Organofluorine chemistry describes the chemistry of the organofluorines, organic compounds that contain the carbon–fluorine bond. Organofluorine compounds find diverse applications ranging from oil and water repellents to pharmaceuticals, refrigerants, and reagents in catalysis. In addition to these applications, some organofluorine compounds are pollutants because of their contributions to ozone depletion, global warming, bioaccumulation, and toxicity. The area of organofluorine chemistry often requires special techniques associated with the handling of fluorinating agents.
The carbon–fluorine bond
Fluorine has several distinctive differences from all other
substituents encountered in organic molecules. As a result, the physical
and chemical properties of organofluorines can be distinctive in
comparison to other organohalogens.
- The carbon–fluorine bond is one of the strongest in organic chemistry (an average bond energy around 480 kJ/mol). This is significantly stronger than the bonds of carbon with other halogens (an average bond energy of e.g. C-Cl bond is around 320 kJ/mol) and is one of the reasons why fluoroorganic compounds have high thermal and chemical stability.
- The carbon–fluorine bond is relatively short (around 1.4 Å).
- The Van der Waals radius of the fluorine substituent is only 1.47 Å, which is shorter than in any other substituent and is close to that of hydrogen (1.2 Å). This, together with the short bond length, is the reason why there is no steric strain in polyfluorinated compounds. This is another reason for their high thermal stability. In addition, the fluorine substituents in polyfluorinated compounds efficiently shield the carbon skeleton from possible attacking reagents. This is another reason for the high chemical stability of polyfluorinated compounds.
- Fluorine has the highest electronegativity of all elements: 3.98. This causes the high dipole moment of C-F bond (1.41 D).
- Fluorine has the lowest polarizability of all atoms: 0.56 10−24 cm3. This causes very weak dispersion forces between polyfluorinated molecules and is the reason for the often-observed boiling point reduction on fluorination as well as for the simultaneous hydrophobicity and lipophobicity of polyfluorinated compounds whereas other perhalogenated compounds are more lipophilic.
In comparison to aryl chlorides and bromides, aryl fluorides form Grignard reagents only reluctantly. On the other hand, aryl fluorides, e.g. fluoroanilines and fluorophenols, often undergo nucleophilic substitution efficiently.
Types of organofluorine compounds
Fluorocarbons
Formally, fluorocarbons
only contain carbon and fluorine. Sometimes they are called
perfluorocarbons. They can be gases, liquids, waxes, or solids,
depending upon their molecular weight. The simplest fluorocarbon is the
gas tetrafluoromethane (CF4). Liquids include perfluorooctane
and perfluorodecalin. While fluorocarbons with single bonds are
stable, unsaturated fluorocarbons are more reactive, especially those
with triple bonds. Fluorocarbons
are more chemically and thermally stable than hydrocarbons, reflecting
the relative inertness of the C-F bond. They are also relatively lipophobic. Because of the reduced intermolecular van der Waals interactions,
fluorocarbon-based compounds are sometimes used as lubricants or are
highly volatile. Fluorocarbon liquids have medical applications as
oxygen carriers.
The structure of organofluorine compounds can be distinctive. As
shown below, perfluorinated aliphatic compounds tend to segregate from
hydrocarbons. This "like dissolves like effect" is related to the
usefulness of fluorous phases and the use of PFOA
in processing of fluoropolymers. In contrast to the aliphatic
derivatives, perfluoroaromatic derivatives tend to form mixed phases
with nonfluorinated aromatic compounds, resulting from donor-acceptor
interactions between the pi-systems.
Fluoropolymers
Polymeric organofluorine compounds are numerous and commercially significant. They range from fully fluorinated species, e.g. PTFE to partially fluorinated, e.g. polyvinylidene fluoride ([CH2CF2]n) and polychlorotrifluoroethylene ([CFClCF2]n). The fluoropolymer polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE/Teflon) is a solid.
Hydrofluorocarbons
Hydrofluorocarbons
(HFCs), organic compounds that contain fluorine and hydrogen atoms, are
the most common type of organofluorine compounds. They are commonly
used in air conditioning and as refrigerants in place of the older chlorofluorocarbons such as R-12 and hydrochlorofluorocarbons such as R-21. They do not harm the ozone layer as much as the compounds they replace; however, they do contribute to global warming. Their atmospheric concentrations and contribution to anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions are rapidly increasing, causing international concern about their radiative forcing.
Fluorocarbons with few C-F bonds behave similarly to the parent hydrocarbons, but their reactivity can be altered significantly. For example, both uracil and 5-fluorouracil
are colourless, high-melting crystalline solids, but the latter is a
potent anti-cancer drug. The use of the C-F bond in pharmaceuticals is
predicated on this altered reactivity. Several drugs and agrochemicals contain only one fluorine center or one trifluoromethyl group.
