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Acidity kinetic control

Hthiated 4-substituted-2-methylthia2oles (171) at -78 C (Scheme 80). Crossover experiments at—78 and 25°C using thiazoles bearing different substituents (R = Me, Ph) proved that at low temperature the lithioderivatives (172 and 173) do not exchange H/Li and that the product ratios (175/176) observed are the result of independent metala-tion of the 2-methyl and the C-5 positions in a kinetically controlled process (444). At elevated temperatures the thermodynamic acidities prevail and the resonance stabilized benzyl-type anion (Scheme 81) becomes more abundant, so that in fine the kinetic lithio derivative is 173, whereas the thermodynamic derivative is 172. [Pg.123]

On reaction with acyl chlorides and acid anhydrides phenols may undergo either acylation of the hydroxyl group (O acylation) or acylation of the ring (C acylation) The product of C acylation is more stable and predominates under conditions of thermodynamic control when alu mmum chloride is present (see entry 6 m Table 24 4 Section 24 8) O acylation is faster than C acylation and aryl esters are formed under conditions of kinetic control... [Pg.1017]

With pteridine (1) the covalent hydration is a complex matter since the general acid-base catalyzed reaction provides a good example of a kinetically controlled addition to the... [Pg.286]

A good deal of experimental care is often required to ensure that the product mixture at the end of a Friedel-Crafts reaction is determined by kinetic control. The strong Lewis acid catalysts can catalyze the isomerization of alkylbenzenes, and if isomerization takes place, the product composition is not informative about the position selectivity of electrophilic attack. Isomerization increases the amount of the meta isomer in the case of dialkylbenzenes, because this isomer is thermodynamically the most stable. ... [Pg.583]

The positions of substitution, orientation, and configuration of the stable form are determined by a balance between opposing steric and dipole ef-fects. There is less agreement regarding the factors influencing kinetically controlled reaction (see below). Essentially neutral conditions, such as provided by an acetate or pyridine buffer, are required to avoid isomerization. Frequently, however, bromination will not proceed under these conditions, and a compromise has been used in which a small amount of acid is added to start and maintain reaction, while the accumulation of hydrogen bromide is prevented by adding exactly one equivalent of acetate... [Pg.270]

Reactant and product structures. Because the transition state stmcture is normally different from but intermediate to those of the initial and final states, it is evident that the stmctures of the reactants and products should be known. One should, however, be aware of a possible source of misinterpretation. Suppose the products generated in the reaction of kinetic interest undergo conversion, on a time scale fast relative to the experimental manipulations, to thermodynamically more stable substances then the observed products will not be the actual products of the reaction. In this case the products are said to be under thermodynamic control rather than kinetic control. A possible example has been given in the earlier description of the reaction of hydroxide ion with ester, when it seems likely that the products are the carboxylic acid and the alkoxide ion, which, however, are transformed in accordance with the relative acidities of carboxylic acids and alcohols into the isolated products of carboxylate salt and alcohol. [Pg.6]

For the kinetically controlled formation of 1,3-disubstituted tetrahydro-P-carbolines, placing both substituents in equatorial positions to reduce 1,3-diaxial interactions resulted in the cw-selectivity usually observed in these reactions." Condensation reactions carried out at or below room temperature in the presence of an acid catalyst gave the kinetic product distribution with the cw-diastereomer being the major product observed, as illustrated by the condensation of L-tryptophan methyl ester 41 with benzaldehyde. At higher reaction temperatures, the condensation reaction was reversible and a thermodynamic product distribution was observed. Cis and trans diastereomers were often obtained in nearly equal amounts suggesting that they have similar energies."... [Pg.474]

The Diels-Alder reaction of a diene with a substituted olefinic dienophile, e.g. 2, 4, 8, or 12, can go through two geometrically different transition states. With a diene that bears a substituent as a stereochemical marker (any substituent other than hydrogen deuterium will suffice ) at C-1 (e.g. 11a) or substituents at C-1 and C-4 (e.g. 5, 6, 7), the two different transition states lead to diastereomeric products, which differ in the relative configuration at the stereogenic centers connected by the newly formed cr-bonds. The respective transition state as well as the resulting product is termed with the prefix endo or exo. For example, when cyclopentadiene 5 is treated with acrylic acid 15, the cw fo-product 16 and the exo-product 17 can be formed. Formation of the cw fo-product 16 is kinetically favored by secondary orbital interactions (endo rule or Alder rule) Under kinetically controlled conditions it is the major product, and the thermodynamically more stable cxo-product 17 is formed in minor amounts only. [Pg.91]

The exocyclic C — C double bond in the chlorin can be reduced by catalytic hydrogenation in tetrahydrofuran/water in the presence of palladium(II) acetate with triethoxysilane as hydrogen source to yield under kinetic control cw-stereoisomers, which can be transformed by treatment with /)-toluenesulfonic acid in methanol to the thermodynamically favored trans-isomers.27d... [Pg.625]

The tautomerization is induced by cobalt(II) which forms the thermodynamically more stable metalatcd hydroporphyrins from which the cobalt can be removed using trifluoroacctic acid under kinetic control. Experiments with porphyrinogen and hexahydroporphyrin show that the porphyrinogen-hexahydroporphyrin equilibrium can be shifted by complexation of porphyrinogen with metal ions to the more stable metal hexahydroporphyrins and that metal-free hexahydroporphyrins tautomerize back to the more stable metal-free porphyrinogens.29... [Pg.625]

