I have been tasked with converting the top compound bearing an N-cyclobutylmethyl with an N-methyl. My initial thought was to follow the general route outlined by Grewe (amongst others):
1-protect the phenol group with benzoyl chloride
2-oxidise the amine with mCPBA in methanol (or H2O2 or other suitable oxidizing agent)
3-reduce with FeCl2.4H2O in H2O to produce secondary amine.
4-deprotect phenol.
I know chloroformate esters are a more modern general approach & have seen examples of Pd or Ru catalysed methods but I've actually seen an outline of an N-cyclobutylmethyl being removed using the above route in 60% yield. Not bad - but the amount of precursor available is very limited so the learning curve is going to have to be steep
One left-field idea that occured to me was that quaternization with a methyl halide followed by dequaternization. As a general rule, small tert alkyl first, then methyl then ethyl or isopropyl. leaving a dealkylated amine, it is usually driven by the stability of the resulting cation and frequently by the volatility of the resulting alkyl halide. I've noted sodium thipohenoxide & ethanolamine being used for this.
Another interesting one was the N-deallylation of a tertiary amine in which Wilkinson's catalyst (10& mol weight) isomerized the N-allyl to an enamine facilitating quantitative results.
Any and all suggestions & references would be gratefully received. I've been out of the synthetic chemistry arena for close on a decade so please forgive my clunky thought-processes.