C O M M U N I C A T I O N S
Acknowledgment. We thank DFG (SFB 623) for financial
support.
References
(1) (a) Chem. ReV. Special Issue on “Recoverable Catalysts and Reagents”,
Gladysz, J. A., Ed. 2002, 102, No. 10. (b) Chiral Catalyst Immobilization
and Recycling; DeVos, D. E., Vankelecom, I. F. J., Jacobs, P. A., Eds.;
Wiley, VCH: Weinheim, 2000.
(2) (a) Merckle, C.; Blu¨mel, J. AdV. Synth. Catal. 2003, 345, 584. (b) Merckle,
C.; Blu¨mel, J. Top. Catal. 2005, 34, 5. (c) Reinhard, S.; Sˇoba, P.;
Rominger, F.; Blu¨mel, J. AdV. Synth. Catal. 2003, 345, 589. (d) Reinhard,
S.; Behringer, K. D.; Blu¨mel, J. New J. Chem. 2003, 27, 776.
(3) For some representative examples from other groups, see: (a) Gao, H.;
Angelici, R. J. Organometallics 1999, 18, 989. (b) Lu, Z.; Lindner, E.;
Mayer, H. A. Chem. ReV. 2002, 102, 3543. (c) Gao, H.; Angelici, R. J. J.
Am. Chem. Soc. 1997, 119, 6937. (d) McMorn, P.; Hutchings, G. J. Chem.
Soc. ReV. 2004, 33, 108.
(4) (a) Fetouaki, R.; Seifert, A.; Bogza, M.; Oeser, T.; Blu¨mel, J. Inorg. Chim.
Acta 2006, 359, 4865. (b) Piestert, F.; Fetouaki, R.; Bogza, M.; Oeser,
T.; Blu¨mel, J. Chem. Commun. 2005, 1481. (c) Bogza, M.; Oeser, T.;
Blu¨mel, J. J. Organomet. Chem. 2005, 690, 3383.
(5) (a) Blu¨mel, J. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1995, 117, 2112. (b) Behringer, K. D.;
Blu¨mel, J. J. Liq. Chromatogr. 1996, 19, 2753.
-
Figure 3. 31P CP/MAS NMR spectra of [1a(II)Et2]2+‚2BF4 (top trace),
1a(II)(AuCl)2 (middle), and 1a(AuCl)4 (bottom). *rotational sidebands.
(6) Representative syntheses and data: (a) 1d: 2 mL of a 1.6 M solution of
nBuLi (3.220 mmol) in hexane was added dropwise to a solution of 256
mg (0.402 mmol) of C(p-C6H4Br)47 in 150 mL of ether at -78 °C. Then,
the mixture was brought to ambient temperature over 2.5 h, during which
time a white suspension formed. After the mixture was cooled to -78
°C, ClPtBu2 (0.61 mL, 3.220 mmol) was added, and the mixture was
slowly warmed to room temperature. After the mixture was stirred
overnight and the solids were filtered off, the solvent was removed in
vacuo. 1d could be obtained as a colorless powder and purified by
recrystallization from toluene/ethanol (1:5) (186 mg, 51.6% yield). 1H
However, using longer contact times of up to 12 ms increases the
triarylphosphine signal intensity as expected,11 with a 3:2 ratio of
ethylphosphonium to phosphine signal intensity. Regarding the 31
P
CP/MAS signal of polycrystalline 5 with its large CSA and small
residual line width (Figure 2, top), it is also clear that the spectrum
of 5(I) cannot result from a composition of species bound by two
phosphonium groups and residual polycrystalline material. The latter
would furthermore have been washed off with the solvent.
The phosphonium salts presented here are bound irreversibly to
the support as long as the latter is not dissolved. Even the usual
ion exchange methods, e.g., treating the modified silica with acids,
bases, or other soluble counterions, did not remove even traces of
phosphine species, as established by 31P NMR of the supernatant
solution. After these treatments the spectra in Figures 1 and 2 were
unchanged. Hence, the phosphonium linkages are even more robust
with respect to leaching12a or decomposition12b than ethoxysilane
linkers.12a Siloxide anions seem to be the most firmly bound
counterions, and consequently phosphonium salts such as [Ph3PEt]-
Br can be irreversibly bound to silica by simply stirring the latter
with a solution of the phosphonium salt in toluene.
