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Catalyst-free diboration and silaboration of alkenes and alkynes using bis(9-heterofluorenyl)s.

Jannik GilmerTimo TrageserLuis ČaićAlexander V VirovetsMichael BolteHans-Wolfram LernerFelipe FantuzziMatthias Wagner
Published in: Chemical science (2023)
Diboration and silaboration reactions are prominent tools to introduce valuable functional groups into organic substrates. To date, most diboranes(4) and silylboranes used for this purpose are electronically and/or kinetically stabilized and require activation by a catalyst. We show here that the tetraaryl (μ-hydrido)diborane(4) anion [3] - and the silyl (hydrido)borate ([4] - )/Me 3 SiBr system react spontaneously with the archetypal olefin ethylene in the absence of a catalyst. The actual active species in both cases are the valence isoelectronic intermediates [FluB-B(H)Flu] - ([1] - ) and FluB-Si(H)Flu (2), which consist of two 9-heterofluorenyl halves that get attached to the 1 and 2 positions of ethylene. At room temperature, [1] - is present in a dynamic equilibrium with its isolable isomer [3] - , while 2 has to be released in situ at low temperatures by H - abstraction from [4] - . Quantum-chemical calculations show qualitatively identical reaction mechanisms for [1] - and 2. Since the reactions start with π coordination of the ethylene molecule to a vacant B(p z ) orbital, the high Lewis acidity and low steric hindrance of the 9-borafluorenyl fragments are the keys to success. As the reaction proceeds, back-donation from the B-E bond into the ethylene π* orbital becomes increasingly important (E = B, Si). The scope of the reactions has been extended to t Bu(H)C[double bond, length as m-dash]CH 2 and t BuC[triple bond, length as m-dash]CH on the one hand and FluB-Si(Cl)Flu as well as FluB-Si(Cl)Ph 2 on the other.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • ionic liquid
  • molecular dynamics
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • density functional theory
  • highly efficient