
X
+
O
HN
HN
X
R
H
N
+
n
R
NH
2
1
+
N2H
2HN
X
2R
H
N
X
1R
S ,O = X
HN
H
N
X
)2HC(
2
O
R
O
R
1R
R
R
511
n )2HC(
411
Scheme 66
NH
HN
011
din-2-ones 111 in 53% and 62% yields, respectively.
Under these conditions, isovaleric aldehyde and urea or
thiourea afforded 3,4-dihydro-1H-pyrimidin-2-ones 112,
whereas cyclohexanone and thiourea gave spirotricyclic
product 113 in 78% yield (Scheme 65).83
b-Ketonitriles were used in a Biginelli-type reaction with
aromatic aldehydes and thiourea in the presence of chlorotrimethylsilane–N,N-dimethylformamide at 25 °C to
obtain 1:2:1 condensation products 116 (Scheme 67). In
the case of cyanoacetamides, one-step fusion of 1,3-thiazine and pyrimidine cycles occurred to give hydrochlorides
117 (Scheme 68). The structure of the latter products was
confirmed by single-crystal X-ray analysis.85
R
O
R
O
O
rA
rA
HN
lCSMT
S
N2H
2HN
.t.r ,FMD
NH
+
N
NC
R
X
NCeM ,FMD ,lCSMT
HN
X
rA
N
S
NH
H
N
OHCrA 2 + 2HN
NH +
2
N
S
NC
R
n 2
3RO ) HC(
+
HN
h 6 ,xulfer
R
,rA ,nB ,eM ,H = 1R
,3ROn)2HC( ,hP ,eM ,H = 2R
S
NCeM ,FMD ,lCSMT
NH
O
2HC
211
H
N
1
R
)%29–65( 711
N2H
S ,O = X
O
2
lC
2HN
h 6 ,xulfer
O
+
O
lCSMT
.t.r ,FMD
rA
H
hP ,uB-t = R
)%29–58( 611
S
R
O
S
2HN
N2H
H
N
)%87( 311
Scheme 65
O
N2H
2HN
h 6–4 ,xulfer
Scheme 67
1R
H
+
)%26( rP-n = R ,b111
)%35( tE = R ,a111
O
OHCrA 2 +
NCeM ,FMD ,lCSMT
R
HN
NC
X
X
Scheme 64
Scheme 68
Condensation of cyclohexane-1,3-dione and urea or thiourea in the presence of chlorotrimethylsilane–acetonitrile–N,N-dimethylformamide led to the formation of
either spiro (114) or heterobicyclic compounds (115) in
high yields. Whereas benzaldehyde or para-substituted
aromatic aldehydes afforded both products, with spiro de-
When trifluoromethyl-substituted b-dicarbonyl compounds were used as substrates in the Biginelli reaction,
4-hydroxyhexahydropyrimidin-2-one derivatives 118a
were obtained in 48–82% yields. It should be noted that a
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
NH HN
In an analogous transformation involving dimedone, aromatic aldehydes and a chlorotrimethylsilane–acetonitrile–
N,N-dimethylformamide system, octahydroquinazolines
115 (R2 = Me) were also obtained.77
REVIEW
D. M. Volochnyuk et al.
ortho-substituted aldehydes and was efficient in the case
of sensitive substrates (e.g., those containing nitro, hydroxy, alkoxy or chloro groups) due to the milder reaction
conditions.89
O
1R
O
2RO
+ OHC1R
h 8–6 ,.t.r
IaN–lCSMT
O
2RO
O
O
hP
1R
O2R
HO
O
H
N
NCeM ,IaN–lCSMT
021
X
N
N
3FC 2
H
X
+ OHC1R
h 3–2 ,.t.r
N2H
O
N
N
1R
+
4R
2HN
O2HCO-5,4 ,2ON-5 ,lC-5 ,H = 2R
hP ,eM = 1R
121
1
O
R
1R
3R
3R
4
N
2R
R
N
4
S
R
321
221
O
3R
R
N
N
N
5
R
521
eM
O
O
3
R
4R
N
O
421
Scheme 71
4
2R
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
N
O
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
R
N
HO
3FC
N
eM
X
eM
)%65–14( b811
)eM = 3R = 2R
,hP ,tEO = 1R(
3FC
In situ generated iodotrimethylsilane has been found to be
an efficient condensing reagent in Hantzsch pyridine synthesis. The 1,4-dihydropyridines 120 were obtained from
aromatic aldehydes, ethyl acetoacetate and ammonium
acetate. An analogous result was obtained under modified
reaction conditions starting from aldehydes and aminocrotonate (Scheme 70). Unlike the classical Hantzsch procedure or its newer modifications, the method described
above afforded better yields of the products in the case of
h 01–4 ,C° 59 ,FMD
1
Pyridines
2R
)H = 3R ,hP = 2R
ro eM = 3R = 2R(
)%06–84( 911
hP
5.3.1
O
X
2R
,hP ,tEO = 1R
Synthesis of Other N-Containing Heterocycles
Heterofused pyridines were also synthesized by this method. In particular, thieno[2,3-b]pyridines 122, [1]benzofuro[3,2-b]pyridines 123, 5H-chromeno[2,3-b]pyridin-5ones 124 and pyrido[2,3-d]pyrimidin-2,4(1H,3H)-diones
125 were obtained (Scheme 71).92
3R
O
3R
3FC
5.3
Chlorotrimethylsilane was successfully applied in the
Friedlander quinoline synthesis. In this case, o-aminoacetophenones reacted with a set of methylene active compounds [e.g., b-dicarbonyl compounds, acetophenones
and other alkyl (het)aryl ketones, tert-butyl methyl ketone, cycloalkanones, 4-piperidones, ethyl 2-oxobutyrate,
laevulinic acid, 1,3-dichloroacetone, ethyl 4-chloroacetoacetate, 2-chlorocyclohexanone] in the presence of
chlorotrimethylsilane–N,N-dimethylformamide in a pressure tube to give various quinoline derivatives 121 in 76–
97% yields (Scheme 71).90,91
)viuqe 5( lCSMT