Finally, we sought to demonstrate that the remaining phosphine
groups of the immobilized linkers could be derivatized. Accordingly,
1a(II) was treated with [Et3O]BF4 in ether at ambient temperature.
The 31P CP/MAS (Figure 3, top) showed only a single signal, con-
sistent with the formation of the surface-bound tetraphosphonium
cation [1a(II)Et2]2+‚2BF4-. Complexation of 1a(I) using AuCl-
(THT) cleanly gave 1a(I)(AuCl)3, as evidenced by the disappear-
ance of the phosphine resonance in the 31P CP/MAS spectrum, and
the appearance of a new signal, comparable to the one of the poly-
crystalline 1a(AuCl)4 (Figure 3, bottom) with respect to the chemi-
cal shift and shift anisotropy at 32.2 ppm (Figure 3, middle). These
results show that the immobilized linker is rather robust and that
the remaining phosphine groups can be derivatized in a variety of
ways.
3
3
NMR (C6D6): δ ) 7.64 (dd, J(H-H) ) 8.2 Hz, J(P-H) ) 6.0 Hz, 8H;
PCCH), 7.38 (d, 3J(H-H) ) 8.2 Hz, 8H; PCCHCH), 1.20 (d, 3J(P-H) )
11.4 Hz, 72H; CH3) ppm; 13C NMR (C6D6): δ ) 136.04 (d, 2J(P-C) )
23.0 Hz; PCCH), 135.47 (d, 1J(P-C) ) 25.2 Hz; PCCH), 130.29 (d, 3J(P-
C) ) 8.2 Hz; PCCHCH), 147.09 (s, PCCHCHC), 65.33 (s, (C6H4)4C),
31.69 (d, 1J(P-C) ) 23.2 Hz; CCH3), 30.36 (d, 2J(P-C) ) 14.9 Hz; CH3)
ppm; 31P NMR (C6D6, 121.5 MHz): δ ) 26.42 ppm. HR-MS (FAB+):
[M]+ (100.0%) 897.2048 (calcd. 897.2037). (b) 2b: A 1.6 M solution of
nBuLi (0.77 mL, 1.23 mmol) in hexane was added dropwise to 100 mg
(0.15 mmol) of Si(p-C6H4Br)7a in 70 mL of ether at -78 °C. The solution
was warmed up to ambient temperature in the course of 2.5 h. Then, it
was cooled down to -78 °C, and 0.16 mL (1.84 mmol) of ClPEt2 was
added. After having been warmed to room temperature and stirred
overnight the solvents were removed in vacuo, and the product was
extracted with CH2Cl2. 2b (71 mg, 0.1 mmol) was obtained as a colorless
waxy material (mp 72 °C) after removal of the solvent, corresponding to
a yield of 66.7%. 1H NMR (C6D6): δ ) 7.69 (dd, 3J(H-H) ) 8.0 Hz,
3
3
4J(P-H) ) 0.9 Hz, 8H; PCCHCH), 7.45 (dd, J(H-H) ) 7.9 Hz, J(P-H)
) 6.6 Hz, 8H; PCCH), 1.51 (m, 16H; PCH2), 0.97 (t, 3J(H-H) ) 7.6 Hz,
12H; CH3), 0.93 (t, 3J(H-H) ) 7.6 Hz, 12H; CH3) ppm; 13C NMR
(C6D6): δ ) 141.84 (d, 1J(P-C) ) 10.4 Hz; PCCH), 136.68 (d, 3J(P-C)
) 5.8 Hz; PCCHCH), 134.51 (s, SiC), 132.05 (d, 2J(P-C) ) 17.4 Hz;
PCCH), 20.11 (d, 1J(P-C) ) 12.4 Hz; PCH2), 10.06 (d, 2J(P-C) ) 14.1
Hz; CH3) ppm; 31P NMR (C6D6, 121.5 MHz): δ ) -16.17 ppm; 29Si
NMR (C6D6, 99.4 MHz): δ ) -14.9 ppm. HR-MS (FAB+): [M]+
(41.9%) 688.3041 (calcd. 688.3102), [M-Et]+ (39.6%) 659.2729 (calcd.
