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Reduction [H] Organic Synthesis Chem-706 How to Define Reduction Reduction means Gain of electron Formation of C-H bond Loss of C-O bond (or its equivalence) Over all An organic molecule lose oxygen and/or gain hydrogen General symbol [H] In organic chemistry A reduction results in a net increase in the number of C-H bonds, or a net decrease in the number of C-O bonds (or equivalent, such as C-Cl, CBr, etc). A general order between Oxidation & Reduction Reduction -- Common ways on Basis of H2 Addition TYPE I TYPE II TYPE III Reduction via Metal Hydride Reagents Addition of a hydride (H-) and a proton (H+) These reagents reduced the multiple bonds,C=O, C=N & , by transferring an hydride H¯ to the substrate, and then a proton is added from H2O or an alcohol. A common presentation of reaction: Most commonly known reagents are sodium borohydride (NaBH4) and lithium aluminum hydride (LiAlH4). All metal hydride reagent contains boron (B) or aluminium (Al) which are boned to one or more H atoms. Functional groups interconversion via different Reducing agents Catalytic Hydrogenation [H2] Substrates Catalysts Pressure (atm) Catalyst/Compound ration (wt%) Reduction Products Alkene 5% Pd/C 1-3 5-10% Alkane Alkyne 5% Pd (BaSO4) 1 2% + 2% quinoline Alkene Aldehyde or Ketone PtO2 1 2-4% Alcohol Halide 5% Pd/C 1 1-15% KOH Alkane Nitrile Raney Ni 35-70 3-30% Amine Ref: Hudlicky, M. In Reductions in Organic Chemistry 2nd Ed., American Chemical Society Monograph 188: Washing DC, 1996, P. 8. List of Reagents used in Metal Hydride(H-) Reduction Substrates Hydride Donors LiAlH4 DIBAL NaAlH(OtBu)3 AlH3 NaBH4 NaCNBH4 Na(AcO) 3BH B2H6 Li(Et)3 BH H2 (catalyst) Aldehyde or Ketone Alcohol Alcohol Alcohol Alcohol Alcohol (slow) Alcohol (slow) Alcohol Alcohol Alcohol Alcohol Iminium ion Amine -- -- -- Amine Amine Amine -- -- Amine Acid Halide Alcohol Alcohol Aldehyde Alcohol -- -- -- -- Alcohol Alcohol Ester Alcohol Alcohol or Aldehyde Alcohol (Slow Alcohol Alcohol (slow) Alcohol Alcohol Amide Amine Amine or Aldehyde Amine (slow) Amine -- -- Amine (slow) Amine (slow) Alcohol (tertiary amide) Amine Carboxylate Salt Alcohol Alcohol -- Alcohol -- -- -- Alcohol -- -- Alcohol (slow) Alcohol Ref: Hudlicky, M. In Reductions in Organic Chemistry 2nd Ed., American Chemical Society Monograph 188: Washing DC, 1996, P. 8. Reduction of Carbonyl Compounds Angle of Nucleophilic Attack The Bürgi–Dunitz angle Bürgi and Dunitz deduced this trajectory by examining crystal structures of compounds containing both a nucleophilic nitrogen atom and an electrophilic carbonyl group. They found that, when the two got close enough to interact, but were not free to undergo reaction, the nitrogen atom always lay on or near the 107° trajectory decribed here. Theoretical calculations later gave the same 107° value for the optimum angle of attack. ( Ref: Organic Chemistry. By J. P. Clayden, N. Greeves, S. Warren, and P. D. Wothers; Oxford University Press, 2001, ISBN 0 19 850346 6, 53 Chapters). Reduction of Aldehyde & Ketone Alkane Deoxygenation of Tosylhydrazon Alkane Hydride Donors Sodium Cynaoborohydride, Sodium triacetoxyborohydride or catecholborane. A mild and selective type of reduction for the purpose of carbonyl deoxygenation. Most useful to convert hindered carbonyl groups to corresponding Alkane . Also compatible with esters, amides, nitriles, nitro groups and alkyl halides. However, electron deficient aryl aldehyde and ketone prove to be resistant to reduction. Only proposed when inductive effects and/or conformational constraints favour the tautomerization of the hydrazone to an azohydrazine In the case of a, b-saturated system, the addition of hydride ion occurs in a concerted way via 1,5-sigmatropic rearrangement. The Mechanism of such "alkene walk" appears to proceeds through diazene intermediate with transfer hydride. The double still retain in this reduction process. Ref: Miller, V. P.; Yang, D.-y; Weigel, T. M.; Han, O.; Liu, H.