H+, CH3+, and R3Si+ Carborane Reagents: When Triflates Fail

Reed, CA

HERO ID

1001836

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2010

Language

English

PMID

19736934

HERO ID 1001836
In Press No
Year 2010
Title H+, CH3+, and R3Si+ Carborane Reagents: When Triflates Fail
Authors Reed, CA
Journal Accounts of Chemical Research
Volume 43
Issue 1
Page Numbers 121-128
Abstract For decades, triflic add, methyl triflate, and trialkylsilyl triflate reagents have served synthetic chemistry well as clean, strong electrophilic sources of H+, CH3+, and R3Si+, respectively. However, a number of weakly basic substrates are unreactive toward these reagents. In addition, triflate anion can express undesired nucleophilicity toward electrophilically activated substrates. s Account, we describe methods that replace triflate-based electrophilic reagents with carborane reagents. Using carborane anions of type CHB11R5X6- (R = H, Me, X; X = Br, Cl), members of a class of notably inert, weakly nucleophilic anions, significantly increases the electrophilicity of these reagents and shuts down subsequent nucleophilic chemistry of the anion. Thus, H(carborane) acids cleanly protonate benzene, phosphabenzene, C-60, etc., while triflic acid does not. Similarly, CH3(carborane) reagents can methylate substrates that are inert to boiling neat methyl triflate, including benzene, phosphabenzenes, phosphazenes, and the pentamethylhydrazinium ion, which forms the dipositive ethane analogue, Me6N22+. Methyl carboranes are also surprisingly effective in abstracting hydride from simple alkanes to give isolable carbocation salts, e.g., t-butyl cation. ylsilyl carborane reagents, R3Si(carborane), abstract halides from substrates to produce cations of unprecedented reactivity. For example, fluoride is extracted from freons to form carbocations; chloride is extracted from IrCl(CO)(PPh3)(2) to form a coordinatively unsaturated iridium cation that undergoes oxidative addition with chlorobenzene at room temperature; and silylation of cyclo-N3P3Cl6 produces a catalyst for the polymerization of phosphazenes that functions at room temperature. Although currently too expensive for widespread use, carborane reagents are nevertheless of considerable interest as specialty reagents for making reactive cations and catalysts.
Doi 10.1021/ar900159e
Pmid 19736934
Wosid WOS:000274289400013
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Is Qa No