Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Alkenes scope

Nieto-Oberhuber, C., Perez-Galan, P., Herrero-Gomez, E., Lauterbach, T, Rodriguez, C., Lopez, S., Bour, C., Rosellon, A., Cardenas, D.J. and Echavarren, A.M. (2008) Gold(I)-Catalyzed Intramolecular [4+ 2] Cycloadditions of Arylalkynes or 1,3-Enynes with Alkenes Scope and Mechanism. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 130, 269-279. [Pg.237]

Schmidt VA, Hoyt JM, Margubeux GW, Chirik PJ. Cobalt-catalyzed [2jt + 2jt] cycloadditions of alkenes scope, mechanism, and elucidation of electronic structure of catalytic intermediates. Am Chem Soc. 2015 137 7903-7914. [Pg.374]

The first report of oxidative carbonylation is the reaction of alkenes with CO in benzene in the presence of PdCh to afford the /3-chloroacyl chloride 224[12,206]. The oxidative carbonylation of alkene in alcohol gives the q, f3-unsaturated ester 225 and /3-alkoxy ester 226 by monocarbonylation, and succinate 111 by dicarbonylation depending on the reaction conditions[207-209]. The scope of the reaction has been studied[210]. Succinate formation takes... [Pg.51]

The scope of haloaliphatic additions to alkenes has been extended to the preparation of 1,2-bis(perfluoroalkyl)iodoethanes by the addition of perfluoroalkyl iodides tofluoroalkyl alkenes [73] (equation 12) or to alkadienes [14] (equation 13)... [Pg.748]

Fluorinated cyclobutanes and cyclobutenes are relatively easy to prepare because of the propensity of many gem-difluoroolefins to thermally cyclodimerize and cycloadd to alkenes and alkynes. Even with dienes, fluoroolefins commonly prefer to form cyclobutane rather than six-membered-ring Diels-Alder adducts. Tetrafluoroethylene, chlorotrifluoroethylene, and l,l-dichloro-2,2-difluoroethyl-ene are especially reactive in this context. Most evidence favors a stepwise diradical or, less often, a dipolar mechanism for [2+2] cycloadditions of fluoroalkenes [S5, (5], although arguments for a symmetry-allowed, concerted [2j-t-2J process persist [87], The scope, characteristic features, and mechanistic studies of fluoroolefin... [Pg.777]

Since the mid-1990s, synthetic attention has been directed more towards the use of metal-stabilized nitrenes as synthetic effectors of alkene aziridination. In 1969 it was reported that Cu(i) salts were capable of mediating alkene aziridination when treated with tosyl azide, but the method was limited in scope and was not adopted as a general method for the synthesis of aziridines [12]. Metaloporphyrins [13] were shown to be catalysts for the aziridination of alkenes in the presence of the nitrene precursor N-tosyliminophenyliodinane [14] in the early 1980s, but the reaction did... [Pg.122]

In the Diels-Alder reaction a double bond adds 1,4 to a conjugated diene (a 2 + 4 cycloaddition), so the product is always a six-membered ring. The double-bond compound is called a dienophile. The reaction is easy and rapid and of very broad scope and reactivity of dienes and dienophiles can be predicted based on analysis of the HOMOs and LUMOs of these species. Ethylene and simple alkenes make poor dienophiles, although the reaction has been carried out with these compounds. [Pg.1062]

The reaction is similar to the Diels-Alder (in action, not in scope), and if dienes are involved, the latter reaction may compete, though most alkenes react with a diene either entirely by 1,2 or entirely by 1,4 addition. Three mechanisms can be proposed analogous to those proposed for the Diels-Alder reaction. Mechanism... [Pg.1078]

Potentially, phosphaalkenes can be precursors to phosphinidenes in the same manner that carbenes can be formed from alkenes. This latter metathesis route deserves more attention in light of the recognition that stable carbenes can be in equilibrium with their dimers [11]. However, a discussion on phosphaalkenes is outside the scope of the present survey. [Pg.100]

In any reaction, the mechanism should explain not only the regiochemistry, but the stereochemistry as well. In this particular reaction (addition of H—X across alkenes), the stereochemistry is generally not relevant. Recall from the previous section that we need to consider stereochemistry (syn vs. anti) only in cases where the reaction generates two new stereocenters. If only one stereocenter is formed, then we expect a pair of enantiomers (racemic mixture), regardless of whether the reaction was anti or syn. You will probably not see an example where two new stereocenters are formed, because the stereochemical outcome in such a case is complex and is beyond the scope of our conversation. [Pg.263]

Until now we have focnsed on the regiochemistry of this reaction. We did not explore the stereochemistry, because it is beyond the scope of the course. In situations where two stereocenters are formed, the results are dependent on the starting alkene and on the temperature. Therefore, we will only present problems where no stereocenters are formed, or where only one stereocenter is formed. [Pg.269]