Kinetically controlled 1,4-additions of 2-propenylsilanes to acyclic enones bearing a benzyloxy group in the 4-position proceeded with moderate stereoselectivity using titanium(IV) chloride as the preferred Lewis acid. The stereochemical outcome was dependent on the geometry of the enone used26. [Pg.938]

The Pummerer reaction346 of conformationally rigid 4-aryl-substituted thiane oxides with acetic anhydride was either stereoselective or stereospecific, and the rearrangement is mainly intermolecular, while the rate-determining step appears to be the E2 1,2-elimination of acetic acid from the acetoxysulfonium intermediates formed in the initial acetylation of the sulfoxide. The thermodynamically controlled product is the axial acetoxy isomer, while the kinetically controlled product is the equatorial isomer that is preferentially formed due to the facile access of the acetate to the equatorial position347. The overall mechanism is illustrated in equation 129. [Pg.470]

Lubineau and coworkers [18] have shown that glyoxal 8 (Ri = R2 = H), glyoxylic acid 8 (Ri = H, R2 = OH), pyruvic acid 8 (Ri = Me, R2 = OH) and pyruvaldehyde 8 (Ri = H, R2 = Me) give Diels-Alder reactions in water with poor reactive dienes, although these dienophiles are, for the most part, in the hydrated form. Scheme 6.6 illustrates the reactions with (E)-1,3-dimethyl-butadiene. The reaction yields are generally good and the ratio of adducts 9 and 10 reflects the thermodynamic control of the reaction. In organic solvent, the reaction is kinetically controlled and the diastereoselectivity is reversed. [Pg.258]

As mentioned in the Introduction, rearrangements of the intermediate alkyl cation in the Koch synthesis may compete with the carbonylation. Under the kinetically controlled conditions prevailing in the Koch synthesis of carboxylic acids, the rearrangements occur only from a less stable to a more stable carbonium ion, e.g. from a secondary to a tertiary ion. The reverse rearrangements—from a more stable to a less stable... [Pg.34]

The anti addition is a kinetically controlled process that results from irreversible backside opening of an iodonium ion intermediate by the carboxylate nucleophile. Bartlett and co-workers showed that the more stable trans product was obtained under acidic conditions in which there is acid-catalyzed equilibration (thermodynamic control).74... [Pg.313]

The comparison of I —> N and N —> I may also be explained by the buffered pH in the diffusion layer and leads to an interesting comparison between a process under kinetic control versus one under thermodynamic control. Because the bulk solution in process N —> I favors formation of the ionized species, a much larger quantity of drug could be dissolved in the N —> I solvent if the dissolution process were allowed to reach equilibrium. However, the dissolution rate will be controlled by the solubility in the diffusion layer accordingly, faster dissolution of the salt in the buffered diffusion layer (process I—>N) would be expected. In comparing N—>1 and N —> N, or I —> N and I —> I, the pH of the diffusion layer is identical in each set, and the differences in dissolution rate must be explained either by the size of the diffusion layer or by the concentration gradient of drug between the diffusion and the bulk solution. It is probably safe to assume that a diffusion layer at a different pH than that of the bulk solution is thinner than a diffusion layer at the same pH because of the acid-base interaction at the interface. In addition, when the bulk solution is at a different pH than that of the diffusion layer, the bulk solution will act as a sink and Cg can be eliminated from Eqs. (1), (3), and (4). Both a decrease in the h and Cg terms in Eqs. (1), (3), and (4) favor faster dissolution in processes N —> I and I —> N as opposed to N —> N and I —> I, respectively. [Pg.117]

Since the inception of our work Jere, Miller and Jackson have published kinetic and stereochemical data on the hydrogenation of alanine (19). Important in their analysis is the observation that amino acids must be in their protonated form to undergo facile hydrogenation since reduction of carboxylate anions is significantly more endothermic than protonated acids (19). Control of pH is important for two reasons at neutral pH amino acids exist as zwitterions and the resultant hydrogenation products are basic. For these reasons a full equivalent of phosphoric acid (or similar acid) is required to obtain high yields. [Pg.157]

The sulphonation of naphthalene with concentrated H2S04 at 80° is found to lead to almost complete 1 -substitution, the rate of formation of the alternative 2-sulphonic acid being very slow at this temperature, i.e. kinetic control. Sulphonation at 160°, however, leads to the formation of no less than 80 % of the 2-sulphonic acid, the remainder being the 1-isomer. That we are now seeing thermodynamic control is confirmed by the observation that heating pure naphthalene 1- or... [Pg.164]


See other pages where Acidity kinetic control is mentioned: [Pg.73]    [Pg.73]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.507]    [Pg.258]    [Pg.468]    [Pg.277]    [Pg.440]    [Pg.507]    [Pg.142]    [Pg.958]    [Pg.63]    [Pg.180]    [Pg.180]    [Pg.308]    [Pg.310]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.214]    [Pg.149]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.399]    [Pg.180]    [Pg.33]    [Pg.376]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.84]    [Pg.356]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.32]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.270 , Pg.280 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.270 , Pg.280 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.270 , Pg.280 ]




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