Reductive Amination
Revisited: Reduction of Aldimines
with Trichlorosilane Catalyzed by DimethylformamideFunctional
Group Tolerance, Scope, and Limitations
Posted on 2021-11-29 - 12:33
Aldimines, generated in situ from
aliphatic, aromatic, and heteroaromatic
aldehydes and aliphatic, aromatic, and heteroaromatic primary or secondary
amines, can be reduced with trichlorosilane in the presence of dimethylformamide
(DMF) as an organocatalyst (≤10 mol %) in toluene or CH2Cl2 at room temperature. The reduction tolerates
ketone carbonyls, esters, amides, nitriles, sulfones, sulfonamides,
NO2, SF5, and CF3 groups, boronic
esters, azides, phosphine oxides, CC and CC bonds,
and ferrocenyl nucleus, but sulfoxides and N-oxides
are reduced. α,β-Unsaturated aldimines undergo 1,2-reduction
only, leaving the CC bond intact. N-Monoalkylation
of primary amines is attained with a 1:1 aldehyde to amine ratio,
whereas excess of the aldehyde (≥2:1) allows second alkylation,
giving rise to tertiary amines. Reductive N-alkylation
of α-amino acids proceeds without racemization; the resulting
products, containing a CC bond or N3 group, are
suitable for click chemistry. This reaction thus offers advantages
over the traditional methods (borohydride reduction or catalytic hydrogenation)
in terms of efficiency and chemoselectivity. Solubility of some of
the reacting partners appears to be the only limitation. The byproducts
generated by the workup with aqueous NaHCO3 (i.e., NaCl
and silica) are environmentally benign. As a greener alternative,
DMA can be employed as a catalyst instead of DMF.
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Popov, Kirill
K.; Campbell, Joanna L. P.; Kysilka, Ondřej; Hošek, Jan; Davies, Christopher D.; Pour, Milan; et al. (2021). Reductive Amination
Revisited: Reduction of Aldimines
with Trichlorosilane Catalyzed by DimethylformamideFunctional
Group Tolerance, Scope, and Limitations. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.joc.1c01561