Ad. Allen et al., Amination of bis(trimethylsilyl)-1,2-bisketene to ketenyl amides, succinamides, and polyamides: Preparative and kinetic studies, J ORG CHEM, 64(13), 1999, pp. 4690-4696
The reaction of the bisketene (Me3SiC=C=O)(2) (1) with amines is facile and
proceeds by two distinct steps forming first ketenylcarboxamides 3 and the
n succinamides 5. Successive reaction of 1 with two different amines gives
mixed succinamides, while phenylhydrazine gives succinimide 7. The reaction
s of 1.8 equiv of 1 with 1,4-(H2NCH2)(2)C6H4 gives alpha,omega-bisketenyldi
amide 13, while equivalent amounts of 1 and diamines gave polymeric amides.
Mixed ester amides 8 are formed by sequential reaction of 1 with an alcoho
l, followed by an amine, or vice versa. Kinetic studies of the amination re
action of 1 with excess amines in CH3CN gave rate constants k(obs) for the
formation of ketenylcarboxamides that were fit by the relationship k(obs) =
k(a)[amine](2) + k(b)[amine](3). Further reaction of the n-butyl ketenylca
rboxamide 3b with n-BuNH2 to give the succinamide 5b was first order in [n-
BuNH2], while the further reaction of the CF3CH2 ketenylcarboxyamide 3c wit
h CF3CH2NH2 to form 5c was fit by the equation k(obs) = k(c)[amine](2)/(k(d
)[amine] + 1). The reaction of 3b with CH3OH to form the ester amide 8a is
strongly accelerated compared to CH3OH addition to the corresponding keteny
l ester and gives significant stereoselectivity for formation of erythro pr
oduct, and both these effects, as well as the absence of higher order kinet
ic terms in the reaction of 3b with n-BuNH2 may arise from coordination by
the carboxamido group to the nucleophile.