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Organometallic Compounds

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Organometallic Compounds Chapter 15 Guest Lecturer: Prof. Jonathan L. Sessler Organometallic Compounds Organometallic compound: a compound that contains a carbon ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Organometallic Compounds


1
OrganometallicCompounds
  • Chapter 15

Guest Lecturer Prof. Jonathan L. Sessler
2
AWOL!
3
Organometallic Compounds
  • Organometallic compound a compound that contains
    a carbon-metal bond
  • In this chapter, we focus on organometallic
    compounds of Mg, Li, and Cu
  • these classes illustrate the usefulness of
    organometallics in modern synthetic organic
    chemistry
  • they illustrate how the use of organometallics
    can bring about transformations that cannot be
    accomplished in any other way
  • several more recent reactions of organometallic
    compounds are discussed in Chapter 24

4
Organometallic Reagents
  • The Key Concepts
  • Make a carbon negatively charged/polarlized so it
    is nucleophilic.
  • Reaction with electrophilic carbons can make
    carbon-carbon bonds.

This is a Big Deal!
5
The First Organometallic Reagents
Grignard Reagents
  • Discovered by Victor Grignard in 1900
  • Key factors are ethereal solvent and water-free
    conditions
  • Awarded Nobel Prize in 1912

Victor Grignard
Grignard, Victor , 18711935, French chemist. He
shared the 1912 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his
work in organic synthesis based on his discovery
(1900) of the Grignard Reagent. He taught at the
Univ. of Nancy (190919) and at the Univ. of
Lyons (from 1919 until the end of his career).
6
Grignard Reagents
  • Grignard reagent an organomagnesium compound
  • prepared by addition of an alkyl, aryl, or
    alkenyl (vinylic) halide to Mg metal in diethyl
    ether or THF

ether

1-Bromobutane
ether

Bromobenzene
7
An Alternative to Grignard Reagents are Alkyl
Lithiums
Both are prepared from alkyl, vinyl, and aryl
halides under anhydrous conditions
8
Grignard and Organolithium Reagents
  • Given the difference in electronegativity between
    carbon and magnesium (lithium), the C-Mg (C-Li)
    bond is polar covalent, with C?- and Mg? ( Li?
    )
  • Grignard and organolithium reagents behave like
    carbanions
  • Carbanion an anion in which carbon has an
    unshared pair of electrons and bears a negative
    charge

9
Grignard and Organolithium Reagents
  • Carbanion an anion in which carbon has an
    unshared pair of electrons and bears a negative
    charge
  • Carbanions are strong bases--they are easily
    quenched by even very weak acids (water,
    alcohols, amines, amides, carboxylic acids, even
    terminal alkynes). A limitation to utility!

10
Grignard and Organolithium Reagents
  • Carbanion an anion in which carbon has an
    unshared pair of electrons and bears a negative
    charge
  • Carbanions are strong bases--they are easily
    quenched by even very weak acids (water,
    alcohols, amines, carboxylic acids, amides, even
    terminal alkynes). A limitation to utility!

11
Limitations
  • Cant make Grignards with acidic or
    electro-philic functional groups present in the
    molecule
  • R2NH pKa 38-40
  • Terminal Alkynes pKa 25
  • ROH pKa 16-18
  • Carbonyls Nitros pKa 11-27

12
Grignard and Organolithium Reagents
  • Carbanion an anion in which carbon has an
    unshared pair of electrons and bears a negative
    charge
  • Carbanions are also great nucleophiles. This is
    the reason for their great utility!

13
  • Key Point Grignard and Organolithium Reagents
  • Great nucleophiles that add efficiently to
    electrophilic carbons, such as epoxides and
    carbonyl group of aldehydes, ketones and esters.
    However, their basicity can be a limitation!
  • Epoxides illustrate how many common organic
    functional groups contain electrophilic carbons

14
Grignard and Organolithium Reagents
  • Carbanions (nucleophiles) can react with
    electrophilic carbon centers in favorable cases.
    The net result is a carbon-carbon bond--a big
    deal!
  • Grignards and organolithium reagents react with
    many oxygen-containing electrophiles, but not
    with alkyl halides.
  • Well illustrate this with epoxides.
  • Recall, acidic protons will kill our reagents
    and/or wont allow them to be generated in the
    first place