eM ,H = 3R
hP ,eM ,H = 2R
S ,O = X
Trimethylsilyl triflate is another effective catalyst in the
Biginelli reaction. In this case, the reaction was complete
within 15 minutes of the addition of 0.01 equivalent of trimethylsilyl triflate to the mixture of starting compounds
(i.e., aldehyde, urea and b-dicarbonyl compound) in acetonitrile at ambient temperature. The corresponding products 106 were formed in 80–95% yields.88
Quinolines and Heterofused Pyridines
1R
R
O
C3F
2
3
hP
3FC
R
NH + 1R
OHChP + HN
)H = 2R(
)%28–65( a811
tE ,eM = 2R
rP-i ,teH ,rA = 1R
O
Other organosilicon compounds have also been used as
water scavengers in Biginelli reactions. For example, iodotrimethylsilane generated in situ from chlorotrimethylsilane and sodium iodide was successfully applied in the
condensation of aromatic, heterocyclic, aliphatic or a,bunsaturated aldehydes, urea and acetylacetone or ethyl
acetoacetate, leading to the formation of dihydropyrimidine-2(1H)-ones 106. The reaction was carried out for 30–
50 minutes and afforded compounds 106 in 82–98%
yields.87
5.3.2
R
.t.r ,FMD
R
2RO
Scheme 70
3
lCSMT
Scheme 69
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
NCeM ,cAO4HN
different diastereoselectivity (compound 118b) was observed when N,N¢-dimethyl(thio)urea was used instead of
the unsubstituted or monosubstituted derivatives. The
only exception was represented by 1,1,1-trifluoropentane2,5-dione, which afforded classical dihydropyrimidine
products 119 under these conditions (Scheme 69).86
4R
3736
REVIEW
3737
Organosilicon Compounds as Water Scavengers
In an analogous reaction, fused heterocyclic compounds
126 were obtained in 45–98% yields from o-aminothiophenecarbaldehydes 127a–c and creatinine in the
presence of bis(trimethylsilyl)acetamide (Scheme 72).93
the reaction of acetylacetone and urea that led to the
formation
of
1,2-dihydropyrimidin-2-ones
129
(Scheme 74).39
O
N
N
R
O
FMD ,lCSMT
O
O
h 21–6 ,.t.r
RHN
SMTO
eM
+
N2H
N
eM
N
SMTN
N
)%99( eM = R ,b921
)%67( H = R ,a921
N
R
2R
3R)O(CN
N
+
3R
1R
)%31–0( 231
2R
N
1R
lC)O(C3R
721
N
N
S
a621
eM
eM
S
N
N
2HN
N
S
N
N
c621
2R
OHC
N
1R
N3tE ,lCSMT 2HN
O
eM
2HN
N
b621
2HN
OHC
2HN
HN
1R
)%79–36( 031
OHC
2HN
131
OHC
S
S
Scheme 75
c721
b721
S
a721
Scheme 72
A chlorotrimethylsilane-induced dehydrative cyclization
of diamides 133 in the presence of N,N-dimethylethylamine (DMEA) afforded 3H-quinazolin-4-ones 134
(Scheme 76). The reaction appeared to be insensitive to
the nature of the acyl substituent (R3) and was also effective in the case of compounds containing OH and NH
groups.96
O
O
2
AEMD ,lCSMT
R
NH
O
N
h 07 ,C° 03 ,NCeM
3R
N
R
R
1
R
431
3R
NH
2
1
OSMD ,lCSMT
h 5–3 ,C° 09
OHC2HC4R
+
1R
N
331
2R
Scheme 76
4
3
R
1R
R
N
2
R
821
Scheme 73
5.3.3
R
3
Another approach to quinoline synthesis involved the
chlorotrimethylsilane-promoted cyclization addition of
enolizable aldehydes to arylimines, under an air atmosphere in dimethylsulfoxide, that afforded 2-arylquinolines 128 (Scheme 73). The clean and mild reaction
conditions, high yields of the products and simple workup protocol are attractive features of the procedure described above which thus enable a facile preparation of
the quinoline derivatives.94
Analogues of an alkaloid vasicinone 135a–c were obtained in quantitative yields by subsequent reduction of
the corresponding N-(2-azidobenzoyl)lactams 136 and iodotrimethylsilane-promoted reductive cyclization, with
iodotrimethylsilane acting both as reaction promoter and
as reducing reagent (Scheme 77).97
Pyrimidines and Quinazolines
In addition to the chlorotrimethylsilane-mediated Biginelli
reaction discussed in section 5.2, several examples of
other pyrimidine syntheses have been reported. In particular, Zav’yalov and Kulikova successfully applied the
chlorotrimethylsilane–N,N-dimethylformamide system in
5.3.4
Azoles
2-Substituted
2,3-dihydro-3-phenyl-1,3,4-thiadiazoles
137 were obtained in high yields from N¢-phenylthioformic hydrazide 138 and aldehydes by treatment with chlorotrimethylsilane (Scheme 78).98
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
3R)O(CHN
N
821
2HN
1R
+
h 2 ,C° 041
)%89( c621
)%89( b621
)%54( a621
Pyrimidine derivatives 130 were obtained in the reaction
of azadienes 131 and acyl chlorides in the presence of
chlorotrimethylsilane and triethylamine. N,N¢-Diacylazadienes 132 were also formed as by-products; nevertheless,
