posted on 2014-03-07, 00:00authored byMélanie Hamon, Niall Dickinson, Alice Devineau, David Bolien, Marie-José Tranchant, Catherine Taillier, Ivan Jabin, David
C. Harrowven, Richard J. Whitby, A. Ganesan, Vincent Dalla
Intramolecular and intermolecular
alkylations of carbocation precursors
of limited ionization ability, principally N,O-acetals, without the use of an exogenous reagent have
been developed. The reactions are carried out in 1,1,2,2-tetrachloroethane
(TCE) and take advantage of the ability of this solvent to continuously
release small amounts of HCl by thermolytic elimination. A study of
the reaction led to several improved protocols such as (1) preheated
TCE, (2) microwave-assisted reactions, and (3) flow or sealed-tube
conditions, which allow significant reaction rate enhancements and
made possible some challenging reactions such as the α-amidoalkylation
of ketones. Studies using flow chemistry confirmed not only that very
low concentrations of HCl generated from the solvent were responsible
for the reactivity but also that TCE had additional beneficial properties
in comparison to other chlorinated solvents such as dichloroethane.
The method can easily be extended to the alkylation using proelectrophiles
such as π-activated alcohols, which are normally unreactive
toward HCl catalysis. This work represents the first successful use
of HCl, the simplest strong Brønsted acid, as an efficient alkylation
catalyst.