4.8 Article

The influence of boryl substituents on the formation and reactivity of adjacent and vicinal free radical centers

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 122, Issue 23, Pages 5455-5463

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja9944812

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Radicals containing alpha-boronate substituents were generated by bromine abstraction from 1-bromoalkyldioxaborolanes (boronic esters), by addition to vinyl boronate, and by hydrogen abstraction from alkyldioxaborolanes and observed by EPR spectroscopy. Unsymmetrically substituted alpha-boronate radicals displayed selective line broadening in their low-temperature spectra from which barriers to internal rotation about (CH2)-C-.-B(OR')OR bonds were found to be 3 +/- 1 kcal mol(-1). Use of an empirical relationship between barrier height and bond dissociation energy led to BDE[(RO)(2)BCH2-H] = 98.6 kcal mol(-1). Rate constants for hydrogen abstraction from 2,4,4,5,5-pentamethyl-1,3,2-dioxaborola by tert-butoxyl radicals were determined from competitive EPR and product studies and found to be relatively small, comparable to those of unactivated methyl groups. Hydrogen abstraction from bis(4,4,5,5-tetramethyl-1,3,2-dioxaborolan-2-yl)methane was found to be extremely difficult. The structures and energetics of cr-boronate radicals were computed by DFT methods (B3LYP/6-31G*). This predicted reductions in the rotation barriers of X2B-CH2. radicals for increasing alkoxy substitution at B (X = Me or MeO) and corresponding increases in the X2BCH2-H bond dissociation energies. The B3LYP-comIjuted BDE[(MeC))2BCH2-H] was in excellent agreement with the analogous value derived from the experimental rotation barrier. Radicals containing P-boronate substituents were generated from the corresponding 2-bromoalkylboronic esters and characterized by EPR spectroscopy. At higher temperatures the main product from trialkyltin and triethylsilyl radical promoted reactions of 2-(2-bromohexyl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethyl-1,3,2-dioxaborolane was l-hexene. This was best accounted for by a mechanism involving initial S(H)2 attack on the borolane and subsequent bromine atom elimination from the displaced 2-bromohexyl radical.

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