Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Phosphole

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ChemSpider ID
  
144273


Related compounds
  
Pyrrole, bismole, arsole, stibole

Phosphole is the organic compound with the chemical formula C4H4PH; it is the phosphorus analog of pyrrole. The term phosphole also refers to substituted derivatives of the parent heterocycle. These compounds are of theoretical interest but also serve as ligands for transition metals and as precursors to more complex organophosphorus compounds.

Contents

Phosphole Phosphole Wikipdia

Structure and bonding

Phosphole Phosphol Wikipedia

Unlike the related 5-membered heterocycles pyrrole, thiophene, and furan, the aromaticity of phospholes is diminished, reflecting the reluctance of phosphorus to delocalize its lone pair. The main indication of this difference is the pyramidalization of phosphorus. The absence of aromaticity is also indicated by the reactivity of phospholes.

Preparation

Phosphole The wide synthetic versatility of five membered rings containing

The parent phosphole was first described in 1983. It was prepared by low temperature protonation of lithium phospholide. Pentaphenylphosphole was reported in 1953. One route to phospholes is via the McCormack reaction, involving the addition of a 1,3-diene to a phosphonous chloride (RPCl2) followed by dehydrohalogenation. Phenylphospholes can be prepared via zirconacyclopentadienes by reaction with PhPCl2.

Reactivity

Phosphole httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The behavior of the secondary phospholes, those with P-H bond, is dominated by the reactivity of this group. The parent phosphole readily rearranges by migration of H from P to carbon-2, followed by dimerization.

Phosphole Phosphole Wikipedia

Most phospholes are tertiary, typically P-methyl or P-phenyl. The nonaromaticity of these phospholes is manifested in their reactivity but the P-C bonds remain intact. For example, they undergo Diels-Alder reactions with electrophilic alkynes. They are basic at P, serving as ligands.

Phosphole Phosphole C4H5P ChemSpider

2,5-Diphenyl phospholes can be functionalised by deprotonation followed by P-acylation then a 1H, 2H, 3H phospholide equilibrium resulting in a 1:3 shift of the acyl group. Phospholes can also be turned into β-functional phosphabenzenes (phosphinines, or phosphorine) via functionalisation by imidoyl chloride and insertion.

Phosphole Design and synthesis of phosphole based systems for novel organic

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Phosphole Phosphol Wikipedia

Phosphole Phospholebased ligands in catalysis Catalysis Science

References

Phosphole Wikipedia