The scope of reactions involving hydrogen peroxide and PTC is large, and some idea of the versatility can be found from Table 4.2. A relatively new combined oxidation/phase transfer catalyst for alkene epoxidation is based on MeRe03 in conjunction with 4-substituted pyridines (e.g. 4-methoxy pyridine), the resulting complex accomplishing both catalytic roles. [Pg.123]

Martin, Padron, and coworkers have reported on the scope and limitations of the use of iron(lll) halides as effective catalysts in the coupling of alkenes or acetylenes with aldehydes to achieve a wide variety of useful synthetic transformations. All these reactions are shown in Scheme 10, which serves as a guide through the aliphatic C-C bond formation section [27]. [Pg.8]

The stoichiometric insertion of terminal alkenes into the Cu-B bond of the (NHC)Cu-B(cat) complex, and the isolation and full characterisation of the p-boryl-alkyl-copper (I) complex has been reported. The alkyl complex decomposes at higher temperatures by P-H elimination to vinylboronate ester [67]. These data provide experimental evidence for a mechanism involving insertion of alkenes into Cu-boryl bonds, and establish a versatile and inexpensive catalytic system of wide scope for the diboration of alkenes and alkynes based on copper. [Pg.40]

The oxidative cleavage of alkenes is a common reaction usually achieved by ozonolysis or the use of potassium permanganate. An example of NHC-coordina(ed Ru complex (31) capable of catalysing the oxidative cleavage of alkenes was reported by Peris and co-workers (Table 10.9) [44]. Despite a relatively limited substrate scope, this reaction reveals an intriguing reactivity of ruthenium and will surely see further elaboration. [Pg.249]

Early attempts by Asinger to enlarge the scope of hydroalumination by the use of transition metal catalysts included the conversion of mixtures of isomeric linear alkenes into linear alcohols by hydroalumination with BU3AI or BU2AIH at temperatures as high as 110°C and subsequent oxidation of the formed organoaluminum compounds [12]. Simple transition metal salts were used as catalysts, including tita-nium(IV) and zirconium(IV) chlorides and oxochlorides. The role of the transition metal in these reactions is likely limited to the isomerization of internal alkenes to terminal ones since no catalyst is required for the hydroalumination of a terminal alkene under these reaction conditions. [Pg.49]

The synthetic scope of radical cyclizations can be further extended by tandem trapping by electrophilic alkene. [Pg.979]

In terms of scope, activated alkenes beyond vinyl arenes, such as nor-bornene, couple effectively to aromatic and ,( >-unsaturated anhydrides, in-... [Pg.107]

Although significant progress in the field of asymmetric hydroformylation has been made, it is limited to a rather narrow substrate scope. An alternative approach to a stereoselective hydroformylation might employ substrate control of a chiral alkenic starting material. Of particular use... [Pg.162]

Some years ago we began a program to explore the scope of the palladium-catalyzed annulation of alkenes, dienes and alkynes by functionally-substituted aryl and vinylic halides or triflates as a convenient approach to a wide variety of heterocycles and carbocycles. We subsequently reported annulations involving 1,2-, 1,3- and 1,4-dienes unsaturated cyclopropanes and cyclobutanes cyclic and bicyclic alkenes and alkynes, much of which was reviewed in 1999 (Scheme l).1 In recent days our work has concentrated on the annulation of alkynes. Recent developments in this area will be reviewed and some novel palladium migration processes that have been discovered during the course of this work will be discussed. [Pg.435]

Some remarks concerning the scope of the cobalt chelate catalysts 207 seem appropriate. Terminal double bonds in conjugation with vinyl, aryl and alkoxy-carbonyl groups are cyclopropanated selectively. No such reaction occurs with alkyl-substituted and cyclic olefins, cyclic and sterically hindered acyclic 1,3-dienes, vinyl ethers, allenes and phenylacetylene95). The cyclopropanation of electron-poor alkenes such as acrylonitrile and ethyl acrylate (optical yield in the presence of 207a r 33%) with ethyl diazoacetate deserve notice, as these components usually... [Pg.165]


See other pages where Alkenes scope is mentioned: [Pg.159]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.126]    [Pg.316]    [Pg.324]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.118]    [Pg.707]    [Pg.1032]    [Pg.1425]    [Pg.224]    [Pg.226]    [Pg.311]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.11]    [Pg.233]    [Pg.306]    [Pg.343]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.382]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.231]    [Pg.197]    [Pg.162]    [Pg.383]    [Pg.410]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.778 , Pg.779 , Pg.780 ]




SEARCH



Alkene expanded substrate scope

Alkenes synthetic scope

© 2024 chempedia.info