Accessing unusual heterocycles: ring expansion of benzoborirenes by formal cycloaddition reactions.
Marvin SindlingerMarkus StröbeleJörg GrunenbergHolger F BettingerPublished in: Chemical science (2023)
Benzoborirenes are a very rare class of strained boron heterobicyclic systems. In this study a kinetically stabilized benzoborirene 1 is shown to react with multiple bonds of trimethylphosphine oxide, acetaldehyde, and tert -butyl isonitrile. The (2 + 2) cycloaddition product with trimethylphosphine oxide, benzo[ c ][1,2,5]oxaphosphaborole, has a long apical PO bond (194.0 pm) that must be considered on the border line between ionic and covalent according to the natural bond orbital, quantum theory of atoms in molecules, and compliance matrix approaches to the description of chemical bonding. The coordination compound between the benzoborirene and phosphine oxide was observed by NMR spectroscopy at 213 K. The Lewis acidity of 1 is similar to that of B(OCH 2 CF 3 ) 3 and B(C 6 F 5 ) 3 based on the 31 P{ 1 H} NMR chemical shift of the Lewis acid base complexes with trimethylphosphine oxide at 213 K. Benzoboriene 1 does not react with acetone, but forms a (2 + 2) cycloaddition product, an oxaborole, with acetaldehyde. In contrast, it undergoes a double (2 + 1) reaction with tert -butyl isonitrile to yield a boro-indane derivative under mild conditions. The observed reactivity of 1 is in agreement with computational analyses of the respective potential energy surfaces.
Keyphrases
- magnetic resonance
- high resolution
- cystic fibrosis
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- solid state
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- heavy metals
- escherichia coli
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- water soluble
- risk assessment
- quantum dots
- polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
- human health
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- oxide nanoparticles
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- candida albicans