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  • Study of the lithiated phenylacetonitrile monoanions and dianions formed according to the lithiated base used (LHMDS, LDA, or n-BuLi). 2. Alkylation and deuteriation mechanism study by vibrational and NMR spectroscopy and quantum chemistry calculations.

Study of the lithiated phenylacetonitrile monoanions and dianions formed according to the lithiated base used (LHMDS, LDA, or n-BuLi). 2. Alkylation and deuteriation mechanism study by vibrational and NMR spectroscopy and quantum chemistry calculations.

The Journal of organic chemistry (2012-06-30)
Tekla Strzalko, Lya Wartski, Jacques Corset, Martine Castellà-Ventura, Françoise Froment
ABSTRACT

Mechanisms of alkylation by PhCH(2)Cl or CH(3)I in THF and of deuteriation by DCl (4 N in D(2)O) in THF or THF-toluene of lithiated phenylacetonitrile monoanions and dianions obtained with LHMDS, LDA, or n-BuLi are studied by vibrational and NMR spectroscopy and quantum chemistry calculations. Dialkylation of the three dilithio dianions generated with n-BuLi (2.0-2.7 equiv, THF-hexane) depends on their structure: N-lithio (PhCCNLi)(-)Li(+) and (C,N)-dilithio PhCLiCNLi dianions afford PhCR(2)CN (R = PhCH(2), CH(3)) from the intermediate N-lithio monoalkylated monoanion PhCRCNLi 10; C-lithio dianion (PhCLiCN)(-)Li(+) leads to a carbenoid species, the C-lithio monoalkylated nitrile PhCLiRCN 11, which either eliminates carbene Ph-C-R and different LiCN species or isomerizes to PhCRCNLi in the presence of LiX (X = Cl, I). Dialkylation or dideuteriation of monoanions (monomers, dimers, and heterodimers [PhCHCNLi·LiR'], R' = (SiMe(3))(2)N, (i-Pr)(2)N) obtained with LHMDS or LDA (2.4 equiv, THF) proceeds via a sequential mechanism involving monometalation-monoalkylation (or monodeuteriation) reactions. Some carbene and (LiCNLi)(+) are also observed, and explained by another mechanism implying the C-lithio monoalkylated monoanion PhCLiRCN 9 in the presence of LiX. These results show the ambiphilic behavior of PhCLiRCN as a carbenoid (11) or a carbanion (9) and the importance of LiX formed in situ in the first alkylation step.