The phosphines R(2)R'P [R = R' = Me, Et, (n)Pr, (i)Pr, (CH(2))(3)OH; Me(2)PhP and MePh(2)P] react with 2- or 4-hydroxybenzyl alcohols, including "lignin-type" vanillyl, syringyl, and alpha-methylvanillyl alcohols, in a 1:1 ratio in aqueous media, to give zwitterionic phosphobetaine products; these on treatment with aq HCl form the corresponding phosphonium chlorides in good to excellent yields. The syringyl derivative [3,5-(OMe)(2)-4-OH-C(6)H(2)CH(2)PEt(3)]Cl was structurally characterized by X-ray analysis. Kinetically, the reactivity of the benzyl alcohols, studied with the water-soluble [HO(CH(2))(3)](3)P, decreases with substituents in the order 2-hydroxy > 4-hydroxy > vanillyl > syringyl > alpha-methylvanillyl, while 3-hydroxybenzyl alcohol is unreactive; the trend is consistent with reactivity requiring the presence of an ortho- or para-OH substituent in the aromatic ring of the alcohol, and that the reactions proceed via a carbocation species stabilized as a quinone methide. Triethylphosphine reacts with coniferyl alcohol at the C=C moiety to give a zwitterionic intermediate that is again converted by aq HCl to a phosphonium chloride; no reaction was observed with cinnamyl alcohol. The effect on a phenolic pK(a) by incorporation of a phosphonium substituent is also measured.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ic801657g | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!