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Acetylacetonato complexes stability

Stable monomeric complexes can also be obtained without the presence of bulky ligands. Intramolecular donation of electrons into the empty valency orbital of Ge from nitrogen renders them stability, as seen in (11), which is stable to dry oxygen, but readily hydrolyzes. The same phenomenon occurs in the acetylacetonato complex of Ge(II) and Ge(acac)I, in which germanium is three-coordinate with a stereochemically active lone pair. [Pg.1414]

Manufacture of rhodium precatalysts for asymmetric hydrogenation. Established literature methods used to make the Rh-DuPhos complexes consisted of converting (1,5-cyclooctadiene) acetylacetonato Rh(l) into the sparingly soluble bis(l,5-cyclooctadiene) Rh(l) tetrafluoroborate complex which then reacts with the diphosphine ligand to provide the precatalyst complex in solution. Addition of an anti-solvent results in precipitation of the desired product. Although this method worked well with a variety of diphosphines, yields were modest and more importantly the product form was variable. The different physical forms performed equally as well in hydrogenation reactions but had different shelf-life and air stability. [Pg.71]

Catalytic cyclopropanation of alkenes with diazomalonates is sometimes carried out with copper powder, but it appears that copper(I) halide/trialkyl phosphite complexes (for a procedure see Houben-Weyl Vol. E19b, p 1113), bis(acetylacetonato)copper(II), " ° and tet-raacetatodirhodium can be employed more advantageously (Table 13, entries 7-9). For the cyclopropanation of styrene with dicyclohexyl diazomalonate, however, copper(I) triflate was the catalyst of choice, while intramolecular C —H insertion at the cyclohexyl ring took place in the presence of tetraacetatodirhodium. A detailed comparison of copper catalysts for the cyclopropanation of cyclohexene, 1-methyl- and 1,2-dimethylcyclohexene, (Z)- and ( )-hept-2-ene with dimethyl diazomalonate, including competitive reaction pathways such as allylic C-H insertion and carbene dimer formation, is available. The catalyzed interaction between diazomalonic esters and enol ethers leads to cyclopropanes in some cases (e.g. ethoxymethylenecyclohexane to dimethyl 2-ethoxyspiro[2.5]octane-l,l-dicarboxylate ) and to different products in other cases (e.g. 1-methoxycyclohexene, 2-methoxy-3,4-dihydro-2/7-pyran ). This behavior is attributed to the occurence of stabilized dipolar intermediates in these reactions. [Pg.465]


See other pages where Acetylacetonato complexes stability is mentioned: [Pg.111]    [Pg.323]    [Pg.193]    [Pg.285]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.234]    [Pg.477]    [Pg.477]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.334]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.465]    [Pg.1486]    [Pg.188]    [Pg.39]    [Pg.629]    [Pg.268]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.1974]    [Pg.54]   


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