15
Grignard reagents react productively with
formaldehyde to give primary alcohols
aldehydes to give secondary alcohols ketones
to give tertiary alcohols esters to give
tertiary alcohols CO2 to give acids
epoxides to give primary alcohols
The one we are choosing for the sake of initial
illustration
16
Epoxides The Example We Want to Stress
New C-C bond

d
d-
Considered Retrosyn- thetically
These is an extremely valuable reaction Worth
celebrating!
17
Prof. Iverson Would Normally Play His Trumpet
Here!
But, he is gone
18
Another Kind of Celebration!
  • Cost of Attending USC (per year) 50,000
  • Gymnastics, Tumbling and Cheerleading Lessons
    20,000
  • Keeping Hair Just The Right Shade of Blond
    10,000
  • Cheering for the Wrong Team Priceless!

19
Back to Work A Related Example Detailed
Mechanism Highlighting Retention of
Stereochemistry
New C-C bond
Key Points to Note Attack at least hindered
carbon Mechanism is SN2-like in initial
step Single enantiomeric product Chiral center
not affected by reaction Relief of ring strain
helps drive reaction H3O breaks up initial salt
20
Two More Examples of Additions to Epoxides

New C-C bond
New C-C bond
Note Stereochemistry at epoxide retained in
product
21
Key point Orientation Matters!
22
Gilman Reagents
  • Lithium diorganocopper reagents, known more
    commonly as Gilman reagents
  • prepared by treating an alkyl, aryl, or alkenyl
    lithium compound with Cu(I) iodide

23
Gilman Reagents
  • Coupling with organohalogen compounds
  • form new carbon-carbon bonds by coupling with
    alkyl and alkenyl chlorides, bromides, and
    iodides. (Note that this doesnt work with
    Grignard or organolithium reagents. THEY ARE TOO
    BASIC AND DO E2 ELIMINATIONS.)
  • Example

New C-C bond
24
Gilman Reagents
  • coupling with a vinylic halide is stereospecific
    the configuration of the carbon-carbon double
    bond is retained

New C-C bond
25
Gilman Reagents
  • A variation on the preparation of a Gilman
    reagent is to use a Grignard reagent with a
    catalytic amount of a copper(I) salt

26
Gilman Reagents
  • Reaction with epoxides
  • regioselective ring opening (attack at least
    hindered carbon)

New C-C bond
27
Interim Summary of Introduction to Organometallic
Reagents
  • Organolithium reagents and Grignard reagents are
    very basic but also great nucleophiles. They
    react with epoxides at the less hindered site to
    give a two-carbon chain extended alcohol. They
    do not couple with alkyl-, aryl-, or vinyl
    halides.
  • Gilman reagents react with epoxides as do
    organolithium reagents and Grignard reagents.
    However, they also add to alkyl-, aryl-, and
    vinyl halides to make new C-C bonds.

28
Feeling Lost?
Fortunately, Dr. Iverson will be back on Monday!
29
Back to Grignard Reagents
Meanwhile.
  • Addition of a Grignard reagent to formaldehyde
    followed by H3O gives a 1 alcohol
  • This sequence (mechanism) is general and
    important!

30
Grignard Reactions
These are valuable and important
reactions Please add to your card stock!
31
Grignard reagents react with esters
R'
R'
d
d

C

MgX
O


  • but species formed is unstable and dissociates
    under the reaction conditions to form a ketone

32
Grignard reagents react with esters
R'
R'

d
d

C


MgX
O



CH3OMgX
  • this ketone then goes on to react with a second
    mole of the Grignard reagent to give a tertiary
    alcohol



33
Example
O

(CH3)2CHCOCH3
2 CH3MgBr
1. diethyl ether 2. H3O
  • Two of the groups attached to the tertiary
    carbon come from the Grignard reagent

OH
(CH3)2CHCCH3
CH3
(73)
34
Practice

35
Practice

36
The Same Chemistry is seen With Organolithium
Reagents
O


CH
H2C
CHLi
1. diethyl ether 2. H3O

CHCH
CH2
(76)
OH
37
Practice

38
Organometallics are one of the classic ways of
activating CO2
39
End of Lecture. Any Questions?
40
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