659.2711), [M-PEt2]+ (11.9%) 599.2458 (calcd. 599.2582). (c) Sn(p-
C6H4Br)4: 1,4-Dibromobenzene (5.89 g, 24.97 mmol) was dissolved in
60 mL of ether and cooled to -15 °C. Then 15.6 mL of a 1.6 M solution
of nBuLi (24.97 mmol) in hexane was added dropwise. After having been
stirred for 15 min the reaction mixture was cooled to -78 °C, and 0.73
mL (6.25 mmol) of SnCl4 was added dropwise. After the mixture was
stirred for 12 h at ambient temperature, 20 mL of 1 M HCl was added,
and the product was extracted with ether. The organic phase was washed
with H2O and dried with MgSO4. Sn(p-C6H4Br)4 was obtained after
filtration, removal of the solvent in vacuo, and recrystallization with CHCl3
as a colorless crystalline powder in 89.0% yield (4.12 g, 5.56 mmol). mp
214 °C. 1H NMR (CDCl3): δ ) 7.56 (d, 3J(H-H) ) 8.1 Hz, 4J(119/7Sn-H)
) 12.1/7.6 Hz, 8H; SnCCHCH), 7.39 (d, 3J(H-H) ) 8.1 Hz, 3J(119/7Sn-
H) ) 47.6/45.7 Hz, 8H; SnCCH); 13C NMR (CDCl3): δ ) 138.29
(2J(119/7Sn-C) ) 42.1/40.3 Hz; SnCCH), 135.01 (1J(119/7Sn-C) ) 541.8/
517.8; SnC), 132.09 (3J(119/7Sn-C) ) 54.8/53.3 Hz; BrCCH), 124.76
(4J(119/7Sn-C) ) 14.4 Hz; BrC); 119Sn NMR (CDCl3, 186.5 MHz): δ )
-118.58 ppm. HR-MS (FAB+): [M]+ (55.9%) 739.6893 (calcd. 739.7007),
[M-Br]+ (29.8%) 660.7740 (calcd. 660.7824).
In conclusion, we have demonstrated that di- and tetraphosphines
with rigid backbones can be easily synthesized and immobilized
irreversibly via an ionic bond as phosphonium salts ad libitum with
one or two binding sites. This way of binding does not require an
intramolecular ethoxysilane functionality, making major synthesis
and purification efforts obsolete. Depending on the phosphine type
and the immobilization procedure chosen, one, two, or three free
phosphine groups per molecule remain. These can be used for
example for coordinating catalysts, which we will explore in more
detail in the future.
(7) (a) Fournier, J.-H.; Wang, X.; Wuest, J. D. Can. J. Chem. 2003, 81, 376.
(b) Rathore, R.; Burns, C. L.; Guzei, I. A. J. Org. Chem. 2004, 69, 1524.
(8) (a) Baldwin, R. A.; Cheng, M. T. J. Org. Chem. 1967, 32, 1572. (b)
Behringer, K. D.; Blu¨mel, J. Inorg. Chem. 1996, 35, 1814.
(9) (a) Blu¨mel, J. Inorg. Chem. 1994, 33, 5050. (b) Sommer, J.; Yang, Y.;
Rambow, D.; Blu¨mel, J. Inorg. Chem. 2004, 43, 7561.
(10) Any preconditioning of the silica or alumina used is not necessary, but
the dryness of the support influences the surface coverage.9
(11) Reinhard, S.; Blu¨mel, J. Magn. Reson. Chem. 2003, 41, 406.
(12) (a) Merckle, C.; Blu¨mel, J. Chem. Mater. 2001, 13, 3617. (b) Posset, T.;
Rominger, F.; Blu¨mel, J. Chem. Mater. 2005, 17, 586.
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J. AM. CHEM. SOC. VOL. 130, NO. 12, 2008 3773