| Literature DB >> 35382462 |
Sonja Fuchs1,2, Arumugam Jayaraman1,2, Ivo Krummenacher1,2, Laura Haley1,2, Marta Baštovanović1,2, Maximilian Fest1,2, Krzysztof Radacki1,2, Holger Helten1,2, Holger Braunschweig1,2.
Abstract
We report that the outcome of the tin-boron exchange reaction of a mixed thiophene-benzo-fused stannole with aryldibromoboranes is associated with the steric bulk of the aryl substituent of the borane reagent, leading to either boroles or large diboracycles as products. NMR spectroscopic studies indicate that the two products can reversibly interconvert in solution, and mechanistic density functional theory (DFT) calculations reveal boroles to be intermediates in the formation of the diboracyclic products. The addition of Lewis bases to the diboracycles leads to the corresponding borole adducts, demonstrating that they react as "masked" boroles. Additionally, the reaction of the title compounds with a series of organic azides affords complex heteropropellanes, formally 2 : 1 borole-azide adducts, that deviate from the usual BN aromatic compounds formed via nitrogen atom insertion into the boroles. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35382462 PMCID: PMC8905844 DOI: 10.1039/d1sc06908j
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Scheme 1Products of the tin–boron exchange reaction of fused stannoles with PhBCl2, according to He et al.[6]
Scheme 2Isolated products of the tin–boron exchange reaction between stannole 1 and various aryldibromoboranes (top), and dynamic equilibrium between the cyclic dimers 3a, b and the corresponding annulated boroles 2a, b in solution (bottom).
Fig. 1Molecular structure of 3a with thermal ellipsoids at 50% probability (left) and LUMO of 3a (isovalue = 0.05, right).
Scheme 3Lewis base adducts of 3a and molecular structure of 2a-pyr. Displacement ellipsoids are shown at the 50% probability level. The ellipsoids of the phenyl substituent, hydrogen atoms and solvent molecules are omitted for clarity. Selected bond lengths (Å) and angles (°): B1–N1 1.623(5), B1–C1 1.616(4); C1–B1–N1 109.46.
Fig. 2Computed mechanism for diboracycle formation via tin–boron exchange. Free energies in parentheses are in kcal mol−1. DFT-optimised structure with key distances of the transition state responsible for the borole-to-diboracycle interconversion (TSA[4-5]) is shown in the inset in the top right corner.
Fig. 3Reactivity of 3a towards a series of organic azides and molecular structure of 4a. Displacement ellipsoids are shown at the 50% probability level. Some ellipsoids and hydrogen atoms have been removed for clarity. Selected bond lengths (Å) and angles (°): B1–N18 1.456(2), B21–N20 1.617(2), N18–N19 1.339(2), N19–N20 1.277(2), N18–C16 1.491(2), C16–B21 1.661(2), C13–C16 1.592(2); N18–N19–N20 111.6(1).
Fig. 4Mechanism computed for azide adduct formation at the B3LYP-D3BJ/6-311g++**/SMD(C6H6)//B3LYP-D3BJ/6-31g** level of theory. Free energies in parentheses are in kcal mol−1.