Samarium(II) iodide is a powerful
reducing agent – for example it rapidly reduces
water to
hydrogen.
Organic chemistry Samarium(II) iodide is a reagent for
carbon-carbon bond formation, for example in a
Barbier reaction (similar to the
Grignard reaction) between a
ketone and an alkyl iodide to form a
tertiary alcohol: :R1I + R2COR3 → R1R2C(OH)R3 Typical reaction conditions use SmI2 in THF in the presence of catalytic NiI2.
Esters react similarly (adding two R groups), but
aldehydes give by-products. The reaction is convenient in that it is often very rapid (5 minutes or less in the cold). Although samarium(II) iodide is considered a powerful single-electron reducing agent, it does display remarkable
chemoselectivity among functional groups. For example,
sulfones and
sulfoxides can be reduced to the corresponding
sulfide in the presence of a variety of
carbonyl-containing functionalities (such as
esters,
ketones,
amides,
aldehydes, etc.). This is presumably due to the considerably slower reaction with
carbonyls as compared to
sulfones and
sulfoxides. Furthermore, hydrodehalogenation of halogenated
hydrocarbons to the corresponding
hydrocarbon compound can be achieved using samarium(II) iodide. Also, it can be monitored by the color change that occurs as the dark blue color of SmI2 in THF discharges to a light yellow once the reaction has occurred. The picture shows the dark colour disappearing immediately upon contact with the
Barbier reaction mixture. Work-up is with dilute
hydrochloric acid, and the samarium is removed as aqueous Sm3+. Carbonyl compounds can also be coupled with simple alkenes to form five, six or eight membered rings.
Tosyl groups can be removed from
N-tosylamides almost instantaneously, using SmI2 in conjunction with distilled water and an amine base. The reaction is even effective for deprotection of sensitive substrates such as
aziridines: : In the
Markó-Lam deoxygenation, an alcohol could be almost instantaneously deoxygenated by reducing their toluate ester in presence of SmI2. : SmI2 can also be used in the
transannulation of
bicyclic molecules. An example is the SmI2 induced
ketone -
alkene cyclization of 5-methylenecyclooctanone which proceeds through a
ketyl intermediate: : : The applications of SmI2 have been reviewed. The book
Organic Synthesis Using Samarium Diiodide, published in 2009, gives a detailed overview of reactions mediated by SmI2. == References ==