Unlike other greenhouse gases in the Paris Agreement, hydrofluorocarbons have other international negotiations.
In September 2016, the so-called New York Declaration urged a global reduction in the use of HFCs. On 15 October 2016, due to these chemicals contribution to climate change, negotiators from 197 nations meeting at the summit of the United Nations Environment Programme in Kigali, Rwanda reached a legally-binding accord to phase out hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) in an amendment to the Montreal Protocol.
Fluorocarbenes
As
indicated throughout this article, fluorine-substituents lead to
reactivity that differs strongly from classical organic chemistry. The
premier example is difluorocarbene, CF2, which is a singlet whereas carbene (CH2) has a triplet ground state. This difference is significant because difluorocarbene is a precursor to tetrafluoroethylene.
Perfluorinated compounds
Perfluorinated compounds are fluorocarbon derivatives, as they are
closely structurally related to fluorocarbons. However, they also
possess new atoms such as nitrogen, iodine, or ionic groups, such as perfluorinated carboxylic acids.
Methods for preparation of C–F bonds
Organofluorine
compounds are prepared by numerous routes, depending on the degree and
regiochemistry of fluorination sought and the nature of the precursors.
The direct fluorination of hydrocarbons with F2, often diluted with N2, is useful for highly fluorinated compounds:
- R
3CH + F
2 → R
3CF + HF
Such reactions however are often unselective and require care because hydrocarbons can uncontrollably "burn" in F
2, analogous to the combustion of hydrocarbon in O
2. For this reason, alternative fluorination methodologies have been developed. Generally, such methods are classified into two classes.
2, analogous to the combustion of hydrocarbon in O
2. For this reason, alternative fluorination methodologies have been developed. Generally, such methods are classified into two classes.
Electrophilic fluorination
Electrophilic fluorination rely on sources of "F+". Often such reagents feature N-F bonds, for example F-TEDA-BF4.
Asymmetric fluorination, whereby only one of two possible enantiomeric
products are generated from a prochiral substrate, rely on
electrophilic fluorination reagents. Illustrative of this approach is the preparation of a precursor to anti-inflammatory agents:
Electrosynthetic methods
A specialized but important method of electrophilic fluorination involves electrosynthesis.
The method is mainly used to perfluorinate, i.e. replace all C–H bonds
by C–F bonds. The hydrocarbon is dissolved or suspended in liquid HF,
and the mixture is electrolyzed at 5–6 V using Ni anodes. The method was first demonstrated with the preparation of perfluoropyridine (C
5F
5N) from pyridine (C
5H
5N). Several variations of this technique have been described, including the use of molten potassium bifluoride or organic solvents.
5F
5N) from pyridine (C
5H
5N). Several variations of this technique have been described, including the use of molten potassium bifluoride or organic solvents.
Nucleophilic fluorination
The
major alternative to electrophilic fluorination is, naturally,
nucleophilic fluorination using reagents that are sources of "F−," for Nucleophilic displacement typically of chloride and bromide. Metathesis reactions employing alkali metal fluorides are the simplest.
- R
3CCl + MF → R
3CF + MCl (M = Na, K, Cs)
Alkyl monofluorides can be obtained from alcohols and Olah reagent (pyridinium fluoride) or another fluoridating agents.
The decomposition of aryldiazonium tetrafluoroborates in the Sandmeyer or Schiemann reactions exploit fluoroborates as F− sources.
- ArN
2BF
4 → ArF + N
2 + BF
3
Although hydrogen fluoride
may appear to be an unlikely nucleophile, it is the most common source
of fluoride in the synthesis of organofluorine compounds. Such
reactions are often catalysed by metal fluorides such as chromium
trifluoride. 1,1,1,2-Tetrafluoroethane, a replacement for CFC's, is prepared industrially using this approach:
- Cl2C=CClH + 4 HF → F3CCFH2 + 3 HCl
Notice that this transformation entails two reaction types, metathesis (replacement of Cl− by F−) and hydrofluorination of an alkene.
Deoxofluorination
Deoxofluorination agents effect the replacement hydroxyl and carbonyl
groups with one and two fluorides, respectively. One such reagent,
useful for fluoride for oxide exchange in carbonyl compounds, is sulfur tetrafluoride:
- RCO2H + SF4 → RCF3 + SO2 + HF
Alternates to SF4 include the diethylaminosulfur trifluoride (DAST, NEt2SF3) and bis(2-methoxyethyl)aminosulfur trifluoride (deoxo-fluor). These organic reagents are easier to handle and more selective:
From fluorinated building blocks
Many
organofluorine compounds are generated from reagents that deliver
perfluoroalkyl and perfluoroaryl groups.
