A subscription to JoVE is required to view this content. Sign in or start your free trial.
Method Article
This protocol describes the preparation of elemental lanthanides under inert atmosphere and their application in a selective C-F activation process involving trifluoromethylated benzofulvenes.
The selective activation of one carbon-fluorine bond in polyfluorinated aromatic molecules or in trifluoromethyl-containing substrates offers the possibility of accessing unique fluorine-containing molecules, which are difficult to obtain by other synthetic pathways. Among various metals, which can undergo C-F activation, lanthanides (Ln) are good candidates as they form strong Ln-F bonds. Lanthanide metals are strong reducing agents with a redox potential Ln3+/Ln of approximately -2.3 V, which is comparable to the value of the Mg2+/Mg redox couple. In addition, lanthanide metals display a promising functional group tolerance and their reactivity can vary along the lanthanide series, making them suitable reagents for fine-tuning reaction conditions in organic and organometallic transformations. However, due to their oxophilicity, lanthanides react readily with oxygen and water and therefore require special conditions for storage, handling, preparation, and activation. These factors have limited a more widespread use in organic synthesis. We herein present how dysprosium metal - and by analogy all lanthanide metals - can be freshly prepared under anhydrous conditions using glovebox and Schlenk techniques. The freshly filed metal, in combination with aluminum chloride, initiates the selective C-F activation in trifluoromethylated benzofulvenes. The resulting reaction intermediates react with nitroalkenes to obtain a new family of difluoroalkenes.
Lanthanide metals have been sporadically used in organic synthesis since the late 1970s1. Initially, these strong reducing agents, with a redox potential Ln3+/Ln of approximately -2.3 V, were employed mainly in Birch-type reductions of aromatic compounds and pinacol coupling reactions. An increased availability and purity of lanthanide metals from the 1980s on, as well as the development of methodologies and equipment to handle air and moisture sensitive compounds led to new applications of lanthanide metals. The preparation of the widely used SmI2 directly from Sm metal and diiodoethane or iodine was a breakthrough in lanthanide chemistry2. In recent years, new reactivity patterns of lanthanide metals have been described, for example, the Barbier-type reaction of allylic halides with carbonyl compounds3, the reductive coupling reactions involving diaryl ketones4 or acyl chlorides5, selective cyclopropanation reactions6, and the combination of lanthanide metals with group 4 metallocenes7,8. These studies showed that lanthanide metals display a promising functional group tolerance and that their reactivity can vary along the lanthanide series, making them suitable reagents for fine-tuning reaction conditions in organic transformations.
Organolanthanide complexes and inorganic lanthanide salts have been studied in C-F activation reactions with aromatic and aliphatic carbon-fluorine bonds for over 40 years9,10,11. In 2014, the first report on C-F activation using elemental ytterbium metal appeared12. It showed the regioselective reaction of Yb with pentafluorobenzene to afford p-tetrafluorobenzene and YbF2. More recently, we have shown that various lanthanide metals can react with trifluoromethylated benzofulvenes in the presence of aluminum chloride to obtain ε,ε-difluoropentadienylmetal complexes that reacted selectively with a wide range of aldehydes to new difluoroalkenes (Figure 1)13. It turned out that the combination of dysprosium metal and aluminum chloride gave the highest yields and best selectivities. We herein present an extension of this work using nitroalkenes as electrophiles14, leading regioselectively to a new class of difluoroalkenes15.
1. Preparation of Starting Material Outside the Glovebox
2. Preparation of Freshly Filed Dysprosium Metal Inside the Glovebox
3. Start C-F Activation Reaction Outside the Glovebox
4. Addition of Nitroalkene
5. Workup and purification
This lanthanide-mediated C-F activation procedure followed by reaction with nitroalkenes provides readily access to new difluoroalkenes containing a nitro group. A plausible reaction mechanism is depicted in Figure 2. In contrast to our previous work using aldehydes as electrophiles (Figure 1)13, nitroalkenes afford the 1,3-disubstituted indene products regioselectively. This may be explained by the greate...
This protocol involves work with highly reactive, air and moisture sensitive lanthanide metals. Therefore, the whole reaction procedure must be carried out under dry inert gas, and all starting materials, including solvents, must be very clean and dried before use.
There are two advantages for the preparation of freshly filed metals over the purchase of already filed metals: (i) the purchase of pieces or ingots is considerably more economic and (ii) freshly filed metal is more reactive because...
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We acknowledge financial support from ANR (ANR-15-CE29-0020-01, ACTIV-CF-LAN), CNRS, ICMR, Université de Reims Champagne Ardenne, ENSCM and ICGM. We thank Carine Machado and Anthony Robert for help with EI-MS and NMR analysis.
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Dysprosium ingot | Strem | 93-6637 | Store under nitrogen/argon |
Anhydrous aluminum chloride | Alfa Aesar | 88488 | Store under nitrogen/argon |
Iodine 99.5% for analysis | Across Organics | 212491000 | |
THF GPR Rectapur | VWR Chemicals | 28552.324 | Dried and distilled over Na/benzophenone before use |
Glovebox | MBraun | Under nitrogen atmosphere |
Request permission to reuse the text or figures of this JoVE article
Request PermissionThis article has been published
Video Coming Soon
Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved