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Aldehydes acylzirconocene addition

Carbon monoxide rapidly inserts into the carbon—zirconium bond of alkyl- and alkenyl-zirconocene chlorides at low temperature with retention of configuration at carbon to give acylzirconocene chlorides 17 (Scheme 3.5). Acylzirconocene chlorides have found utility in synthesis, as described elsewhere in this volume [17]. Lewis acid catalyzed additions to enones, aldehydes, and imines, yielding a-keto allylic alcohols, a-hydroxy ketones, and a-amino ketones, respectively [18], and palladium-catalyzed addition to alkyl/aryl halides and a,[5-ynones [19] are examples. The acyl complex 18 formed by the insertion of carbon monoxide into dialkyl, alkylaryl, or diaryl zirconocenes may rearrange to a r 2-ketone complex 19 either thermally (particularly when R1 = R2 = Ph) or on addition of a Lewis acid [5,20,21]. The rearrangement proceeds through the less stable... [Pg.88]

The reactivity of acylzirconocene chlorides towards carbon electrophiles is very low, and no reaction takes place with aldehydes at ambient temperature. In the reaction described in Scheme 5.12, addition of a silver salt gave the expected product, albeit in low yield (22—34%). The yield was improved to 79% by the use of a stoichiometric amount of boron trifluoride etherate (BF3OEt2) (1 equivalent with respect to the acylzirconocene chloride) at 0 °C. Other Lewis acids, such as chlorotitanium derivatives, zinc chloride, aluminum trichloride, etc., are less efficient. Neither ketones nor acid chlorides react with acylzirconocene chlorides. In Table 5.1, BF3 OEt2-mediated reactions of acylzirconocene chlorides with aldehydes in CH2C12 are listed. [Pg.155]

Thus, the involvement of one of the following three possible mechanisms has been suggested (i) nucleophilic addition of the acylzirconocene chloride to the Lewis acid activated aldehyde, (ii) nucleophilic addition of the cationic species of the acylzirconocene chloride formed by an Ag(I) salt or a Lewis acid, or (iii) transmetalation of the acylzirconocene chloride with the Lewis acid and subsequent nucleophilic addition. [Pg.156]


See other pages where Aldehydes acylzirconocene addition is mentioned: [Pg.224]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.21]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.218 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.218 ]




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Acylzirconocene

Addition aldehydes

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