the use of chlorotrimethylsilane decreased the yield of 132
significantly (Scheme 75).95
1
2HN
2HN
2HN
Scheme 74
3738
REVIEW
D. M. Volochnyuk et al.
4R
O
N
O
3R
O
O
+ 1R
lCSMT
_
R
1
N
2R
O
1
R
N
2
O
)2HC(
N
n
R
1
IaN ,lCSMT
2R
N
n 2
) HC(
NCeM
4R
3R
4R
1R
N
3R
631
3 = n ,c531
2 = n ,b531
1 = n ,a531
141
2R
O 3N
SMT
341
R
N
3–1 = n
lC ,H = 2R
eM ,H = 1R
1R
N
+
2
R
HOOC
N
N
2
HOOC
Scheme 77
R
sic
)hP = 1R( 5:59 = sic/snart
)%87–06 ( 241
snart
N
1R
N
S
eMOOC2HC ,rA ,nB = 4R
tEOOC ,teH ,hP = 3R
teH ,hP ,eM = 2R
nB ,hP =
S
O
lCSMT
N
H
+
H
H
N
R
R
831
)%78( eM = R ,b731
)%69( hP = R ,a731
Scheme 80
Recently, it was shown that some endothiopeptides 139
were transformed into thiazoles 140 by treatment with a
chlorotrimethylsilane–sodium iodide system and microwave irradiation (Scheme 79).99
N-Aryl diamines, as well as diamines with a bulky substituent on the nitrogen, behaved poorly in the reaction: the
products were formed in 10–25% yields. Only aldehydes
that are sufficiently stable under reaction conditions (e.g.,
aromatic aldehydes) actually gave the desired products.
The target products (namely, benzoxazoles) were also not
formed in the case of o-aminophenols.102
R
O
N
)viuqe 2( lCSMT
1
R
h 2 ,C° 59 ,FMD
X
N
2HN
S
OHC1R +
HX
R
RN ,S = X
N
OeM
S
R
R
931
4R
rB
2HN
4
R
N
3RHN
5R
2HN
O
3
N
RHN
2HN
2HN
N
2HN
HS
N2H
N
3R
O
2-(Chloromethyl)indolizine-1-carbonitrile 144 was obtained from pyridin-2-ylacetonitrile and 1,3-dichloroacetone (Scheme 82). It is interesting to note that other
condensing reagents used did not allow for compound 144
to be obtained.103
NC
O
lCSMT
+
N
lC
lC
NC
N
441
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
2HN
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
O
Selected examples of the substrates are given
Benzo- and Heterofused Azoles
The chlorotrimethylsilane–N,N-dimethylformamide system has been applied successfully to the synthesis of
benzimidazoles, 3H-imidazo[4,5-b]pyridines, purines,
xanthines and benzothiazoles from the corresponding
(hetero)aromatic o-diamines or o-aminothiophenols and
aldehydes (Scheme 81). The reaction scope and limitations were also established. In the case of N-unsubstituted
phenylenediamines, diimines were obtained as by-products, resulting in lowered yields of the desired products.
N
5.3.5
Scheme 81
lC
O
The chlorotrimethylsilane-initiated [3+2]-cycloaddition
reaction of imines and oxazolones 141 was shown to be a
convenient method of obtaining highly substituted imidazolines 142. The first step of the reaction was the reversible N-silylation of 141 leading to the formation of ylide
143 (so-called ‘munchnone’), which acted as a 1,3-dipolar
compound in the cycloaddition (Scheme 80). The diastereoselectivity of the reaction was determined by steric interactions of the bulky silyl group in 143 and the Csubstituent of the imine, and led to preferential formation
of the trans-isomer. It should be noted that in the case of
R = Me or Bn instead of R = Ph, the stability of cationic
center is lowered, thus resulting in diminished stereoselectivity.100,101
2HN
WM
eMO
041
2
)%99–7(
R
R
N
H
IaN ,lCSMT
N
Scheme 79
Scheme 82
Other examples of chlorotrimethylsilane- and/or hexamethyldisilazane-promoted dehydrative cyclizations
leading to the formation of heterofused azoles are illustrated in Scheme 83.104,105
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
Scheme 78
REVIEW
3739
Organosilicon Compounds as Water Scavengers
HOOC
O
N
N
HOOC
lCSMT ,SDMH
NC
O
N
NC
4OS2)4HN(
N
O
N
,SDMH
2HN
O
H
N
eMO
O
OH
eMO
OH
O
H
O
H
eM
O
H
N
N
H
h 05 ,C° 041
O
H
N
N
2HN
O
h 63 ,xulfer ,+H
O
H
N
N
H
O
N
H
N
H
HOeM ,lCSMT
N
eM
N
N
OeM
h 1 ,C° 01
N
OeM
N
NC
O
NC
N
H
hPHN
HN
O
S
lCSMT
O
O
C° 001 ,FMD O
N
2R
1
841
R
O
1R
NH
+
2R
O
741
eMOC ,3RHNOC ,NC = GWE
eMO ,eM ,lC ,F ,H = 1R
O
O
HO
O
O
O
641
541
The first expedient method for the preparation of the compound 145 was reported in 1973,106 and this chromone derivative has been widely applied in heterocycle synthesis
since then.107 Nevertheless, the first example of using
chlorotrimethylsilane as a promoter of the recyclization of
3-formylchromones was reported only in 2004. Specifically, the reaction of 3-formylchromones 147 and electron-withdrawing-group-substituted acetamides, in the
presence of a chlorotrimethylsilane–N,N-dimethylformamide system, led to the formation of pyridone derivatives
148 as a result of a Guareschi–Thorpe condensation
(Scheme 85).108
GWE
Scheme 84
HO
The condensation of 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds is one of
the most widely used reactions in the synthesis of heterocycles. In many cases, these electrophiles possess several
non-equivalent reaction centers, thereby presenting a
regioselectivity problem. Hence, one of the major tasks in
this area is to find the substrates and the conditions that allow for single regioisomers to be obtained. 3-Formylchromone (145), a molecule which possesses three
electrophilic centers, is that type of substrate
(Scheme 84). The tendency of the chromone fragment to
undergo recyclization reactions allows one to consider
145 as a synthetic equivalent of 2-(2-hydroxybenzoyl)malonic aldehyde (146).
