Exploiting Synthetic and Structural Synergism in Alkali-Metal-Mediated Organotransitionmetallation (AMMO)

Lead Research Organisation: University of Strathclyde
Department Name: Pure and Applied Chemistry

Abstract

The metallation reaction, where hydrogen is exchanged for a metal, is one of the most fundamental and important chemical transformations, being practised everyday in academic and industrial laboratories across the world. It is particularly useful in the manufacture of fine chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and polymers. Usually the metal employed in these reactions is lithium because of its high polarity and high reactivity. To attach a transition metal to carbon (aromatic) frameworks one would normally have to prepare the lithium derivative beforehand, then carry out a metal exchange reaction using a transition metal salt. This is necessary because transition metals are not generally reactive enough to be directly attached to an aromatic framework. However, there are limits to the usefulness of such exchange reactions due to solubility problems of the ionic salt in covalent organic solvents and to temperature sensitivities. This project will revolutionise this area as it will enable the development of the new concept of alkali-metal-mediated organotransitionmetallation (AMMO). Designing reagents containing an alkali metal and a transition metal within the same molecule, can lead to unique compounds that exhibit special synergic (mixed-metal) reactivities which cannot be replicated by alkali metal compounds or by transition metal compounds on their own (i.e. the single metal systems). Consequently using these two-metal based reagents, it is now possible to directly attach transition metal centres to aromatic frameworks. We have built prototype reagents based on lithium-manganese and sodium-manganese systems which can directly attach manganese to the carbon framework of the metallocene ferrocene, thus proving the concept. The innovative programme proposed will develop the synergic alkali metal chemistry of manganese with a range of other aromatic organic compounds and pioneer the same for other important transition metals including chromium, iron, cobalt and nickel. Incorporating transition metals with access to a large portfolio of properties (for example in redox chemistry, magnetochemistry and catalysis) within aromatic frameworks, will open up a treasure chest of new chemical opportunities outside the scope of conventional lithium-based aromatic compounds. The first transition metal host inverse crown macrocycles (special cyclic compounds with cationic host rings and anionic guest cores) will be prepared using AMMO. It is envisaged that, depending on the transition metal, some inverse crowns will exhibit interesting magnetic and material properties radically different to those of known inverse crowns which are based on magnesium and are therefore non-magnetic and non-redox active.

Publications

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Armstrong DR (2013) A hetero-alkali-metal version of the utility amide LDA: lithium-potassium diisopropylamide. in Dalton transactions (Cambridge, England : 2003)

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Armstrong DR (2010) Diisopropylamide and TMP turbo-Grignard reagents: a structural rationale for their contrasting reactivities. in Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English)

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Balloch L (2011) A µ4-oxide-containing a dimeric variant of a sodium dialkyl(amido)zincate reagent. in Acta crystallographica. Section C, Crystal structure communications

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Balloch L (2012) Dizincation of a 2-substituted thiophene: constructing a cage with a [16]crown-4 zincocyclic core. in Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English)

 
Description This project was designed to develop new reactions in chemistry that operate by two distinct metals working together synergistically. It is relevant to the synthesis of aromatic compounds of academic and industrial interest in areas such as fine chemical, agrochemical and pharmaceutical manufacture.

This highly productive project produced many high impact papers including several communications in Angewandte Chemie, Chemical Science and the Journal of the American Chemical Society. It also produced papers in the high impact journals of Science and Nature Chemistry. The theme running through the work was new synergistic chemistry created by having two distinct metals in bimetallic systems. Diffusion ordered spectroscopy (DOSY) was introduced for the first time in this area to establish that reagents considered to be lithium amidozincate species were in fact separate mixtures of lithium amides and zinc amides, in which the reaction synergies were executed in a stepwise manner, with deprotonation of an aromatic substrate by the lithium amide and then insertion into the new lithium-carbon bond by the transition metal species. This revised earlier thinking that such deprotonations occurred through a synchronized synergy in which both metals functioned simultaneously. This new concept of stepwise synergy was also found to be operative in lithium amidocadmate analogues. These findings helped to take this chemistry out of its black box and thus enable it to be tailored beyond trial and error.

Subjecting the biologically important heterocyclic compound thiophene to a sodium alkyl-amidozincate reagent remarkably produced a new type of cage compound that contained a novel [16]crown-4 zincocyclic core. This finding illustrated how an unwanted complication to a synthetic chemist, dimetallation of the substrate where only monometallation was wanted, can turn out to be an unearthed treasure to a supramolecular chemist. Interestingly, if the common practice of using metallated intermediates in situ in tandem bond-forming applications was used here, then this new concept in transition metal ring chemistry would have been missed. The ring system was elucidated by growing crystals of an active metallo intermediate from the reaction solution. Characterisation was carried out by a combination of X-ray crystallography and NMR spectroscopic studies.

Switching from zinc to aluminium also produced unprecedented breakthroughs. The most surprising was that the strong amide base, 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidide, TMP, could be transformed into a strong acid by the synergic reactivity of a potassium-aluminate partnership. The acidity, which was a consequence of intramolecular steric effects within a K-C-Al-N template ring system, was manifested in deprotonation of a methyl sidearm that converted the TMP anion to a dianion. A lithium aluminium protocol was also found to be useful for deprotonating highly sensitive ethers and thioethers, such as tetrahydrofuran and its sulfur tetrahydrothiphene, and sedating the emerging cyclic anions. With conventional non-synergic organometallic bases, such sensitive anions decompose rapidly through ring-opening mechanisms.

Main group multiple C-H/N-H bond activation was achieved in a diamine by the synergistic combination of an alkali metal with zinc. Such activations, which included a dehydrogenation, are normally the domain of redox active transition metals, whereas here they were accomplished via a fixed oxidation state bimetallic pairing. Both experimental and DFT evidence were gathered to elucidate the mechanism involved in this novel diamine to diazaethene transformation.

Finally, relevant to catalysis, using N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) ligands it was found possible to convert sterically bulky dialkylmagnesium and dialkylmanganese polymers to rare monomeric modifications.
Exploitation Route Many of the results emerging from this project will start different research lines. Funding for these research lines will be sought from various sources including EPSRC, Eu and industry.
Synthetic and catalytic chemists could use the new concepts and methodologies developed during this project.
Sectors Chemicals

 
Description AstraZeneca
Amount £24,000 (GBP)
Funding ID 115522 
Organisation AstraZeneca 
Sector Private
Country United Kingdom
Start 10/2011 
End 09/2014
 
Description The Nuffield Foundation
Amount £1,080 (GBP)
Funding ID URB/40814 
Organisation Nuffield Foundation 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 07/2012 
End 09/2012
 
Description The Nuffield Foundation
Amount £1,080 (GBP)
Funding ID URB/37965 
Organisation Nuffield Foundation 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 07/2010 
End 09/2010
 
Description The Nuffield Foundation
Amount £1,080 (GBP)
Funding ID URB/37965 
Organisation Nuffield Foundation 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 07/2010 
End 09/2010
 
Description The Nuffield Foundation
Amount £1,080 (GBP)
Funding ID URB/40814 
Organisation Nuffield Foundation 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United Kingdom
Start 07/2012 
End 09/2012