(Trifluoromethyl)trimethylsilane, CF3Si(CH3)3, is used as a source of the trifluoromethyl group, for example. Among the available fluorinated building blocks are CF3X (X = Br, I), C6F5Br, and C3F7I. These species form Grignard reagents that then can be treated with a variety of electrophiles.
The development of fluorous technologies (see below, under solvents) is
leading to the development of reagents for the introduction of
"fluorous tails".
A special but significant application of the fluorinated building block approach is the synthesis of tetrafluoroethylene,
which is produced on a large-scale industrially via the intermediacy of
difluorocarbene. The process begins with the thermal (600-800 °C)
dehydrochlorination of chlorodifluoromethane:
- CHClF2 → CF2 + HCl
- 2 CF2 → C2F4
Sodium fluorodichloroacetate (CAS# 2837-90-3) is used to generate chlorofluorocarbene, for cyclopropanations.
18F-Delivery methods
The usefulness of fluorine-containing radiopharmaceuticals in 18F-positron emission tomography has motivated the development of new methods for forming C–F bonds. Because of the short half-life of 18F, these syntheses must be highly efficient, rapid, and easy. Illustrative of the methods is the preparation of fluoride-modified glucose by displacement of a triflate by a labeled fluoride nucleophile:
Biological role
Biologically synthesized organofluorines have been found in microorganisms and plants, but not animals. The most common example is fluoroacetate, which occurs as a plant defence against herbivores in at least 40 plants in Australia, Brazil and Africa. Other biologically synthesized organofluorines include ω-fluoro fatty acids, fluoroacetone, and 2-fluorocitrate which are all believed to be biosynthesized in biochemical pathways from the intermediate fluoroacetaldehyde. Adenosyl-fluoride synthase is an enzyme capable of biologically synthesizing the carbon–fluorine bond. Man made carbon–fluorine bonds are commonly found in pharmaceuticals and agrichemicals because it adds stability to the carbon framework; also, the relatively small size of fluorine is convenient as fluorine acts as an approximate bioisostere of the hydroxyl group.
Introducing the carbon–fluorine bond to organic compounds is the major
challenge for medicinal chemists using organofluorine chemistry, as the
carbon–fluorine bond increases the probability of having a successful
drug by about a factor of ten. An estimated 20% of pharmaceuticals, and 30–40% of agrichemicals are organofluorines, including several of the top drugs. Examples include 5-fluorouracil, fluoxetine (Prozac), paroxetine (Paxil), ciprofloxacin (Cipro), mefloquine, and fluconazole.
Applications
Organofluorine chemistry impacts many areas of everyday life and technology. The C-F bond is found in pharmaceuticals, agrichemicals, fluoropolymers, refrigerants, surfactants, anesthetics, oil-repellents, catalysis, and water-repellents, among others.
Pharmaceuticals and agrochemicals
The
carbon-fluorine bond is commonly found in pharmaceuticals and
agrochemicals because it is generally metabolically stable and fluorine
acts as a bioisostere of the hydrogen atom. An estimated one fifth of pharmaceuticals contain fluorine, including several of the top drugs. Examples include 5-fluorouracil, flunitrazepam (Rohypnol), fluoxetine (Prozac), paroxetine (Paxil), ciprofloxacin (Cipro), mefloquine, and fluconazole. Fluorine-substituted ethers are volatile anesthetics, including the commercial products methoxyflurane, enflurane, isoflurane, sevoflurane and desflurane. Fluorocarbon anesthetics reduce the hazard of flammability with diethyl ether and cyclopropane. Perfluorinated alkanes are used as blood substitutes.
Inhaler propellant
Fluorocarbons are also used as a propellant for metered-dose inhalers
used to administer some asthma medications. The current generation of
propellant consists of hydrofluoroalkanes (HFA), which has replaced CFC-propellant-based inhalers. CFC inhalers were banned as of 2008 as part of the Montreal Protocol because of environmental concerns with the ozone layer. HFA propellant inhalers like FloVent and ProAir ( Salbutamol ) have no generic versions available as of October 2014.
Fluorosurfactants
Fluorosurfactants, which have a polyfluorinated "tail" and a hydrophilic "head", serve as surfactants because they concentrate at the liquid-air interface due to their lipophobicity. Fluorosurfactants have low surface energies and dramatically lower surface tension. The fluorosurfactants perfluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOS) and perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) are two of the most studied because of their ubiquity, toxicity, and long residence times in humans and wildlife.
