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Additions metal-activated alkenes, palladium acetate

Functionalized benzenes preferentially induced ortho-para substitution with electron-donating groups and meta substitution with electron-withdrawing groups (see above). Additionally, the order of reactivity found with aromatics was similar to that of electrophilic aromatic substitution. These observations implicated an electrophihc metalation of the arene as the key step. Hence, Fujiwara et al. [4b] believed that a solvated arylpalladium species is formed from a homogeneous solution of an arene and a palladium(ll) salt in a polar solvent via an electrophilic aromatic substitution reaction (Figure 9.2). The alkene then coordinates to the unstable arylpalladium species, followed by an insertion into the aryl-palladium bond. The arylethyl-palladium intermediate then rapidly undergoes )8-hydride elimination to form the alkenylated arene and a palladium hydride species, which then presumably decomposes into an acid and free palladium metal. Later on, the formation of the arylpalladium species proposed in this mechanism was confirmed by the isolation of diphenyltripalladium(ll) complexes obtained by the C-H activation reaction of benzene with palladium acetate dialkylsulfide systems [19]. [Pg.350]

In an extension of this work, the Shibasaki group developed the novel transformation 48—>51 shown in Scheme 10.25c To rationalize this interesting structural change, it was proposed that oxidative addition of the vinyl triflate moiety in 48 to an asymmetric palladium ) catalyst generated under the indicated conditions affords the 16-electron Pd+ complex 49. Since the weakly bound triflate ligand can easily dissociate from the metal center, a silver salt is not needed. Insertion of the coordinated alkene into the vinyl C-Pd bond then affords a transitory 7t-allylpalladium complex 50 which is captured in a regio- and stereocontrolled fashion by acetate ion to give the optically active bicyclic diene 51 in 80% ee (89% yield). This catalytic asymmetric synthesis by a Heck cyclization/ anion capture process is the first of its kind. [Pg.576]

Hydrogenation is a stepwise process that may be stopped at the intermediate alkene stage by the use of modified catalysts, such as the Lindlar catalyst. This catalyst is palladium that has been precipitated on calcium carbonate and treated with lead acetate and quinoline. The surface of the metal rearranges to a less active configuration than that of palladium on carbon so that only the first rr bond of the alkyne is hydrogenated. As with catalytic hydrogenation of alkenes (Section 12-2), the addition of H2 is a syn process (see margin). As a result, this method affords a stereoselective synthesis of cis alkenes from alkynes. [Pg.553]


See other pages where Additions metal-activated alkenes, palladium acetate is mentioned: [Pg.240]    [Pg.117]    [Pg.185]    [Pg.659]    [Pg.659]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.392]    [Pg.98]    [Pg.337]    [Pg.400]    [Pg.7]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.458 ]




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Acetals activation

Acetate activation

Acetate, active activation

Acetates addition

Acetates alkenes

Acetic activated

Acetic activation

Activated alkenes

Activations palladium®) acetate

Additions acetal

Alkenes acetalization

Alkenes metal-activated

Alkenes metallation

Alkenes, activation

Metal acetates

Metal additives

Metal alkenes

Metal palladium

Metallic palladium

Metals addition

Palladium acetate

Palladium activations

Palladium alkenes

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