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Amides Aromatic substitution

OF SUBSTITUTED AROMATIC AMIDES (AROMATIC ACYLATED BASES)... [Pg.801]

Bromo 1 3 dimethylbenzene is inert to nucleophilic aromatic substitution on treatment with sodium amide in liquid ammonia It is recovered unchanged even after extended contact with the reagent Suggest an explanation for this lack of reactivity... [Pg.984]

Although nucleophilic aromatic substitution by the elimination-addition mecha nism IS most commonly seen with very strong amide bases it also occurs with bases such as hydroxide ion at high temperatures A labeling study revealed that hydroly SIS of chlorobenzene proceeds by way of a benzyne intermediate... [Pg.985]

Nucleophilic aromatic substitution can also occur by an elimination-addition mechanism This pathway is followed when the nucleophile is an exceptionally strong base such as amide ion m the form of sodium amide (NaNH2) or potassium amide (KNH2) Benzyne and related arynes are intermediates m nucleophilic aromatic substitutions that pro ceed by the elimination-addition mechanism... [Pg.987]

Several chemical methods have been devised for identifying the N terminal ammo acid They all take advantage of the fact that the N terminal ammo group is free and can act as a nucleophile The a ammo groups of all the other ammo acids are part of amide linkages are not free and are much less nucleophilic Sanger s method for N terminal residue analysis involves treating a peptide with 1 fluoro 2 4 dimtrobenzene which is very reactive toward nucleophilic aromatic substitution (Chapter 23)... [Pg.1131]

Despite the synthetic utility of this transformation, nearly eighty years elapsed between the discovery of the Bischler-Napieralski reaction and the first detailed studies of its mechanism. " Early mechanistic proposals regarding the Bischler-Napieralski reaction involved protonation of the amide oxygen by traces of acid present in P2O5 or POCI3 followed by electrophilic aromatic substitution to provide intermediate 5, which upon dehydration would afford the observed product 2. However, this proposed mechanism fails to account for the formation of several side products that are observed under these conditions vide infra), and is no longer favored. [Pg.376]

Detailed mechanistic studies by Fodor demonstrated the intermediacy of both imidoyl chlorides (6) and nitrilium salts (7) in Bischler-Napieralski reactions promoted by a variety of reagents such as PCI5, POCI3, and SOCh)/ For example, amide 1 reacts with POCI3 to afford imidoyl chloride 6. Upon heating, intermediate 6 is converted to nitrilium salt 7, which undergoes intramolecular electrophilic aromatic substitution to afford the dihydroisoquinoline 2. Fodor s studies showed that the imidoyl chloride and nitrilium salt intermediates could be generated under mild conditions and characterized spectroscopically. Fodor also found that the cyclization of the imidoyl chlorides is accelerated by the addition of Lewis acids (SnCU, ZnCh), which provides further evidence to support the intermediacy of nitrilium salts. ... [Pg.377]

A more practical solution to this problem was reported by Larson, in which the amide substrate 20 was treated with oxalyl chloride to afford a 2-chlorooxazolidine-4,5-dione 23. Reaction of this substrate with FeCL affords a reactive A-acyl iminium ion intermediate 24, which undergoes an intramolecular electrophilic aromatic substitution reaction to provide 25. Deprotection of 25 with acidic methanol affords the desired dihydroisoquinoline products 22. This strategy avoids the problematic nitrilium ion intermediate, and provides generally good yields of 3-aryl dihydroisoquinolines. [Pg.379]

Ammonolysis of 2-chlorobenzothiazole in liquid ammonia was studied by Lemons et al. and found to be approximately first-order with respect to this substrate at the fairly high concentrations used. The actual nucleophilic reagent was, as expected, the neutral species NH3, and reaction via the amide ion NH2 arising from the autoprotolysis equilibrium [Eq. (5)] was excluded on the grounds that addition of ammonium chloride did not depress the reaction rate. In accordance with this interpretation and in connection with the existence of aromatic substitutions other than normal it is of interest that 2-chlorobenzothiazole was found to react difiFerently with sodamide, although the products were unidentified in this case. [Pg.293]

Nucleophilic aromatic substitution of the anthranilic acid derivatives, 72, on ortho-bromonitrobenzene affords the diphenyl-amine, 73. The ester is then saponified and the nitro group reduced to the amine (74). Cyclization of the resulting amino acid by heat affords the lactam (75). Alkylation on the amide nitrogen with 2-dimethylaminoethyl chloride by means of sodium amide affords dibenzepine (76). ... [Pg.405]

