4.6 Article

Microwave-Accelerated McKenna Synthesis of Phosphonic Acids: An Investigation

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MOLECULES
卷 28, 期 8, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules28083497

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microwave-assisted synthesis; phosphonic acids; bromotrimethylsilane; dealkylation

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Phosphonic acids are important organophosphorus compounds widely used in various fields. A convenient and efficient method for the preparation of phosphonic acids is silyldealkylation with bromotrimethylsilane (BTMS), followed by desilylation. We investigated microwave irradiation as an acceleration method for BTMS reactions and found that it had significant advantages over conventional heating, including higher yields and chemoselectivity. This method was also applied to the preparation of antiviral and anticancer drugs, showing great potential.
Phosphonic acids represent one of the most important categories of organophosphorus compounds, with myriad examples found in chemical biology, medicine, materials, and other domains. Phosphonic acids are rapidly and conveniently prepared from their simple dialkyl esters by silyldealkylation with bromotrimethylsilane (BTMS), followed by desilylation upon contact with water or methanol. Introduced originally by McKenna, the BTMS route to phosphonic acids has long been a favored method due to its convenience, high yields, very mild conditions, and chemoselectivity. We systematically investigated microwave irradiation as a means to accelerate the BTMS silyldealkylations (MW-BTMS) of a series of dialkyl methylphosphonates with respect to solvent polarity (ACN, dioxane, neat BTMS, DMF, and sulfolane), alkyl group (Me, Et, and iPr), electron-withdrawing P-substitution, and phosphonate-carboxylate triester chemoselectivity. Control reactions were performed using conventional heating. We also applied MW-BTMS to the preparation of three acyclic nucleoside phosphonates (ANPs, an important class of antiviral and anticancer drugs), which were reported to undergo partial nucleoside degradation under MW hydrolysis with HCl at 130-140 degrees C (MW-HCl, a proposed alternative to BTMS). In all cases, MW-BTMS dramatically accelerated quantitative silyldealkylation compared to BTMS with conventional heating and was highly chemoselective, confirming it to be an important enhancement of the conventional BTMS method with significant advantages over the MW-HCl method.

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