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Electrophilic Alkylations of Vinylsilanes: A Comparison of α‐ and β‐Silyl Effects
Author(s) -
Laub Hans A.,
Mayr Herbert
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
chemistry – a european journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.687
H-Index - 242
eISSN - 1521-3765
pISSN - 0947-6539
DOI - 10.1002/chem.201303215
Subject(s) - chemistry , electrophile , nucleophile , silylation , carbocation , medicinal chemistry , vinylsilane , propene , trimethylsilyl , leaving group , organic chemistry , catalysis
Abstract Kinetics of the reactions of benzhydrylium ions (Aryl 2 CH + ) with the vinylsilanes H 2 CC(CH 3 )(SiR 3 ), H 2 CC(Ph)(SiR 3 ), and ( E )‐PhCHCHSiMe 3 have been measured photometrically in dichloromethane solution at 20 °C. All reactions follow second‐order kinetics, and the second‐order rate constants correlate linearly with the electrophilicity parameters E of the benzhydrylium ions, thus allowing us to include vinylsilanes in the benzhydrylium‐based nucleophilicity scale. The vinylsilane H 2 CC(CH 3 )(SiMe 3 ), which is attacked by electrophiles at the CH 2 group, reacts one order of magnitude faster than propene, indicating that α‐silyl‐stabilization of the intermediate carbenium ion is significantly weaker than α‐methyl stabilization because H 2 CC(CH 3 ) 2 is 10 3 times more reactive than propene. trans ‐β‐(Trimethylsilyl)styrene, which is attacked by electrophiles at the silylated position, is even somewhat less reactive than styrene, showing that the hyperconjugative stabilization of the developing carbocation by the β‐silyl effect is not yet effective in the transition state. As a result, replacement of vinylic hydrogen atoms by SiMe 3 groups affect the nucleophilic reactivities of the corresponding CC bonds only slightly, and vinylsilanes are significantly less nucleophilic than structurally related allylsilanes.