Bicyclopropylidene. A unique tetrasubstituted alkene and versatile C6-building block for organic synthesis
- 1 January 2000
- journal article
- Published by Walter de Gruyter GmbH
- Vol. 72 (9), 1745-1756
- https://doi.org/10.1351/pac200072091745
Abstract
Bicyclopropylidene (4), now readily available in preparatively viable quantities, is evolving as a useful C6 building block for organic synthesis due to its enhanced reactivity at the C-H, the C=C, as well as both types of C-C single bonds. Monosubstituted derivatives are accessible by deprotonation/electrophilic substitution. Di- and tetrasubstituted bicyclopropylidenes are best made by copper-mediated reductive dimerization of bromolithiocarbenoids. The 1,3-dipolar cycloadducts of nitrones rearrange to spirocyclopropanated piperidones, palladium-catalyzed codimerizations with acrylates occur with opening of one of the rings to yield precursors to bicyclo[3.3.0]octene and bicyclo[5.3.0]decene skeletons. Silicon-heteroatom bonds can be added across the double bond of 4 under palladium catalysisjust like across a C텡C triple bond, and carbopalladation of the double bond in 4 occurs more rapidly than that in an acrylate. A variety of new three-component reactions of 4 with alkenyl as well as aryl halides and dienophiles have been developed and extended to be carried out in a combinatorial sense, even on a polymer support, with an additional dimension added in the cleavage step. Most of the reported reactions of bicyclopropylidene (4) proceed with good to excellent yields.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Palladium(0)- and Nickel(0)-Catalyzed [3 + 2] Co-Cyclization Reactions of Bicyclopropylidene with AlkenesEuropean Journal of Organic Chemistry, 1998