Abstract

Saturated primary, secondary and tertiary alkyl halides RX (X = Cl, Br or I) are reduced to the corresponding alkanes RH in essentially quantitative yield by triethylsilane in refluxing hexane or cyclohexane in the presence of a suitable initiator and an alkanethiol catalyst. Reduction proceeds by a radical chain mechanism and the thiol acts as a polarity reversal catalyst which mediates hydrogen-atom transfer from the Si–H group of the silane to the alkyl radical R˙. Triphenylsilanethiol and perfluorohexanesulphenyl chloride are also effective catalysts; the latter is probably reduced in situ to the corresponding fluorinated thiol. Other silanes R3SiH (R = Prn, Pri or Ph) also bring about reduction. The silane–thiol couple therefore serves as a useful replacement for tributylstannane as a homolytic reducing agent for alkyl halides. Reduction of 6-bromohex-1-ene, to give a mixture of hex-1-ene and methylcyclopentane, is more sluggush than reduction of saturated halides and this is attributed to removal of the thiol catalyst by addition across the CC bond. Ethyl 4-bromobutanoate is smoothly reduced to ethyl butanoate without interference from the ester function. Dialkyl sulphides are reduced to alkanes by triethylsilane in a radical chain reaction, but the effect of added thiol depends on the nature of the S-alkyl groups in the sulphide. The trialkylsilanethiol couple can also successfully replace trialkylstannane as the reducing agent in the Barton–McCombie deoxygenation of primary and secondary alcohols via their S-methyl dithiocarbonate (xanthate) esters. Good yields of deoxy compounds are obtained from octan-1-ol, octan-2-ol, octadecan-1-ol, 5α-cholestan-3β-ol, cholesterol and 1,2:5,6-di-O-isopropylidene-α-D-glucofuranose.

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