O
Recyclization of 3-Formylchromones
GWE
5.4
Scheme 85
In the chlorotrimethylsilane-promoted reaction of 3formylchromone and primary hetarylmethylamines,
(5-hetaryl-1H-pyrrol-3-yl)(2-hydroxyphenyl)methanones
149 were obtained in 68–91% yields (Scheme 86). With a
2:1 ratio of the reagents, fused chromonepyrroles 150
were formed in moderate yields. When secondary hetarylmethylamines were used as substrates in this reaction,
only pyrrole derivatives 149 were isolated in 65–99%
yields.
An analogous transformation was also observed in the
case of glycine derivatives 151 (Scheme 86).
The chlorotrimethylsilane-mediated pyrrole synthesis appeared to be also applicable to the fusion of the pyrrole
and the dihydroquinoxaline rings (compounds 152). However, in the case of prolinamide and N,N¢-dimethylglycinamide, imidazolinones 153 and 154 were obtained
(Scheme 87).109
Unexpected results were obtained in the reaction of 3formylchromone with aromatic amines. In many cases,
the target 3-(2-hydroxybenzoyl)quinolines 155 were synthesized in 35–87% yields, indicative of the amine acting
first as a C-nucleophile. However, in the case of aniline
derivatives possessing an electron-withdrawing group in
the meta-position, or any para-substituted anilines, the
fused chromenoquinolines 156 were formed in 39–67%
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
Scheme 83
3740
REVIEW
D. M. Volochnyuk et al.
HO
OH
O
O
O
O
)%19–86( 941
O
R +
lCSMT
541
O
R
O
2HN
C° 001 ,FMD
+
C° 001 ,FMD teH
N
O
O
RHN
lCSMT
teH
R
)%78–53( 551
N
O
N
O
2HN
lCSMT
teH
+
C° 001 ,FMD teH
2
O
O
O
O
O
O
)%46–45( 051
R
OH
)%76–93( 651
N
O
O
O
O
4)2HC(N ,2tEN ,2eMN
O
N
H
O
R
N
R
2R
1
O
OH
N
2HN
N
N
)%48( 351
NH
O
N
O
1R
O
251
O
2HN
C2OtE
S
,eMO ,HO = X
+
)%78–53( 751
N
2HN
151
R
R
O
2HN
C2OeM
O
O
N
H
R
R
N
O
O
2
NH
2HN
O
H
N
O
O
H
N
O
N
2HN
SeM
N
2HN
O
O
1
R
Scheme 89
Examples of amino heterocycles are given
H
eM N
H
N eM
eM O
N
O
N
C° 001 ,FMD
N
1R
HN
+
O
)%59–55( 851
HO
O
CN
N
H
N
CN
C2OtE
N
2HN
H
N
O
2HN
H
N
H
N
2HN
2R
2R
GWE
N
H
N
N N
N
2HN
N
H
N
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
Scheme 90
2HN
N
O
eM )%97( 451
Heteroaromatic amines lacking a carbon atom at the position a to the amino group showed NCN-binucleophilic behavior in the reaction with 3-formylchromone, thereby
affording pyrimidines 158 (Scheme 90). An analogous
H
N
O
An analogous transformation was observed in the case of
heteroaromatic amines capable of acting as CCN-binucleophiles, which thus led to the formation of fused pyridines 157 (Scheme 89).111
2HN
O
2HN
lCSMT
and no traces of 155 were detected, thus the amine was
acting first as an N-nucleophile (Scheme 88). In the case
of 3,4-disubstituted anilines, the products 155 or 156 were
obtained, depending on the electronic effects of the substituents.110
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
1R
Scheme 87
Examples of amino heterocycles are given
transformation was observed in the case of amidines
(Scheme 91).112
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
lCSMT
S
+
NH
C° 001 ,FMD
2HN
C° 001 ,FMD
2HN
O
Scheme 86
N
O
lCSMT
O
N
251
HO
O
X
X
Scheme 88
REVIEW
Organosilicon Compounds as Water Scavengers
3741
thus prevents any nucleophilic attack from taking place at
that site.116
HO
O
2
N
2
1
R
4)2HC(N
,hP =
R
O
1
NH
R
O
C° 001 ,FMD
lCSMT
O
2R
Scheme 91
The reaction of 3-formylchromones 147 and 1-aminoimidazoles 159 in the presence of chlorotrimethylsilane and N,N-dimethylformamide led to the formation
of imidazo[1,5-b]pyridazines 160 (Scheme 92). However,
1-aminobenzimidazole and 4-amino-1,2,4-triazoles did
not undergo an analogous heterocyclization under these
conditions; only hydrazone formation was observed.113
Conclusions
Organosilane compounds, in particular chlorotrimethylsilane, act as very efficient water scavengers in many common reactions of carbonyl compounds, including the
Knoevenagel condensation, imine and enamine syntheses,
the Mannich reaction, and heterocyclizations such as the
Biginelli and Friedlander reactions. The procedures developed for these syntheses are applicable to a vast range
of substrate molecules. Taking into account the simplicity
and generality of the methods based on organosilane-promoted condensations of carbonyl compounds, one should
expect further progress in this area with regard to other reactions for which the outcome depends on the use of a water scavenger.
1R
N
O
O
N
lCSMT
1
N
O
2HN
N
2
741
2R
HS = 2R ,b951
=
,a951
2HN
R )%69–18( 061
R
+
C° 001 ,FMD R
2
O
N
hP
OH
hP
Acknowledgment
The authors thank Prof. A. A. Tolmachev for the great encouragement and support.
Scheme 92
References
Finally, in the reaction of 3-formylchromone with compounds 161 (imidazole, benzimidazole,114 quinazolone
and thieno[2,3-d]pyrimidin-4(3H)-one115 derivatives),
fused polycyclic heterocycles 162 were obtained
(Scheme 93).
