Introduction
<P>Traditionally, zinc dust
[
¹]
has
been employed as a reducing agent in organic synthesis. Notably,
zinc dust or an amalgam thereof has been used to reduce carbonyls
[
²]
(Clemmensen reduction),
carbon-oxygen bonds,
[
³]
carbon-halide
bonds,
[
4]
alkynes,
[
5]
heteroatom bonds (N-N
and N-O bonds),
[
6]
and to
prepare numerous organozinc reagents. In addition to various reduction
reactions, zinc has been employed in several named reactions including
the Reformatsky reaction,
[
7]
Serini
reaction,
[
8]
the Knorr pyrrole synthesis,
[
9]
and the Simmons-Smith
cyclopropanation.
[
¹0]
Other
notable reactions that are dependent upon zinc for the preparation
of the active species are the Oshima-Lombardo
olefination,
[
¹¹]
the
Corey-Fuchs alkynylation,
[
¹²]
and
the Negishi cross-coupling.
[
¹³]
</P><P>Organozinc reagents have also proven highly amenable to asymmetric
variants of a number of reactions, as zinc species are mild in comparison
to either organolithium or organomagnesium reagents. These
reactions include the copper-mediated conjugate addition of dialkylzinc reagents
to enones,
[
¹4]
asymmetric
Simmons-Smith cyclopropanations,
[
¹5]
and
enantioselective Reformatsky reactions,
[
¹6]
amongst
others.</P><P>Activated zinc dust is commercially available from a number of
sources. Alternatively it can be activated by stirring with dilute
HCl, then washing with distilled water, ethanol, and absolute diethyl
ether before rigorous drying. This procedure removes oxides from
the surface of zinc, which form slowly upon standing in air. There
are no known toxic properties associated with zinc or organometallics
thereof.</P>