Nucleophilic Neutralization of Organophosphates: Lack of Selectivity or Plenty of Versatility?

Chem Rec. 2021 Oct;21(10):2638-2665. doi: 10.1002/tcr.202100123. Epub 2021 Jun 11.

Abstract

Neutralization of organophosphates is an issue of public health and safety, involving agrochemicals and chemical warfare. A promising approach is the nucleophilic neutralization, scope of this review, which focuses on the molecular nucleophiles: hydroxide, imidazole derivatives, alpha nucleophiles, amines and other nucleophiles. A reactivity mapping is given correlating the pathways and reaction efficiency with structural dependence of the nucleophile (basicity) and the organophosphate (electrophilic centers, P=O/P=S shift, leaving and non-leaving group). Reactions extremely unfavorable (>20 years) can be reduced to seconds with various nucleophiles, some which are catalytic. Although there is no universal nucleophile, a lack of selectivity in some cases accounts for plenty of versatility in other reactions. The ideal neutralization requires a solid mechanistic understanding, together with balancing factors such as milder conditions, fast process, selectivity and less toxic products.

Keywords: dephosphorylation; nucleophilic catalysis; organophosphorus compounds; organothiophosphates; phosphate esters.

Publication types

  • Review