Hydroformylation of Glycals - Journal of the American Chemical

Alex. Rosenthal, Derek. Abson. J. Am. Chem. Soc. , 1964, 86 (23), pp 5356–5357. DOI: 10.1021/ja01077a078. Publication Date: December 1964. ACS Legac...
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5356

Vol. 86

group. Thus, heating a mixture of 3.2 g. of pyridine (0.4 moles), 100 ml. of cyclohexane, 2 g. of Raney nickel, and 0.4 moles of carbon monoxide a t 225' and 1.7 atm. for 14 hr. led to a 35-407, conversion to a-picoline. This observation suggests t h a t the amethylation of pyridines as reported in this communication may be related to the hydroformylation reactionb as well as t o the catalytic formation of biaryls. Studies which are presently underway to elaborate further the scope and mechanism of this reaction will also investigate this possibility. Acknowledgment.-This research was supported in part by funds from the Research Committee of the University of California. Some of the pyridyl alcohols were gifts of the Reilly Tar and Chemical Company.

The general procedure used a t the present time is as follows. A solution of 3,4-di-O-acetyl-~-xylal(12 g.), dicobalt octacarbonyl (3.4 g.), and anhydrous benzene (50 ml.) is allowed to react in a 300 ml. Aminco rocking autoclave with a mixture of 34 atm. of carbon monoxide and about 160 atm. of hydrogen at a temperature of 115'. It is important t h a t the reaction be stopped when 2 moles of gas per mole of substrate is consumed as the aldoses are quite rapidly reduced to the alditols. Work-up of the reaction mixture as described previously3 afforded 13 g. of sirupy product. The presence of approximately 20yo of aldehydoaldoses was demonstrated by the formation of a mixture of 2,3--dinitrophenylhydrazones, A hot ethanolic saturated solution of 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazinewas added portionwise to a boiling solution of the oxo product ( 1 . f ; g) in ( 5 ) C. W. Bird, Chem. Rev., 62, 283 (1962). (6) (a) Address correspondence t o the Department of Chemistry, Texas 50 ml. of ethanol containing 4 drops of acetic acid Christian University, Fort Worth, Texas 76129, (h) National Science until the color of the solution no longer changed from Foundation Summer Teaching Fellow, 1963; iiational Institute of Health orange to yellow; addition of water to turbidity then Predoctoral Fellow in Chemistry, 1963-1965. MANFRED G. REISECKE~" resulted in the precipitation of a bright yellow solid DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY Lours R . K R A Y ~ ~ (0.4 g.) which was removed by filtration. This solid OF CALIFORXIA USIVERSITY RIVERSIDE,CALIFORXIA was then triturated with warm ethanol and again RECEIVED OCTOBER 10, 1964 removed by filtration ; recrystallization from chloroform-light petroleum ether gave fine yellow needles, m.p. 225-226' dec., [ a ] ? ?-60°. ~ This compound Hydroformylation of Glycals was identified from its n.m.r. spectrum and by conSir: version to authentic3 1,5-anhydro-4-deoxy-D-arabinoIn this communication we wish to report the applihexitol (V) as the 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazone of cation of the oxo reaction' in the first direct conversion 4,s- di-0-acetyl- 2,6-anhydro-3-deoxy-aldehydoD- lyxoof glycals2 into anhydrodeoxyaldoses. In earlier hexose. The acetylated anhydrodeoxyaldose (I) was work3,*it was shown t h a t glycals react with a mixture regenerated by reaction of the phenylhydrazone deof carbon monoxide and hydrogen to give primarily a rivative with pyruvic acid,fi and converted by the mixture of epimeric anhydrodeoxyalditols. U7e have action of sodium borohydride to a compound which now found t h a t careful control of the conditions of this was identical with an authentic sample of l,%arihydroreaction affords mixtures of epimeric anhydroaldoses as well as the corresponding epimeric anhydroalditols. Presumably, under the normal conditions for the oxo r e a ~ t i o nthe , ~ anhydroaldoses are reduced to anhydroalditols. Under the modified conditions (as described below) 3,4-di-O-acetyl-~-xylal, for example, reacts with carbon monoxide and hydrogen in the presence of dicobalt octacarbonyl to yield 4,5-di-O-acety1-2,6anhydro-3-deoxy-aldehydo-~-lyxo-hexose(I) and 4,5 -di-O-acetyl-2,6-anhydro3 - deoxy-aldehydo-D-xylohexose (11), in addition to the epimeric anhydrodeoxyhexitols I11 and 1V. ~

H

CH,COCO,H 111

IV

V

VI

I. Wender, H . W . Sternherg, and M .O r c h i n , C d a i y s i s , 6. 73 (1957) B. Helferich. A d v n n . Carbohydrate ChPm , 7 , 209 ( 1 9 5 2 ) . .4. Rosenthal and D . Abson, Ca,z. J . Chem , 42, 1811 (1964) A Rosenthal a n d H. J Koch, i b i d . . 42, 2025 (1964). ( 5 ) H. Adkins and G . Krsek, J . A m . Chem. Sor , 71, 3051 (1949).