HO
O
O
N
O
R
lCSMT
N
C° 001 ,FMD
N
O
)%89–04( 261 R
161
N
H ,hPO ,hPOCHN2HC
,hPOCHN ,lC ,H2OC2HCS ,hP ,lylozaihtozneb-2
,hP2OS ,eM2OS ,2HNSC ,O4)2HC(NOC
,nBHNOC ,2HNOC ,)lyneiht-2(OC ,hPOC ,NC = X
O
H
N
X
O4)2HC(N ,eMN4)2HC(N ,HN4)2HC(N
,H2OC2)2HC( ,H2OC2HC ,lC ,H ,NC = X
HN
X
O
eMS
N
O
O
hP
HN
HN
+
N
HN
N
S
NC
N
S
H
N
Scheme 93
Selected examples of methylene components are given
It should be noted that the use of chlorotrimethylsilane in
most of the 3-formylchromone condensations discussed
above significantly improved the regioselectivity of the
reaction. This is presumably due to the preliminary silylation of the carbonyl group of the chromone ring, which
(1) (a) Claisen, L.; Claparède, A. Chem. Ber. 1881, 14, 2460.
(b) Fehnel, E. A. J. Org. Chem. 1966, 31, 2899. (c) Conard,
C. R.; Dolliver, M. A. Org. Synth. 1932, 12, 22. (d) Noland,
W. E. Org. Synth. 1961, 41, 67. (e) Kyriakides, L. P. J. Am.
Chem. Soc. 1914, 36, 530.
(2) (a) Newkomel, G. R.; Fishe, D. L. Org. Synth. 1970, 50,
102. (b) Cornell, J. H. Jr.; Gollis, M. H. Org. Synth. 1962,
42, 57. (c) Hünig, S.; Lücke, E.; Brenninger, W. Org. Synth.
1961, 41, 65. (d) Buckles, R. E.; Bremer, K. Org. Synth.
1953, 33, 70. (e) Billek, G. Org. Synth. 1963, 43, 49.
(f) Jessup, P. J.; Petty, C. B.; Roos, J.; Overman, L. E. Org.
Synth. 1980, 59, 1.
(3) (a) Ranu, B. C.; Jana, R. Eur. J. Org. Chem. 2006, 3767.
(b) Su, C.; Chen, Z.-C.; Zhen, Q.-G. Synthesis 2003, 555.
(c) Khan, F. A.; Dash, J.; Satapathy, R.; Upadhyay, S. K.
Tetrahedron Lett. 2004, 45, 3055. (d) Forbes, D. C.; Law,
A. M.; Morrison, D. W. Tetrahedron Lett. 2006, 47, 1699.
(4) (a) Deb, M. L.; Bhuyan, P. J. Tetrahedron Lett. 2005, 46,
6453. (b) Xing, C.; Li, X.; Zhu, S.; Zhao, J.; Zhu, S.
Tetrahedron Lett. 2006, 47, 4951. (c) Bartoli, G.; Beleggia,
R.; Giuli, S.; Giuliani, A.; Marcantoni, E.; Massaccesi, M.;
Paoletti, M. Tetrahedron Lett. 2006, 47, 6501. (d) Lai, G.;
Peng, J.; Li, J.; Qiu, H.; Jiang, J.; Jiang, K.; Shen, Y.
Tetrahedron Lett. 2006, 47, 6951.
(5) (a) Yadav, J. S.; Reddy, B. S. S.; Basak, A. K.; Visali, B.;
Narsaiah, A. V.; Nagaiah, K. Eur. J. Org. Chem. 2004, 546.
(b) Ebitani, K.; Motokura, K.; Mori, K.; Mizugaki, T.;
Kaneda, K. J. Org. Chem. 2006, 71, 5440.
(6) (a) Das, D. D.; Harlick, P. J. E.; Sayari, A. Catal. Commun.
2007, 8, 829. (b) Komura, K.; Kawamura, T.; Sugi, Y.
Catal. Commun. 2007, 8, 644. (c) Dong, F.; Li, Y. Q.; Dai,
R. F. Chin. Chem. Lett. 2007, 18, 266. (d) Climent, M. J.;
Corma, A.; Domínguez, I.; Iborra, S.; Sabater, M. J.; Sastre,
G. J. Catal. 2007, 246, 136. (e) Seki, T.; Onaka, M. J. Mol.
Catal. A: Chem. 2007, 263, 115. (f) Xin, X.; Guo, X.; Duan,
H.; Lin, Y.; Sun, H. Catal. Commun. 2007, 8, 115.
(g) Gawande, M. B.; Jayaram, R. V. Catal. Commun. 2006,
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
R
2HN
N
6
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
(14)
(15)
(16)
(17)
(18)
(19)
(20)
(21)
(22)
(23)
(24)
(25)
(26)
(27)
(28)
(29)
(30)
(31)
(32)
(33)
(34)
D. M. Volochnyuk et al.
7, 931. (h) Martins, L.; Bonagamba, T. J.; Azevedo, E. R.;
Bargiela, P.; Cardoso, D. Appl. Catal., A 2006, 312, 77.
(a) McNulty, J.; Steere, J. A.; Wolf, S. Tetrahedron Lett.
1998, 39, 8013. (b) Watson, B. T.; Christiansen, G. E.
Tetrahedron Lett. 1998, 39, 6087. (c) Draper, R. W.; Hu, B.;
Iyer, R. V.; Li, X.; Lu, Y.; Rahman, M.; Vater, E. J.
Tetrahedron 2000, 56, 1811. (d) Nakamura, M.; Endo, K.;
Nakamura, E. Org. Lett. 2005, 7, 3279. (e) Yanagisawa, A.;
Goudu, R.; Arai, T. Org. Lett. 2004, 6, 4281. (f) Bandini,
M.; Benaglia, M.; Sinisi, R.; Tommasi, S.; Umani-Ronchi,
A. Org. Lett. 2007, 9, 2151.
Dilman, A. D.; Ioffe, S. L. Chem. Rev. 2003, 103, 733.