Another drawback to the use of amino-substituted benzenes in electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions is that Friedel-Crafts reactions are not successful (Section 16.3). The amino group forms an acid-base complex with the AICI3 catalyst, which prevents further reaction from occurring. Both drawbacks can be overcome, however, b3 carrying out electrophilic aromatic substitution reactions on the corresponding amide rather than on the free amine. [Pg.939]

The reaction of 151 with methanol to give dimethyl phosphate (154) or with N-methylaniline to form the phosphoramidate 155 and (presumably) the pyrophosphate 156 complies with expectations. The formation of dimethyl phosphate does not constitute, however, reliable evidence for the formation of intermediate 151 since methanol can also react with polymeric metaphosphates to give dimethyl phosphate. On the other hand, reaction of polyphosphates with N-methylaniline to give 156 can be ruled out (control experiments). The formation of 156 might encourage speculations whether the reaction with N,N-diethylaniline might involve initial preferential reaction of monomeric methyl metaphosphate via interaction with the nitrogen lone pair to form a phosphoric ester amide which is cleaved to phosphates or pyrophosphates on subsequent work-up (water, methanol). Such a reaction route would at least explain the low extent of electrophilic aromatic substitution by methyl metaphosphate. [Pg.110]

The formation of 151 from the phosphonate 171 could be proved only by indirect means. Electron-rich aromatic compounds such as N,N-diethylaniline and N,N,N, N -tetraethyl-m-phenylenediamine U0 1I9> and N-methylaniline 120> are phosphorylated in the para- and in the ortho- plus para-positions by 151. Furthermore, 151 also adds to the nitrogen lone pair of aniline to form the corresponding phosphor-amidate. Considerable competition between nucleophiles of various strengths for the monomeric methyl metaphosphate 151 — e.g. aromatic substitution of N,N-diethylaniline and reaction with methanol or aromatic substitution and reaction with the nitrogen lone pair in N-methylaniline — again underline its extraordinary non-selectivity. [Pg.112]

Among the different chemical reactions usable to synthesize polymeric materials by step polymerisation are esterification, amidation, nucleophilic aromatic substitution and urethane (carbamate) formation. Polymerisation... [Pg.53]

A mild and efficient a-heteroarylation of simple esters and amides via nucleophilic aromatic substitution has been described <06OL1447>. Treatment of 2-chloro-benzo[//Jthiazole 99 with tert-butyl propionate in the presence of NaHMDS under nitrogen furnishes tert-butyl 2-(benzo[c(jthiazol-2-yl)propanoate 100. When the same reaction is preformed initially under nitrogen and then exposed to air, the hydroxylation product 101 is obtained. This method offers two desirable features that are either complementary or improvements to the palladium-catalyzed a-arylation reactions. First, heteroaryl chlorides... [Pg.250]

A practical a-heteroarylation of simple esters or amides has been developed via nucleophilic aromatic substitution. Exposure of chlorothiadiazoles 317 and 319 to NaHMDS and tert-butyl acetate or iV-dimethylacetamide leads to the formation of functionalized... [Pg.271]

A pyridyl bis-N-heterocydic carbene (NHC) ligand has been prepared by Steel and Teasdale based on nudeophilic aromatic substitution of dichloroisonicotinic amides with N-methylimidazole (Scheme 6.122) [250]. Microwave heating of the neat reagents at 140 °C for 10 min provided a 91% yield of the corresponding bis-... [Pg.188]

A note of warning both MOM acetals and methyl ethers ortho to electron-withdrawing groups—particularly oxazolines, aldehydes, imines and amides—are susceptible to nucleophilic aromatic substitution reactions involving loss of the alkoxy substituent ... [Pg.535]


See other pages where Amides Aromatic substitution is mentioned: [Pg.456]    [Pg.262]    [Pg.381]    [Pg.374]    [Pg.940]    [Pg.1215]    [Pg.1309]    [Pg.346]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.361]    [Pg.453]    [Pg.72]    [Pg.145]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.393]   


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Amides nucleophilic aromatic substitution

Aromatic acid amides substituted

Aromatic acid amides table of substituted

Aromatic amidation

Aromatic amides

Substituted amides

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