Direct Synthesis of Ethers from Alcohols & Aldehydes Enabled by an Oxocarbenium Ion Interception Strategy

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

Abstract

A new method has been established for formation of ethers from aldehydes and alcohols – a net reductive etherification. Reactions of these entities with phosphines in the presence of acid enable formation of α-(alkoxyalkyl)phosphonium salts, which, upon hydrolysis, result in formation of ether products in isolated yields of 63–92%. Formation and hydrolysis of the α-(alkoxyalkyl)phosphonium salts were done in an efficient telescoped two-step, one-pot process. Formation of the key phosphonium salt intermediates was found to occur in preference to acetal formation, and is proposed to involve interception of oxocarbenium ions formed by reaction of the aldehyde, alcohol and acid by phosphine. This method represents the first instance in which net reductive etherifications have been achieved without the requirement for use of hydrides or hydrogen as reductants, and exhibits excellent functional group tolerance, thus enabling facile hydride-free synthesis of ethers. These are amongst the most important functional groups in organic synthesis and the most frequently encountered functional groups in the structures of pharmaceutical agents.

Keywords

ethers
aldehydes
alcohols
phosphanes
hydrolysis
synthetic methods

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