(a) López, S. E.; Restrepo, J.; Salazar, J. J. Chem. Res. 2007,
497. (b) Hedrera, M. E.; Perillo, I. A. Trends Heterocycl.
Chem. 2002, 8, 105.
(a) Zav’yalov, S. I.; Dorofeeva, O. V.; Taganova, O. K. Izv.
Akad. Nauk SSSR, Ser. Khim. 1985, 495. (b) Zav’yalov, S.
I.; Dorofeeva, O. V.; Rumyantseva, E. E. Izv. Akad. Nauk
SSSR, Ser. Khim. 1989, 2351.
Zav’yalov, S. I.; Zavozin, A. G. Khim.-Farm. Zh. 1994, 28,
49.
Mukaiyama, T.; Wariishi, K.; Saito, Y.; Hayashi, M.;
Kobayashi, S. Chem. Lett. 1988, 17, 1101.
Ishai, E.; Shamai, S.; Feit, B.-A. J. Chem. Soc., Perkin
Trans. 1 2002, 434.
Iwasaka, N.; Mukaiyama, T. Chem. Lett. 1987, 16, 463.
Bender, A.; Guenther, D.; Wingen, R. Liebigs Ann. Chem.
1985, 3, 579.
Mukaiyama, T.; Ohno, T.; Han, J. S.; Kobayashi, S. Chem.
Lett. 1991, 20, 949.
Zhu, Y.; Pan, Y. Chem. Lett. 2004, 33, 668.
Kagawa, N.; Toyota, M.; Ihara, M. Aust. J. Chem. 2004, 57,
655.
Sabitha, G.; Reddy, G. S. K. K.; Reddy, K. B.; Yadav, J. S.
Synthesis 2004, 263.
Reisch, J.; Mester, Z. Monatsh. Chem. 1983, 114, 635.
Reisch, J.; Mester, Z. Arch. Pharm. (Weinheim, Ger.) 1985,
318, 459.
Ryabukhin, S. V.; Plaskon, A. S.; Volochnyuk, D. M.;
Pipko, S. E.; Shivanyuk, A. N.; Tolmachev, A. A. J. Comb.
Chem. 2007, 9, 1073.
(a) Ryabukhin, S. V.; Plaskon, A. S.; Tverdokhlebov, A. V.;
Tolmachev, A. A. Synth. Commun. 2004, 34, 1483.
(b) Ryabukhin, S. V.; Plaskon, A. S.; Volochnyuk, D. M.;
Tolmachev, A. A. Synthesis 2007, 3163.
Ryabukhin, S. V.; Plaskon, A. S.; Volochnyuk, D. M.;
Tolmachev, A. A. Synthesis 2007, 2872.
Tverdokhlebov, A. V.; Gorulya, A. P.; Tolmachev, A. A.;
Kostyuk, A. N.; Chernega, A. N.; Rusanov, E. B. Synthesis
2005, 2161.
Ryabukhin, S. V.; Plaskon, A. S.; Volochnyuk, D. M.;
Pipko, S. E.; Tolmachev, A. A. Synth. Commun. 2008, 38,
3032.
Sakai, T.; Miyata, K.; Tsuboi, S.; Utaka, M. Bull. Chem. Soc.
Jpn. 1989, 62, 4072.
Dräger, G.; Solodenko, W.; Messinger, J.; Schön, U.;
Kirschning, A. Tetrahedron Lett. 2002, 43, 1401.
Angeletti, E.; Canepa, C.; Martinetti, G.; Verturello, P.
Tetrahedron Lett. 1988, 29, 2261.
Schmidt, A. H.; Russ, M. Chem. Ber. 1981, 114, 1099.
Esteban, G.; Plumet, J. ARKIVOC 2007, (iv), 182.
Srivastava, N.; Kumar, A.; Dwivedy, I.; Ray, S. Synth.
Commun. 1997, 27, 2877.
Gutnov, A. V.; Abaev, V. T.; Butin, A. V.; Zavodnik, V. E.;
Kul’nevich, V. G. Khim. Geterotsikl. Soedin. 1996, 12, 162.
Zav’yalov, S. I.; Dorofeeva, O. F.; Rumyantseva, E. E.;
Zavozin, A. G. Khim.-Farm. Zh. 1995, 29, 58.
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
REVIEW
(35) Bellani, P.; Clavenna, G.; Sosio, A. Farmaco, Ed. Sci. 1984,
39, 846.
(36) Ohta, S.; Tsuno, N.; Maeda, K.; Nakamura, S.; Taguchi, N.;
Yamashita, M.; Kawasaki, I. Tetrahedron Lett. 2000, 41,
4623.
(37) Love, B. E.; Ren, J. J. Org. Chem. 1993, 58, 5556.
(38) Ryabukhin, S. V.; Plaskon, A. S.; Volochnyuk, D. M.;
Shivanyuk, A. N.; Tolmachev, A. A. J. Org. Chem. 2007, 72,
7417.
(39) Zav’yalov, S. I.; Kulikova, L. B. Khim.-Farm. Zh. 1992, 26,
88.
(40) Sisko, J.; Mellinger, M.; Sheldrake, P. W.; Baine, N. H.
Tetrahedron Lett. 1996, 37, 8113.
(41) Wynne, J. H.; Price, S. E.; Rorer, J. R.; Stalick, W. M. Synth.
Commun. 2003, 33, 341.
(42) Xu, D.; Ciszewski, L.; Li, T.; Repič, O.; Blacklock, T. J.
Tetrahedron Lett. 1998, 39, 1107.
(43) Ciszewski, L.; Xu, D.; Li, T.; Repič, O.; Blacklock, T. J.
Tetrahedron Lett. 2004, 45, 8091.
