Silylation


Silylation is the introduction of a substituted silyl group to a molecule. The process is the basis of organosilicon chemistry.

Of organic compounds

Alcohols, carboxylic acids, amines, thiols, and phosphates can be silylated. The process involves the replacement of a proton with a trialkylsilyl group, typically trimethylsilyl. Generally the substrate is deprotonated with a suitable strong base followed by treatment with a silyl chloride. Often strong bases such butyl lithium or a Grignard reagent are used, as illustrated by the synthesis of a trimethylsilyl ethers as protecting groups from an alcohol:
Bisacetamide Me is an efficient silylation agent used for the derivatisation of compounds. The reaction of BSA with alcohols gives the corresponding trimethylsilyl ether, together with N-acetamide as a byproduct:
The introduction of a silyl group gives derivatives of enhanced volatility, making the derivatives suitable for analysis by gas chromatography and electron-impact mass spectrometry. For EI-MS, the silyl derivatives give more favorable diagnostic fragmentation patterns of use in structure investigations, or characteristic ions of use in trace analyses employing selected ion monitoring and related techniques.

Desilylation

Desilylation is the reverse of silylation: the silyl group is exchanged for a proton. Various fluoride salts are popular for this purpose.

Of metals

es with silyl ligands are well known. An early example is CpFe2Si3, prepared by a salt metathesis reaction from trimethylsilyl chloride and CpFe2Na. Typical routes include oxidative addition of Si-H bonds to low-valent metals. Metal silyl complexes are intermediates in hydrosilation, a process used to make organosilicon compounds on both laboratory and commercial scales.