1252793-70-6Relevant articles and documents
Cobalt-mediated linear 2:1 Co-oligomerization of alkynes with enol ethers to give 1-alkoxy-1,3,5-trienes: A missing mode of reactivity
Lebuf, David,Iannazzo, Laura,Geny, Anais,Malacria, Max,Peter C Vollhardt,Aubert, Corinne,Gandon, Vincent
experimental part, p. 8904 - 8913 (2010/10/21)
A variety of 1,6-heptadiynes and certain borylalkynes co-oligomerize with enol ethers in the presence of [CpCo(C2H4)2] (Cp = cyclopentadienyl) to furnish the hitherto elusive acyclic 2:1 products, 1,3,5-trien-1-ol ethers, in preference to or in competition with the alternative pathway that leads to the standard [2+2 + 2] cycloadducts, 5-alkoxy-1,3- cyclohexadienes. Minor variations, such as lengthening the diyne tether, cause reversion to the standard mechanism. The trienes, including synthetically potent borylated derivatives, are generated with excellent levels of chemo-, regio-, and diastereoselectivity, and are obtained directly by decomplexation of the crude mixtures during chromatography. The cyclohexadienes are isolated as the corresponding dehydroalkoxylated arenes. In one example, even ethene functions as a linear cotrimerization partner. The alkoxytrienes are thermally labile with respect to 6πelectrocyclization-elimination to give the same arenes that are the products of cycloaddition. The latter, regardless of the mechanism of their formation, can be viewed as the result of a formal [2+2+2] cyclization of the starting alkynes with acetylene. One-pot conditions for the exclusive formation of arenes are developed. DFT computations indicate that cyclohexadiene and triene formation share a common intermediate, a cobaltacycloheptadiene, from which reductive elimination and β-hydride elimination compete.