(44) Jain, N. F.; Panek, J. S. Tetrahedron Lett. 1997, 38, 1349.
(45) Panek, J. S.; Jain, N. F. J. Org. Chem. 2001, 66, 2747.
(46) Panek, J. S.; Jain, N. F. J. Org. Chem. 1998, 63, 4572.
(47) Dias, L. C.; Oliveira, L. G. Org. Lett. 2004, 6, 2587.
(48) Evans, D. A.; Bender, S. L.; Morris, J. J. Am. Chem. Soc.
1988, 88, 2506.
(49) Panek, J. S.; Beresis, R. T.; Celatka, C. A. J. Org. Chem.
1996, 61, 6494.
(50) Heydari, A.; Tavakol, H.; Aslanzadeh, S.; Azarnia, J.;
Ahmadi, N. Synthesis 2005, 627.
(51) Schroth, W.; Jahn, U.; Ströhl, D. Chem. Ber. 1994, 127,
2013.
(52) Jahn, U.; Schroth, W. Tetrahedron Lett. 1993, 34, 5863.
(53) Arend, M.; Risch, N. Synlett 1997, 974.
(54) Kobayashi, K.; Takanohashi, A.; Hashimoto, K.; Morikawa,
O.; Konishi, H. Tetrahedron 2006, 62, 3158.
(55) Saidi, M. R.; Azizi, N. Tetrahedron: Asymmetry 2002, 13,
2523.
(56) Heydari, A.; Mehrdad, M.; Tavakol, H. Synthesis 2003,
1962.
(57) Saidi, M. R.; Azizi, N. Synthesis 2002, 1347.
(58) Saidi, M. R.; Azizi, N. Tetrahedron Lett. 2001, 42, 8111.
(59) Azizi, N.; Saidi, M. R. Tetrahedron Lett. 2002, 43, 4305.
(60) Saidi, M. R.; Azizi, N.; Zali-Boinee, H. Tetrahedron 2001,
57, 6829.
(61) Naimi-Jamal, M. R.; Ipaktschi, J.; Saidi, M. R. Eur. J. Org.
Chem. 2000, 1735.
(62) Naimi-Jamal, M. R.; Mojtahedi, M. M.; Ipaktschi, J.; Saidi,
M. R. J. Chem. Soc., Perkin Trans. 1 1999, 3709.
(63) Saidi, M. R.; Khalaji, M. R.; Ipaktschi, J. J. Chem. Soc.,
Perkin Trans. 1 1997, 1983.
(64) Rochin, C.; Babot, O.; Dunogues, J.; Duboudin, F. Synthesis
1986, 228.
(65) Rochin, C.; Babot, O.; Dunogues, J.; Duboudin, F. Synthesis
1986, 667.
(66) Heaney, H.; Papageorgiou, G.; Wilkins, R. F. J. Chem. Soc.,
Chem. Commun. 1988, 1161.
(67) Heaney, H.; Papageorgiou, G.; Wilkins, R. F. Tetrahedron
1997, 53, 2941.
(68) Fairhurst, R. A.; Heaney, H.; Papageorgiou, G.; Wilkins, R.
F.; Eyley, S. C. Tetrahedron Lett. 1989, 30, 1433.
(69) Earle, M. J.; Fairhurst, R. A.; Heaney, H.; Papageorgiou, G.;
Wilkins, R. F. Tetrahedron Lett. 1990, 31, 4229.
(70) Heaney, H.; Papageorgiou, G. Tetrahedron 1996, 52, 3473.
(71) Brocke, C.; Brimble, M. A.; Lin, D. S.-H.; McLeod, M. D.
Synlett 2004, 2359.
(72) Brimble, M. A.; Brocke, C. Eur. J. Org. Chem. 2005, 2385.
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
3742
(73) Buckley, B. R.; Page, P. C. B.; Heaney, H.; Sampler, E. P.;
Carley, S.; Brocke, C.; Brimble, M. A. Tetrahedron 2005,
61, 5876.
(74) Halliday, J. I.; Chebib, M.; Turner, P.; McLeod, M. D. Org.
Lett. 2006, 8, 3399.
(75) Shipov, A. G.; Orlova, N. A.; Novikova, O. P.; Baukov, Yu.
I. Zh. Obshch. Khim. 1985, 55, 943.
(76) Shipov, A. G.; Orlova, N. A.; Kobzareva, V. P.;
Mozzhukhin, A. O.; Antipin, M. Yu.; Struchkov, Yu. T.;
Baukov, Yu. I. Zh. Obshch. Khim. 1993, 63, 371.
(77) Kantevari, S.; Bantu, R.; Nagarapu, L. ARKIVOC 2006,
(xvi), 136.
(78) Sabitha, G.; Reddy, K. B.; Reddy, G. S. K. K.; Fatima, N.;
Yadav, J. S. Synlett 2005, 2347.
(79) (a) Biginelli, P. Gazz. Chim. Ital. 1893, 23, 360. (b) Kappe,
C. O. Tetrahedron 1993, 49, 6937. (c) Kappe, C. O. Acc.
Chem. Res. 2000, 33, 879.
(80) Zav’yalov, S. I.; Kulikova, L. B. Khim.-Farm. Zh. 1992, 26,
116.
(81) Zhu, Y.; Pan, Y.; Huang, S. Synth. Commun. 2004, 34, 3167.
(82) Ryabukhin, S. V.; Plaskon, A. S.; Ostapchuk, E. N.;
Volochnyuk, D. M.; Tolmachev, A. A. Synthesis 2007, 417.
(83) Zhu, Y.; Huang, S.; Pan, Y. Eur. J. Org. Chem. 2005, 2354.
(84) Zhu, Y.; Pan, Y.; Huang, S. Heterocycles 2005, 65, 113.
(85) Ryabukhin, S. V.; Plaskon, A. S.; Ostapchuk, E. N.;
Volochnyuk, D. M.; Shishkin, O. V.; Shivanyuk, A. N.;
Tolmachev, A. A. Org. Lett. 2007, 9, 4215.
