Ammonia-borane, shown previously to react with carboxylic acids under reflux to form primary amides, reduces acids to alcohols at room temperature in the presence of catalytic TiCl 4 . The process, which is tolerant of a variety of potentially reactive functional groups, including N-protected amino acids, can be employed for the selective reduction of acids in the presence of amides, nitriles and, to some extent, esters. Aliphatic acids can be selectively reduced in the presence of aromatic acids.
Investigation of a variety of Lewis acids for the hydroboration-hydrolysis
(reduction) of ketones with amine-boranes has revealed that catalytic
(10 mol %) titanium tetrachloride (TiCl4) in diethyl ether
at room temperature immensely accelerates the reaction of ammonia
borane. The product alcohols are produced in good to excellent yields
within 30 min, even with ketones which typically requires 24 h or
longer to reduce under uncatalyzed conditions. Several potentially
reactive functionalities are tolerated, and substituted cycloalkanones
are reduced diastereoselectively to the thermodynamic product. A deuterium
labeling study and 11B NMR analysis of the reaction have
been performed to verify the proposed hydroboration mechanism.
Deoxyhalogenation of aryl aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, and esters has been achieved utilizing an appropriate metal halide Lewis acid acting as a carbonyl activator and halogen carrier in combination with borane-ammonia as the reductant. Selectivity is accomplished by matching the stability of the carbocation intermediate with the effective acidity of the Lewis acid. Substituents and substitution patterns significantly influence the requisite solvent/Lewis acid combination. Logical combinations of these factors have also been applied for the regioselective conversion of alcohols to alkyl halides.
In this study, the successful titanium tetrachloride-catalyzed reduction of aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, and nitriles with borane–ammonia was extended to the reduction (deoxygenation) of a variety of aromatic and aliphatic pri-, sec- and tert-carboxamides, by changing the stoichiometry of the catalyst and reductant. The corresponding amines were isolated in good to excellent yields, following a simple acid–base workup.
The reduction of a variety of aromatic and aliphatic nitriles, activated by a molar equivalent of titanium tetrachloride, has been achieved at room temperature using ammonia borane as a safe reductant. The corresponding methanamines were isolated in good to excellent yields following a simple acid-base workup.
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