tert-Butyllithium is a chemical compound with the formula (CH3)3CLi. As an organolithium compound, it has applications in organic synthesis since it is a strong base, capable of deprotonating many carbon molecules, including benzene. tert-Butyllithium is available commercially as solutions in hydrocarbons (such as pentane); it is not usually prepared in the laboratory.
Like other organolithium compounds, tert-butyllithium is a cluster compound. Whereas n-butyllithium exists both as a hexamer and a tetramer, tert-butyllithium exists exclusively as a tetramer with a cubane structure. Bonding in organolithium clusters involves sigma delocalization and significant Li−Li bonding.[2] Despite its complicated structure, tert-butyllithium is usually depicted in equations as a monomer.
The lithium–carbon bond in tert-butyllithium is highly polarized, having about 40 percent ionic character. The molecule reacts like a carbanion, as is represented by these two resonance structures:[3]
Reactions
tert-Butyllithium is renowned for deprotonation of carbon acids (C-H bonds). One example is the double deprotonation of allyl alcohol.[4] Other examples are the deprotonation of vinyl ethers.[5][6][7]
In combination with n-butyllithiium, tert-butylllithium monolithiates ferrocene.[8]tert-Butyllithium deprotonates dichloromethane:[9]
To minimize degradation by solvents, reactions involving tert-butyllithium are often conducted at very low temperatures in special solvents, such as the Trapp solvent mixture.
More so than other alkyllithium compounds, tert-butyllithium reacts with ethers.[2] In diethyl ether, the half-life of tert-butyllithium is about 60 minutes at 0 °C. It is even more reactive toward tetrahydrofuran (THF); the half-life in THF solutions is about 40 minutes at −20 °C.[12] In dimethoxyethane, the half-life is about 11 minutes at −70 °C[13]
In this example, the reaction of tert-butyllithium with (THF) is shown:
Safety
tert-butyllithium is a pyrophoric substance, meaning that it spontaneously ignites on exposure to air. Air-free techniques are important so as to prevent this compound from reacting violently with oxygen and moisture:
t-BuLi + O2 → t-BuOOLi
t-BuLi + H2O → t-BuH + LiOH
The solvents used in common commercial preparations are themselves flammable. While it is possible to work with this compound using cannula transfer, traces of tert-butyllithium at the tip of the needle or cannula may ignite and clog the cannula with lithium salts. While some researchers take this "pilot light" effect as a sign that the product is "fresh" and has not degraded due to time or improper storage/handling, others prefer to enclose the needle tip or cannula in a short glass tube, which is flushed with an inert gas and sealed at each end with septa.[14] Serious laboratory accidents involving tert-butyllithium have occurred. For example, in 2008 a staff research assistant, Sheharbano Sangji, in the lab of Patrick Harran[15] at the University of California, Los Angeles, died after being severely burned by a fire ignited by tert-butyllithium.[16][17][18]
Large-scale reactions may lead to runaway reactions, fires, and explosions when tert-butyllithium is mixed with ethers such as diethyl ether, and tetrahydrofuran. The use of hydrocarbon solvents may be preferred.
^K. P. C. Vollhardt, N. E. Schore (1999). "Organometallic reagents: sources of nucleophilic carbon for alcohol synthesis". Organic Chemistry : Structure And Function, 3rd edition.
^Rick L. Danheiser, David M. Fink, Kazuo Okano, Yeun-Min Tsai, Steven W. Szczepanski (1988). "(1-Oxo-2-Propenyl)Trimethylsilane". Organic Syntheses. 66: 14. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.066.0014.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^M. A. Tschantz, L. E. Burgess, A. I. Meyers (1996). "4-Ketoundecanoic Acid". Organic Syntheses. 73: 215. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.073.0215.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Krzysztof Jarowicki, Philip J. Kocienski, Liu Qun (2002). "1,2-Metallate Rearrangement: (Z)-4-(2-Propenyl)-3-Octen-1-Ol". Organic Syntheses. 79: 11. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.079.0011.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Matteson, Donald S.; Majumdar, Debesh (1983). "Homologation of Boronic Esters to α-Chloro Boronic Esters". Organometallics. 2 (11): 1529–1535. doi:10.1021/om50005a008.
^Adam P. Smith, Scott A. Savage, J. Christopher Love, Cassandra L. Fraser (2002). "Synthesis of 4-, 5-, and 6-Methyl-2,2'-bipyridine by a Negishi Cross-Coupling Strategy: 5-Methyl-2,2'-bipyridine". Organic Syntheses. 78: 51. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.078.0051.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Mercedes Amat, Sabine Hadida, Swargam Sathyanarayana, Joan Bosch (1997). "Regioselective Synthesis of 3-Substituted Indoles: 3-Ethylindole". Organic Syntheses. 74: 248. doi:10.15227/orgsyn.074.0248.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Stanetty, P; Koller, H.; Mihovilovic, M. (1992). "Directed ortho Lithiation of Phenylcarbamic acid 1,1-Dimethylethyl Ester (N-BOC-aniline). Revision and Improvements". Journal of Organic Chemistry. 57 (25): 6833–6837. doi:10.1021/jo00051a030.