(86) Ryabukhin, S. V.; Plaskon, A. S.; Ostapchuk, E. N.;
Volochnyuk, D. M.; Shishkin, O. V.; Tolmachev, A. A.
J. Fluorine Chem. 2008, 129, 625.
(87) Sabitha, G.; Reddy, G. S. K. K.; Reddy, C. S.; Yadav, J. S.
Synlett 2003, 858.
(88) Bose, D. S.; Kumar, R. K.; Fatima, L. Synlett 2004, 279.
(89) Sabitha, G.; Reddy, G. S. K. K.; Reddy, C. S.; Yadav, J. S.
Tetrahedron Lett. 2003, 44, 4129.
(90) Ryabukhin, S. V.; Volochnyuk, D. M.; Plaskon, A. S.;
Naumchik, V. S.; Tolmachev, A. A. Synthesis 2007, 1214.
(91) Degtyarenko, A. S.; Tolmachev, A. A.; Volovenko, Yu. M.;
Tverdokhlebov, A. V. Synthesis 2007, 3891.
(92) Ryabukhin, S. V.; Volochnyuk, D. M.; Plaskon, A. S.;
Naumchik, V. S.; Pipko, S. E.; Tolmachev, A. A.
Heterocycles 2007, 71, 2397.
(93) Björk, M.; Grivas, S. J. Heterocycl. Chem. 2006, 43, 101.
(94) Geng, X.; Li, S.; Bian, X.; Xie, Z.; Wang, C. ARKIVOC
2008, (xiv), 50.
(95) Barluenga, J.; Pozo, C.; Olano, B. Synthesis 1996, 133.
(96) O’Mahony, D. J. R.; Krchňák, V. Tetrahedron Lett. 2002,
43, 939.
Organosilicon Compounds as Water Scavengers
3743
(97) Kamal, A.; Ramana, K. V.; Rao, M. V. J. Org. Chem. 2001,
66, 997.
(98) Yoshio, M.; Kazutada, K.; Akihiro, T.; Masakuni, Y.;
Toshihisa, M. Chem. Pharm. Bull. 1994, 42, 373.
(99) Kazmaier, U.; Ackermann, S. Org. Biomol. Chem. 2005, 3,
3184.
(100) Peddibhotla, S.; Jayakumar, S.; Tepe, J. J. Org. Lett. 2002,
4, 3533.
(101) Peddibhotla, S.; Tepe, J. J. Synthesis 2003, 1433.
(102) Ryabukhin, S. V.; Plaskon, A. S.; Volochnyuk, D. M.;
Tolmachev, A. A. Synthesis 2006, 3715.
(103) Tereschenko, A. D.; Sysoiev, D. A.; Tverdokhlebov, A. V.;
Tolmechev, A. A. Synthesis 2006, 349.
(104) Hayallah, A. M.; Sandoval-Ramirez, J.; Reith, U.; Schobert,
U.; Preiss, B.; Schumacher, B.; Daly, J. W.; Müller, C.
J. Med. Chem. 2002, 45, 1500.
(105) Ceballos, P. A.; Pérez, M.; Cuevas, C.; Francesch, A.;
Manzanares, I.; Echvarren, A. Eur. J. Org. Chem. 2006,
1926.
(106) Nohara, A.; Umetami, T.; Sanno, Y. Tetrahedron Lett. 1973,
14, 1995.
(107) (a) Ellis, G. P. In Heterocyclic Compounds, Vol. 35;
Weisberger, A., Ed.; Interscience: New York, 1977, 921.
(b) Ghosh, C. K. J. Heterocycl. Chem. 1983, 20, 1437.
(c) Sabitha, G. Aldrichimica Acta 1996, 29, 15. (d) Ghosh,
C. K.; Ghosh, C. Indian J. Chem., Sect. B: Org. Chem. Incl.
Med. Chem. 1997, 36, 968. (e) Ghosh, C. K. Heterocycles
2004, 63, 2875.
(108) Ryabukhin, S. V.; Plaskon, A. S.; Volochnyuk, D. M.;
Tolmachev, A. A. Synlett 2004, 2287.
(109) Plaskon, A. S.; Ryabukhin, S. V.; Volochnyuk, D. M.;
Shivanyuk, A. N.; Tolmachev, A. A. Tetrahedron 2008, 64,
5933.
(110) Plaskon, A. S.; Ryabukhin, S. V.; Volochnyuk, D. M.;
Gavrilenko, K. S.; Shivanyuk, A. N.; Tolmachev, A. A.
J. Org. Chem. 2008, 73, 6010.
(111) Ryabukhin, S. V.; Plaskon, A. S.; Volochnyuk, D. M.;
Tolmachev, A. A. Synthesis 2007, 1861.
(112) Ryabukhin, S. V.; Plaskon, A. S.; Volochnyuk, D. M.;
Pipko, S. E.; Tolmachev, A. A. Heterocycles 2008, 75, 583.
(113) Plaskon, A. S.; Ryabukhin, S. V.; Volochnyuk, D. M.;
Shivanyuk, A. N.; Tolmachev, A. A. Heterocycles 2008, 75,
1765.
(114) Ryabukhin, S. V.; Plaskon, A. S.; Volochnyuk, D. M.;
Tolmachev, A. A. Synthesis 2007, 3155.
(115) Plaskon, A. S.; Ryabukhin, S. V.; Volochnyuk, D. M.;
Tolmachev, A. A. Synthesis 2008, 1069.
(116) Iwasaki, H.; Kume, T.; Yamamoto, Y.; Akiba, K.
Heterocycles 1988, 27, 1599.
Synthesis 2009, No. 22, 3719–3743
© Thieme Stuttgart · New York
Downloaded by: University of Chicago. Copyrighted material.
REVIEW
Coments go here:
- Log in to post comments