Introduction
The title compound
[1]
[and
its higher order congeners Fe2(CO)9 and Fe3(CO)12] exhibits
several features which have made it particularly attractive as a
reagent in organic synthesis. These features include: (i) the nucleophilic
attack at one of the CO ligands to generate iron carbonylates;
[2]
(ii) carbonyl insertion
reactions; and (iii) its ability to undergo under thermal or photochemical
conditions an in situ dissociative loss of one or more CO ligand
and subsequent complexation of the coordinatively unsaturated iron
to an organic substrate. Pattern (i) has proven useful mainly due
to the reducing properties of iron carbonylates (Abstract A). Pattern
(ii) now allows the efficient preparation of cyclohexenones (Abstract
B), β-, γ- or δ-lactones and lactams
(Abstract C) and also cyclopentadienones (Abstract D), compounds
which have all proven useful in total synthesis. Finally and most
importantly, reactions of type (iii) include the isomerisation of
olefins with either a stoichiometric or catalytic amount of Fe(CO)5,
[3]
the use of tricarbonyl
iron group for the stabilization of highly labile molecules, the
use of tricarbonyl(η4-1,3-diene)iron complexes
[4]
to protect, under a number of reaction
conditions, (e.g. hydrogenation, acylation, hydroboration, cycloaddition,
epoxydation, osmylation and Michael addition) a 1,3-diene unit (Abstract
E), the use of the tricarbonyl iron moiety to control the stereoselectivity
of reactions on a neighboring functional group (Abstract E), and
mainly, the well known reactivity of the corresponding η5-dienyl
salt (Abstract F). It should be noted here that, though the tricarbonyliron
complexes are easy to prepare on a large scale, are stable and easily
handled in classical laboratory conditions, the title reagent Fe(CO)5 is highly
toxic and volatile, and therefore great care must be taken in its
handling and storage conditions.