The
Cadiot-Chodkiewicz coupling in
organic chemistry is a
coupling reaction between a terminal
alkyne and a
haloalkyne catalyzed by a copper(I) salt such as
copper(I) bromide and an
amine base . The reaction product is a di-acetylene or di-
alkyne.
The reaction mechanism involves deprotonation by base of the acetylenic proton followed by formation of a copper(I) acetylide. A cycle of oxidative addition and reductive elimination on the copper center then creates a new carbon carbon bond.
Related couplings are the Glaser coupling and the Eglinton coupling.
Cadiot-Chodkiewicz coupling
In one study the Cadiot-Chodkiewicz coupling has been applied in the synthesis of acetylene
macrocycles starting from
cis-1,4-diethynyl-1,4-dimethoxycyclohexa-2,5-diene. This compound is also the starting material for the dibromide through
NBS and
silver nitrate:
The coupling reaction itself takes place in methanol with piperidine, the hydrochloric acid salt of hydroxylamine and copper(I) bromide.
Eglinton reaction
In the related
Eglinton reaction two terminal alkynes are coupled directly a copper(II) salt such as
cupric acetate. This procedure was used in the synthesis of
cyclooctadecanonaene. Another example is the synthesis of diphenyldiacetylene from
phenylacetylene
Glaser coupling
The
Glaser coupling (1870) is by far the oldest acetylenic coupling and is based on cuprous salts like
copper(I) bromide and an additional oxidant like oxygen. The base in its original scope is
ammonia.
Hay coupling
The Hay coupling (1962) is another version of the Glaser coupling with the
TMEDA complex of
copper(I) chloride .An example is the the coupling of
trimethylsilylacetylene
References