Solvents
Fluorinated compounds often display distinct solubility properties. Dichlorodifluoromethane and chlorodifluoromethane were widely used refrigerants. CFCs have potent ozone depletion potential due to the homolytic cleavage of the carbon-chlorine bonds; their use is largely prohibited by the Montreal Protocol. Hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs), such as tetrafluoroethane, serve as CFC replacements because they do not catalyze ozone depletion. Oxygen exhibits a high solubility in perfluorocarbon compounds, reflecting again on their lipophilicity. Perfluorodecalin has been demonstrated as a blood substitutes, transporting oxygen to the lungs.
The solvent 1,1,1,2-tetrafluoroethane has been used for extraction of natural products such as taxol, evening primrose oil, and vanillin. 2,2,2-trifluoroethanol is an oxidation-resistant polar solvent.
Organofluorine reagents
The development of organofluorine chemistry has contributed many reagents of value beyond organofluorine chemistry. Triflic acid (CF3SO3H) and trifluoroacetic acid (CF3CO2H) are useful throughout organic synthesis. Their strong acidity is attributed to the electronegativity of the trifluoromethyl group that stabilizes the negative charge. The triflate-group (the conjugate base of the triflic acid) is a good leaving group in substitution reactions.
Fluorous phases
Of topical interest in the area of "Green Chemistry," highly fluorinated substituents, e.g. perfluorohexyl (C6F13) confer distinctive solubility properties to molecules, which facilitates purification of products in organic synthesis. This area, described as "fluorous
chemistry," exploits the concept of like-dissolves-like in the sense
that fluorine-rich compounds dissolve preferentially in fluorine-rich
solvents. Because of the relative inertness of the C-F bond, such
fluorous phases are compatible with even harsh reagents. This theme has
spawned techniques of "fluorous tagging and fluorous protection.
Illustrative of fluorous technology is the use of
fluoroalkyl-substituted tin hydrides for reductions, the products being
easily separated from the spent tin reagent by extraction using
fluorinated solvents.
Hydrophobic fluorinated ionic liquids, such as organic salts of bistriflimide or hexafluorophosphate, can form phases that are insoluble in both water and organic solvents, producing multiphasic liquids.
Organofluorine ligands in transition metal chemistry
Organofluorine ligands have long been featured in organometallic and coordination chemistry. One advantage to F-containing ligands is the convenience of 19F NMR spectroscopy
for monitoring reactions. The organofluorine compounds can serve as a
"sigma-donor ligand," as illustrated by the titanium(III) derivative [(C5Me5)2Ti(FC6H5)]BPh4. Most often, however, fluorocarbon substituents are used to enhance the Lewis acidity of metal centers. A premier example is "Eufod," a coordination complex of europium(III) that features a perfluoroheptyl modified acetylacetonate ligand. This and related species are useful in organic synthesis and as "shift reagents" in NMR spectroscopy.
In an area where coordination chemistry and materials science
overlap, the fluorination of organic ligands is used to tune the
properties of component molecules. For example, the degree and
regiochemistry of fluorination of metalated 2-phenylpyridine ligands in
platinum(II) complexes significantly modifies the emission properties of
the complexes.
The coordination chemistry of organofluorine ligands also embraces fluorous technologies. For example, triphenylphosphine has been modified by attachment of perfluoroalkyl substituents that confer solubility in perfluorohexane as well as supercritical carbon dioxide. As a specific example, [(C8F17C3H6-4-C6H4)3P.
C-F bond activation
An
active area of organometallic chemistry encompasses the scission of C-F
bonds by transition metal-based reagents. Both stoichiometric and
catalytic reactions have been developed and are of interest from the
perspectives of organic synthesis and remediation of xenochemicals.
C-F bond activation has been classified as follows "(i) oxidative
addition of fluorocarbon, (ii) M–C bond formation with HF elimination,
(iii) M–C bond formation with fluorosilane elimination, (iv) hydrodefluorination
of fluorocarbon with M–F bond formation, (v) nucleophilic attack on
fluorocarbon, and (vi) defluorination of fluorocarbon". An illustrative
metal-mediated C-F activation reaction is the defluorination of
fluorohexane by a zirconium dihydride, an analogue of Schwartz's reagent:
- (C5Me5)2ZrH2 + 1-FC6H13 → (C5Me5)2ZrH(F) + C6H14
Fluorocarbon anions in Ziegler-Natta catalysis
Fluorine-containing compounds are often featured in noncoordinating or weakly coordinating anions. Both tetrakis(pentafluorophenyl)borate, B(C6F5)4−, and the related tetrakis[3,5-bis(trifluoromethyl)phenyl]borate, are useful in Ziegler-Natta catalysis
and related alkene polymerization methodologies. The fluorinated
substituents render the anions weakly basic and enhance the solubility
in weakly basic solvents, which are compatible with strong Lewis acids.