(1) (2) (3) (4)

4-deoxy-D-arabino-hexitol. Evaporation of the filtrate obtained from the trituration of the 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazonemixture gave a residue which was fractionated by thin layer chromatography on silica gel using chloroform as developer to afford the aforementioned 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazone derivative of I and also the 2,1dinitrophenylhydrazone of 4,5-di-O-acety1-2,6-anhydro3-deoxy-aldehydo-~-sylo-hexose( I I ) , m.p. 132', [ a ] % - 16'. Compound I1 was converted into VI following the same procedures as described above t o convert I into V. Similarly, hydroformylation of 3,4,G-tri-O-acetylD-glucal a t 125' afforded a mixture of anhydrodeoxyheptitols ( 3 5 7 , ) and heptoses (63%). Column adsorption chromatography of this nonde-0-acetylated mixture on Florisil' using benzene-methanol (97 : :3 v./v.) as developer yielded four fractions. The fastest moving fraction, which was recrystallized from etherlight petroleum ether, n1.p. 110 112O, [ a ] " ~+%j', was proven to be 4,5,T-tri-O-acetyl-2,0-arihy~~ro-~~deoxy-aldehydo-D-manno-heptose (40% yield) by conversion to authentic 2,6-anhydro-3-deoxy-u-mannoheptitol. The absolute stereochemistry of the latter substance was established by correlation with authentic 2,6-anhydro-3-deoxy-~-gliico-heptitol. Hydroformylation of :~,~-di-O-acetyl-D-arabitlal yielded 33c7, of reducing sugars as determined by the (6) (7) (8) Chrm

V . K . Slattux a n d E C Kendall, c h i d . . 7 0 , 882 ( l ! l i 8 ) Product of Floridin Company. Tallahassee. Fla. J . Trotter, A Camerman. .4 Rosenthal. a n d H J. Koch, C a n , 4 2 , 2630,l!iFi-ii

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Dec. 5 , 1964

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method of Somogyig; the nature of this product is under investigation and will be the subject of a future communication. Acknowledgments.-The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial assistance of the National Cancer Institute of Canada, the National Research Council, and the Petroleum Research Fund administered by the American Chemical Society.

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THE EDITOR

relative to a simultaneously irradiated portion of the solution with no trans-stilbene added. The effect was found to be directly related to the triplet energy of the sensitizer used. Thus stilbene produced shifts in the photostationary state only when using sensitizers with ET 44 kcal. (Table I).

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TABLE I QUENCHING BY t?'UTZS-STILBENE'

(9) M. Somogyi, J . Biol. Chem., 160, 69 (1945).

DEPARTMENT OF CHEMISTRY OF BRITISHCOLUMBIA UXIVERSITY VAXCOUVER 8, B. C., CAXADA

ALEX ROSENTHAL DEREKABSON

RECEIVEDSEPTEMBER 23, 1964

The Use of 2,3-Diphenylindenone Oxide a s a Triplet-State Indicator Sir: Triplet excited states of many substances have been studied by phosphorescence,'"Ib triplet-triplet absorption,'c,d and singlet- triplet absorption induced by oxygen or heavy atoms.'e,f However, some compounds do not lend themselves to these measurements, presumably because of rapid rearrangement or intersystem crossing of the initially formed "spectroscopic" triplet. In our studies of the photochemistry of 2,3diphenylindenone oxide2 (I) we have found that this compound can serve as an indicator for certain shortlived triplets when employed in simple color tests performed without the exclusion of oxygen. A description of the method as applied to a study of transstilbene follows. Benzene solutions of colorless I undergo reversible photochemical rearrangement to the red pyrylium oxide 11. The forward reaction (I + 11) is photosensitized by sensitizers of triplet energy ET > 68 kcal.2 In the presence of oxygen using acetophenone (ET = 73.9 kcal.)3 or benzophenone (ET = 68.7 kcal.)3 as sensitizers, irradiation (365 mp) produces a steady-state concentration of I1 controlled by photosensitized interconversion of I1 and I and simultaneous thermal and Ph

Ph

Ph

* L * Ph

0 I

-'

E T , kcal.

Sensitizer

0

I1

YPh 0

I11

photosensitized oxidation of I1 to give the anhydride III.4 The use of sensitizers of ET 68 kcal. in sufficient quantity to absorb nearly all of the light produces complete bleaching since reaction I + I1 is no longer sensitized. Lesser amounts of sensitizer produce low (weakly colored) steady-state concentrations of I1 by competing direct photochemical conversion of I to 11. Under these latter conditions addition of trans-stilbene to 10-I & toI the )solution produced, with some sensitizers, an increase in color on irradiation