Mixed boron trihalide adducts of amines: a multinuclear nuclear magnetic resonance study
Abstract
The 19F chemical shifts of mixed boron trihalide adducts of tertiary amines have a marked dependence on the steric effects of amine substituents, as estimated from the ‘cone angle’ of the amines. Base strength of the amine has little effect on adduct 19F shifts, but does have a pronounced effect on the rate of halogen redistribution. The 11B and 13C chemical shifts and 11B–19F coupling constants of the adducts are discussed. Amines NRR′R″ become chiral when complexed to Lewis acids, since complexation stops the rapid inversion process. Because of this the fluorines in R″R′RN·BF2X (X = Cl, Br, or I) adducts are diastereotopic and magnetically non-equivalent, differing in chemical shift by up to 2 p.p.m. The four-adduct system of benzyl(ethyl)methylamine with BFnI3–n(n = 0–3) gives rise to the cation B(PhCH2NMeEt)2F2+ which, because of the chirality of the co-ordinated amines, exists in meso and optically active forms distinguishable by 19F n.m.r. spectroscopy.