Materials science
Organofluorine compounds enjoy many niche applications in materials science. With a low coefficient of friction,
fluid fluoropolymers are used as specialty lubricants.
Fluorocarbon-based greases are used in demanding applications.
Representative products include Fomblin and Krytox, manufactured by Solvay Solexis and DuPont,
respectively. Certain firearm lubricants such as "Tetra Gun" contain
fluorocarbons. Capitalizing on their nonflammability, fluorocarbons are
used in fire fighting foam. Organofluorine compounds are components of
liquid crystal displays. The polymeric analogue of triflic acid, nafion is a solid acid that is used as the membrane in most low temperature fuel cells. The bifunctional monomer 4,4'-difluorobenzophenone is a precursor to PEEK-class polymers.
Biosynthesis of organofluorine compounds
In contrast to the many naturally-occurring organic compounds containing the heavier halides, chloride, bromide, and iodide, only a handful of biologically synthesized carbon-fluorine bonds are known. The most common natural organofluorine species is fluoroacetate, a toxin found in a few species of plants. Others include fluorooleic acid, fluoroacetone, nucleocidin (4'-fuoro-5'-O-sulfamoyladenosine), fluorothreonine, and 2-fluorocitrate. Several of these species are probably biosynthesized from fluoroacetaldehyde. The enzyme fluorinase catalyzed the synthesis of 5'-fluoro-5-deoxyadenosine (see scheme to right).
History
Organofluorine chemistry began in the 1800s with the development of organic chemistry. The first organofluorine compounds were prepared using antimony trifluoride as the F− source. The nonflammability and nontoxicity of the chlorofluorocarbons CCl3F and CCl2F2 attracted industrial attention in the 1920s. In the 1930s, scientists at duPont discovered polytetrafluoroethylene. Subsequent major developments, especially in the US, benefited from expertise gained in the production of uranium hexafluoride. Starting in the late 1940s, a series of electrophilic fluorinating methodologies were introduced, beginning with CoF3. About this time, electrochemical fluorination ("electrofluorination")
was announced, having been developed in the 1930s with the goal of
generating highly stable perfluorinated materials compatible with uranium hexafluoride.
These new methodologies allowed the synthesis of C-F bonds without
using elemental fluorine and without relying on metathetical methods.
In 1957, the anticancer activity of 5-fluorouracil was described. This
report provided one of the first examples of rational design of drugs. This discovery sparked a surge of interest in fluorinated pharmaceuticals and agrichemicals. The discovery of the noble gas compounds, e.g. XeF4, provided a host of new reagents starting in the early 1960s. In the 1970s, fluorodeoxyglucose was established as a useful reagent in 18F positron emission tomography.
In Nobel Prize-winning work, CFC's were shown to contribute to the
depletion of atmospheric ozone. This discovery alerted the world to the
negative consequences of organofluorine compounds and motivated the
development of new routes to organofluorine compounds. In 2002, the
first C-F bond-forming enzyme, fluorinase, was reported.
Environmental and health concerns
Only a few organofluorine compounds are acutely bioactive and highly toxic, such as fluoroacetate and perfluoroisobutene.
Some organofluorine compounds pose significant risks and dangers to health and the environment. CFCs and HCFCs (hydrochlorofluorocarbon) deplete the ozone layer and are potent greenhouse gases.
HFCs are potent greenhouse gases and are facing calls for stricter
international regulation and phase out schedules as a fast-acting
greenhouse emission abatement measure, as are perfluorocarbons (PFCs), and sulphur hexafluoride (SF6).
Because of the compound's effect on climate, the G-20 major economies agreed in 2013 to support initiatives to phase out use of HCFCs. They affirmed the roles of the Montreal Protocol and the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in global HCFC accounting and reduction. The U.S. and China at the same time announced a bilateral agreement to similar effect.
Persistence and bioaccumulation
Because
of the strength of the carbon–fluorine bond, many synthetic
fluorocarbons and fluorcarbon-based compounds are persistent in the
environment. Fluorosurfactants, such as PFOS and PFOA, are persistent global contaminants. Fluorocarbon based CFCs and tetrafluoromethane have been reported in igneous and metamorphic rock. PFOS is a persistent organic pollutant
and may be harming the health of wildlife; the potential health effects
of PFOA to humans are under investigation by the C8 Science Panel.