Alkyne trimerisation


An alkyne trimerisation reaction is a 2+2+2 cycloaddition reaction in which three alkyne units react to form a benzene ring. The reaction requires a metal catalyst. The process is of historic interest as well as being applicable to organic synthesis. Being a cycloaddition reaction, it has high atom economy. Many variations have been developed including cyclization of mixtures of alkynes and alkenes as well as alkynes and nitriles.

Mechanism and stereochemistry

Trimerization of acetylene to benzene is highly exergonic, proceeding with a free energy change of 142 kcal/mol at room temperature. Kinetic barriers however prevent the reaction from proceeding smoothly. The breakthrough came in 1948, when Reppe and Schweckendiek reported their wartime results showing that nickel compounds are effective catalysts:
Since this discovery, many other cyclotrimerizations have been reported.

Mechanism

In terms of mechanism, the reactions begin with the formation of metal-alkyne complexes. The combination of two alkynes within the coordination sphere affords a metallacyclopentadiene. Starting from the metallacyclopentadiene intermediate, many pathways can be considered including metallocycloheptatrienes, metallanorbornadienes, and a more complicated structure featuring a carbenoid ligand.
Catalysts used include cyclopentadienylcobalt dicarbonyl and Wilkinson's catalyst.

Stereochemistry and regiochemistry

Trimerization of unsymmetrical alkynes gives two isomeric benzenes. For example, phenylacetylene affords both 1,3,5- and 1,2,4-C6R3H3. The substitution pattern about the product arene is determined in two steps: formation of the metallocyclopentadiene intermediate and incorporation of the third equivalent of alkyne. Steric bulk on the alkyne coupling partners and catalyst have been invoked as the controlling elements of regioselectivity.
Chiral catalysts have been employed in combination with arynes to produce non-racemic atropisomeric products.

Scope and limitations

Catalysts for cyclotrimerization are selective for triple bonds, which gives the reaction a fairly wide substrate scope. Many functional groups are tolerated. Regioselective intermolecular trimerization of unsymmetrical alkynes remains an unsolved problem.
Perhaps the most useful development in this area, at least from the commercial perspective is the cotrimerization of nitriles and alkynes. This reaction is a practical route to some substituted pyridines.
Some catalysts are deactivated by formation of stable, 18-electron η4-complexes. Cyclobutadiene, cyclohexadiene, and arene complexes have all been observed as off-cycle, inactivated catalysts. In addition to high-order polymers and dimers and trimers, which originate from low regio- and chemoselectivities, enyne side products derived from alkyne dimerization have been observed. Rhodium catalysts are particularly adept at enyne formation. For nickel catalysis, formation of larger rings can be a problem.

Synthetic applications

Cyclization involving substrates in which some or all of the alkyne units are tethered together can provide fused ring systems. The length of the tether controls the sizes of the additional rings. Addition of a 1,5-diyne with an alkyne produces a benzocyclobutene, a strained structure that can then be induced to undergo further reactions.

All three alkyne units can be tethered, leading to creation of three rings in a single step, with each of the two additional ring sizes controlled by the respective tether lengths.

Crowded triynes can cyclize to products exhibiting helical chirality. In one example remarkable for the formation of three new aromatic rings in one step, the triyne shown is transformed into the helical product via treatment with cyclopentadienylcobalt dicarbonyl. As of 2004, this process had yet to be rendered asymmetric, but the products could be separated through chiral HPLC.
Cyclisation carried out with a diyne and a separate alkyne affords greater control. Using commercially available cyclopentadienylcobalt dicarbonyl, CpCo2, as catalyst, bisacetylene will react with a diyne-1,2-disubstituted benzene to form an anthroquinone aromatic system:
Benzyne, generated in situ from a benzene ring bearing ortho-distributed triflate and trimethylsilyl substituents, can be used to generate an aryne in place of an acetylene and combined with a suitable diyne. Such a benzene derivative reacts with 1,7-octadiyne in the presence of a suitable catalyst to generate a naphthalene system. This is an example of a hexadehydro Diels–Alder reaction.
involving an aryne generated in situ

Comparison with other methods

Cyclotrimerization presents an alternative to the functionalization of pre-formed aromatic compounds through electrophilic or nucleophilic substitution, the regioselectivity of which can sometimes be difficult to control.
Other methods for the direct formation of aromatic rings from substituted, unsaturated precursors include the Dötz reaction, palladium-catalyzed benzannulation of enynes with alkynes, and Lewis-acid-mediated cycloaddition of enynes with alkynes. Cyclization of transient benzyne species with alkynes, catalyzed by palladium, can also produce substituted aromatic compounds.