Organic Chemistry, Poster
OC-161

Thermal Activation of Togni's Reagent Generates F3C!

N. Santschi1, B. J. Jelier1, T. Nauser1
1ETH Zürich, Department of Chemistry and Applied Biosciences, Vladimir-Prelog-Weg 1-5, 8093 Zürich.

Since the original conception of Togni's reagents, they have become central to a plethora of trifluoromethylation strategies.[1] However, in stark contrast to the number of manuscripts published on their applications, dedicated mechanistic studies have been realized to a lesser extent. Nevertheless, a common feature found in most recent mechanistic schemes is the generation of an intermittent electrophilic trifluoromethyl radical (F3C) by action of a specific chemical activator. In this regard, especially metals (e.g. Cu salts, photoredox catalysts) as well as electron-rich organic materials (e.g. arenes, organic anions) are popular choices since these can potentially accomplish a single-electron reduction of the reagents. Most recently, we corroborated this elementary reduction step by means of pulse radiolysis and by relying on the solvated electron.[2] The present contribution showcases that simple thermal activation of Togni's reagent also furnishes F3C!

The thermal activation of Togni's reagent was explored in standard GC-MS equipment by means of gas phase trapping of the generated radicals with TEMPO.[3] To this end, a 1:5 mixture of Togni's reagent and TEMPO was studied by varying the temperature of the injection port - the latter serving as the reaction vessel. In these experiments, the abundance of TEMPO-CF3 was shown to grow non-linearly with increasing temperature and a maximum efficiency of radical production was observed around 220 °C. Concomitantly, the release of methyl radicals (H3C) from the backbone occurred. Both events could also be identified by thermogravimetric analysis in conjunction with mass spectrometry (TGA-MS) of native reagent samples. In this contribution we will detail the experimental setup, acquired data and their mechanistic interpretation. Additionally, we will outline our attempts towards replication of these conditions in a laboratory scale setup to achieve additive-free radical trifluoromethylations with Togni's reagent.[4]

[1] Julie Charpentier, Natalia Früh, Antonio Togni, Chem. Rev., 2015, 115, 650-682.
[2] Nico Santschi, Thomas Nauser, J. Fluorine Chem. 2017, accepted.
[3] Nico Santschi, Benson J. Jelier, Thomas Nauser, submitted.
[4] Nico Santschi, Benson J. Jelier, submitted.