Alkylation of boron trifluoride with pentafluorophenyl Grignard reagent; Tris(pentafluorophenyl)boron

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Published Nov 05, 2003


Reaction Scheme

Procedure

Suspend magnesium turnings (7.2 g, 0.3 mol) in diethyl ether (500 mL) at room temperature. Add BrC6F5 (74.1g, 0.3 mol) dropwise until the solution develops a grey turbid appearance. Cool the reaction on an ice bath and adjust the dropping rate to ensure that the solution does not reflux. Stir for an additional hour to ensure complete reaction. The resulting solution will be dark brown-black in appearance. Dissolve BF3.Et2O (0.1 mol, 14.19 g) in toluene (200 mL) and cool to 0 ºC. Add the Grignard reagent solution via a cannula with vigorous stirring. After addition allow the resulting solution to warm to room temperature. Remove approximately 500 mL of solvent under reduced pressure. Fit a reflux condenser and heat the solution to (almost) 100 ºC on a boiling water bath for one hour. During this time glassy solids will precipitate from solution. Remove all volatiles under vacuum until a dry brown cake is obtained (colourless crystals of B(C6F5)3 may already be apparent). The product is isolated by extracting this cake with warm (45 ºC) hexanes (600 mL). As the hexane solution cools very fine feathery crystals will form. Cooling to -30 ºC will cause further crystallisation. The very fine nature of B(C6F5)3 crystals obtained in this fashion makes them difficult to separate by filtration from the mother liquor. One solution is to add 30 mL of diethyl ether to the collection flask before filtration, now instead of obtaining feathery crystals of B(C6F5)3, cubic crystals of (Et2O)B(C6F5)3 form, which can be easily separated by filtration. The yield depends upon the effort invested in the extraction process. We will typically extract the magnesium halides three times. For subsequent extractions we use the mother liquor obtained after crystallisation of the previous fraction. The best isolated yield obtained using this method was 70% Pure B(C6F5)3 can be obtained from (Et2O)B(C6F5)3 or the crude product described above by sublimation (<0.1 mmHg, 100 ºC).

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