Pinacolborane is the borane with the formula (CH3)4C2O2BH. Often pinacolborane is abbreviated HBpin.[1] It features a boron hydride functional group incorporated in a five-membered C2O2B ring. Like related boron alkoxides, pinacolborane is monomeric. It is a colorless liquid.[2] It features a reactive B-H functional group.[3]
Use in organic synthesis
In the presence of catalysts, pinacolborane hydroborates alkenes and, less rapidly, alkynes.[3][4]
Pinacolborane also affects catalyst-free hydroboration of aldehydes,[5] ketones,[6] and carboxylic acids.[7]
^Ramachandran, P. Veeraraghavan; Chandra, J. Subash; Ros, Abel; Fernández, Rosario; Lassaletta, José M.; Aggarwal, Varinder K.; Blair, Daniel J. (2017). "Pinacolborane". Encyclopedia of Reagents for Organic Synthesis. pp. 1–12. doi:10.1002/047084289X.rn00574.pub3. ISBN9780470842898.
^ abBrown, H.C.; Zaidlewicz, M. (2001). Organic Syntheses Via Boranes, Vol. 2. Milwaukee, WI: Aldrich Chemical Co. ISBN978-0-9708441-0-1.
^Stachowiak, Hanna; Kaźmierczak, Joanna; Kuciński, Krzysztof; Hreczycho, Grzegorz (2018). "Catalyst-free and solvent-free hydroboration of aldehydes". Green Chemistry. 20 (8): 1738–1742. doi:10.1039/C8GC00042E. ISSN1463-9262.
^Wang, Weifan; Luo, Man; Yao, Weiwei; Ma, Mengtao; Pullarkat, Sumod A.; Xu, Li; Leung, Pak-Hing (2019). "Catalyst-free and solvent-free hydroboration of ketones". New Journal of Chemistry. 43 (27): 10744–10749. doi:10.1039/C9NJ02722J. ISSN1144-0546. S2CID197130591.
^Harinath, Adimulam; Bhattacharjee, Jayeeta; Panda, Tarun K. (2019). "Facile Reduction of carboxylic acids to primary alcohols under catalyst-free and solvent-free conditions". Chemical Communications. 55 (10): 1386–1389. doi:10.1039/C8CC08841A. ISSN1359-7345. PMID30607398. S2CID58570916.