z-logo
Premium
Cyclic Iminoboranes: Analogues of Cycloalkynes
Author(s) -
Münster Jochen,
Paetzold Peter,
Schröder Ernst,
Schwan Heinrich,
von BennigsenMackiewicz Theo
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
zeitschrift für anorganische und allgemeine chemie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.354
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 1521-3749
pISSN - 0044-2313
DOI - 10.1002/zaac.200400334
Subject(s) - ring (chemistry) , thermal decomposition , chemistry , toluene , trimethylsilyl , decomposition , medicinal chemistry , boiling , stereochemistry , organic chemistry
1‐Azido‐ and 1‐[trimethylsilyl(trimethylsilyloxy)]boracycloalkanes, (‐Y‐BX‐) [X = N 3 ( 2 ), N(OSiMe 3 )SiMe 3 ( 3 ), Y = alkanediyl], were synthesized from the corresponding chloroboranes [X = Cl ( 1 )]. The following alkanediyl ring fragments were considered: Y = ‐CH 2 ‐CHMe‐CH 2 ‐CH 2 ‐ ( a ), 1, 5‐cyclooctanediyl ( b ), ‐(CH 2 ) 6 ‐ ( c ), ‐(CH 2 ) 7 ‐ ( d ), ‐CMe 2 ‐(CH 2 ) 6 ‐ ( e ), ‐C(‐CMe 2 ‐CH 2 ‐)‐(CH 2 ) 6 ‐ ( f ). The thermal elimination of N 2 (from 2 ) or (SiMe 3 ) 2 O (from 3 ) is accompanied by the migration of one of the two alkanediyl ends from boron to nitrogen under ring expansion to give the cyclic iminoboranes 4 . Formed in solution, the iminoboranes react immediately with undecomposed starting material 2 or 3 under formation of the products 5 or 6 by azidoboration or aminoboration, respectively, of the BN multiple bond. The temperature for the decomposition of 2 depends on the ring size: the five‐membered ring compound 2a and the bicyclic six‐membered ring compound 2b decompose beneath 0 °C, the seven‐ and eight‐membered ring compounds 2c and 2d in boiling hexane and toluene, respectively, whereas the eight‐membered ring compounds 2e and 2f are decomposed in solution above 100 °C so slowly that only unidentified polymers are found. The boranes 3a and 3b , stable at room temperature, afford a temperature of 80 °C for decomposition in solution. The azidoboranes 2c ‐ f can be transported into the gas‐phase without decomposition and can be thermolyzed there at 270‐285 °C. The cyclic iminoboranes 4c ‐ e , formed in the hot tube, were condensed at ‐196 °C, but thereafter not characterized, because they either cyclotrimerized ( 4c , d ) or cyclodimerized ( 4e , e′ ; two isomers depending on which end of the 1, 1‐dimethylheptamethylene unit migrates) beneath ‐60 °C under formation of the corresponding borazines 10c , d or of the diazadiboretidine isomer mixture 9e , e′ , respectively; the spirocyclic borane 2f gives a mixture of unidentified products on gas‐phase thermolysis. The iminoboranes 4e , e′ can be trapped by ethyloboration with BEt 3 giving the products 8e , e′ . The acyclic azidoborane R(Me)BN 3 ( 2g ; R = 1‐methylcycloheptyl), formed after the ring‐contracting rearrangement of a boracyclooctane derivative, gives the isolated and characterized mixture of the acyclic iminoboranes MeB≡NR ( 4g ) and RB≡NMe ( 4g′ ) upon gas‐phase thermolysis; the stabilization of 4g , g′ gives the Dewar borazines 11g and 11g′ .

This content is not available in your region!

Continue researching here.

Having issues? You can contact us here
Accelerating Research

Address

John Eccles House
Robert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom