A Strategy for the Controllable Generation of Organic Superbases from Benchtop-Stable Salts

21 February 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Organic superbases are a distinct class of strong Brønsted base that enable numerous modern reaction applications. However, despite their great synthetic potential, widespread use and study of superbases are limited by their air sensitivity and difficult preparation. To address this, we report air-stable carboxylate salts of BTPP and P2-t-Bu phosphazene superbases that, when added to solution with an epoxide, spontaneously generate freebase. These systems function as effective precatalysts and stoichiometric prereagents for superbase-promoted addition, substitution and polymerization reactions. In addition to improving the synthesis, shelf stability, handling and recycling of phosphazenes, this approach enables precise regulation of the rate of base generation in situ. The activation strategy effectively mimics manual slow addition techniques, allowing for control over a reaction’s rate or induction period and improvement of reactions that require strong base but are also sensitive to its presence, such as Pd-catalyzed coupling reactions.

Keywords

Organic superbases
Precatalysts

Supplementary materials

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Experimental procedures and characterization data.
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