-w. J. Org. Chem. 1989, 54, 4175-4188. Ref: Chai, Y.; Vicic, D. A.; Mcintosh, M. C. Org. Lett. 2003, 7, 1039-1042. Ref: Evans, D. A.; Hoveyda, A. H. J. Org. Chem. 1990, 55, 5190-5192. N-tosylhydrazone a versatile intermediate Mechanism Ref: Ye, F.; Shi, Y.; Zhou, L.; Xiao, Q.; Zhang, Y.; Wang, J. Org. Lett. 2011, 13, 5020-5023. Review : N-Tosylhydrazones: versatile reagents for metal-catalyzed and metal-free cross-coupling reactions Shao, Z.; Zhangb, H. Chem. Soc. Rev., 2012, 41, 560-572 (impact factor 25) Wolff-Kishner Reduction Alkane Wolff–Kishner reduction reduced the Aldehydes & Ketones to Alkanes. Condensation of the carbonyl compound with hydrazine forms the hydrazone, and treatment with base induces the reduction of the carbon coupled with oxidation of the hydrazine to gaseous nitrogen, to yield the corresponding alkane. Numerous modified procedures to the classic Wolff–Kishner reduction have been reported. In general, the improvements have focused on driving hydrazone formation to completion by removal of water, and by the use of high concentrations of hydrazine. The two principal side reactions associated with the Wolff–Kishner reduction are azine formation and alcohol formation. Ref: Piers, E.; Zbonzny, M.; Can. J. Chem. 1979, 57, 1064-1074. Mechanism http://www.organic-chemistry.org/ Advancement N-tert-butyldimethylsilylhydrazone (TBSH) derivatives serve as superior alternatives to hydrazones. TBSH derivatives of aliphatic carbonyl compounds undergo Wolff-Kishner-type reduction at 23 °C; derivatives of aromatic carbonyl undergo reduction at 100 °C. Ref: Furrow, M. E.; Myers, A. G. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2004, 126, 5436-5454. impact factor = 11 Advancement Typical way Typical way Grainger, R. S. et. al. 2013, 11, 6856-6862 Desulfurzation with Raney Nickel Alkane Thioacetal (or thioketal) reduction or Mozingo reduction with Raney nickel and hydrogen is a classic method to prepare a methylene group from a carbonyl compound. Raney Nickel was developed in 1926 by American engineer Murray Raney. ( "Method of producing finely-divided nickel,"U.S. patent 1,628,190, filed: 1926) A thioketal is first produced by reaction of the ketone with an appropriate thiol. The product is then hydrogenolyzed to the alkane, using a Raney nickel catalyst. This method is much milder than either the Clemmensen or Wolff-Kishner reductions, which employ strongly acidic or basic conditions, respectively, that might interfere with other functional groups present in the molecule. • The most common limitation of the desulfurization method is the competitive hydrogenation of alkenes. Ref: 1) Francis A. Carey; Richard J. Sundberg (2007). Advanced Organic Chemistry: Reactions and synthesis. 2) Jonathan Clayden; Nick Greeves, Stuart Warren (2012). Organic Chemistry (2 ed.). Applications: Ref: Woodward, R. B.; Brehm, W. J. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1948, 70, 2107-2115. Brik, A. et. al. Highly efficient one-pot ligation and desulfurization. Chem. Sci., 2013, 4, 2496-2501 (impact fctor = 8.3) NCL (Native Chemical Ligation) convenient method ---- chemical synthesis of proteins well over 100 amino acids in length; --- 166-amino-acid polypeptide chain of the synthetic variant of the erythropoiesis protein and the 203 amino acid HIV-1 protease. Ligation methods (e.g. ICL, NCL) combined with desulfurization have becoming increasingly useful in protein synthesis Clemmensen Redution Alkane Clemmensen reduction of ketones and aldehydes using zinc and hydrochloric acid is a classic method for converting a carbonyl group into a methylene group. Typically, the classic Clemmensen reduction involves refluxing a carbonyl substrate with 40% aqueous hydrochloric acid, amalgamated zinc, and an organic solvent such as toluene. This reduction is rarely performed on polyfunctional molecules due to the harsh conditions employed. Anhydrous hydrogen chloride and zinc dust in organic solvents has been used as a milder alternative to the classic Clemmensen reduction conditions. This reaction is named after Erik Christian Clemmensen, a Danish chemist. Mechanism http://www.organic-chemistry.org/ Application in Natural product synthesis Li, W.-D. Z.; Wang, Y.-Q. J. Org. Chem. 2003, 5, 2931-2934.