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Amines catalysts, rhodium complexes

Secondary amines can be added to certain nonactivated alkenes if palladium(II) complexes are used as catalysts The complexation lowers the electron density of the double bond, facilitating nucleophilic attack. Markovnikov orientation is observed and the addition is anti An intramolecular addition to an alkyne unit in the presence of a palladium compound, generated a tetrahydropyridine, and a related addition to an allene is known.Amines add to allenes in the presence of a catalytic amount of CuBr " or palladium compounds.Molybdenum complexes have also been used in the addition of aniline to alkenes. Reduction of nitro compounds in the presence of rhodium catalysts, in the presence of alkenes, CO and H2, leads to an amine unit adding to the alkene moiety. An intramolecular addition of an amine unit to an alkene to form a pyrrolidine was reported using a lanthanide reagent. [Pg.1001]

Prochiral imines can be hydrogenated to the corresponding amines with extremely high enan-tioselectivities in H20/ethyl ethanoate biphasic systems, using Rh1 complexes of sulfonated phosphines 342 The cationic rhodium complex [Rh(NBD)(131)]+ was an active catalyst for hydrogenation of 2-ethanamido-propenoic acid in aqueous solution.343... [Pg.121]

Takasago A catalytic process for the enantioselective isomerization of allylic amines. The catalyst is a chiral rhodium complex. Used in the manufacture of (-)menthol. Named after Takasago International Corporation, the Japanese company which commercialized the process in 1983. [Pg.264]

As shown in the previous two sections, rhodium(n) dimers are superior catalysts for metal carbene C-H insertion reactions. For nitrene C-H insertion reactions, many catalysts found to be effective for carbene transfer are also effective for these reactions. Particularly, Rh2(OAc)4 has demonstrated great effectiveness in the inter- and intramolecular nitrene C-H insertions. The exploration of enantioselective C-H amination using chiral rhodium catalysts has been reported by several groups.225,244,253-255 Hashimoto s dirhodium tetrakis[A-tetrachlorophthaloyl-(A)-/ r/-leuci-nate], Rh2(derived rhodium complex, Rh2(i -BNP)4 48,244 afforded moderate enantiomeric excess for amidation of benzylic C-H bonds with NsN=IPh. [Pg.196]

Alternatively, the rhodium dimer 30 may be cleaved by an amine nucleophile to give 34. Since amine-rhodium complexes are known to be stable, this interaction may sequester the catalyst from the productive catalytic cycle. Amine-rhodium complexes are also known to undergo a-oxidation to give hydridorhodium imine complexes 35, which may also be a source of catalyst poisoning. However, in the presence of protic and halide additives, the amine-rhodium complex 34 could react to give the dihalorhodate complex 36. This could occur by associative nucleophilic displacement of the amine by a halide anion. Dihalorhodate 36 could then reform the dimeric complex 30 by reaction with another rhodium monomer, or go on to react directly with another substrate molecule with loss of one of the halide ligands. It is important to note that the dihalorhodate 36 may become a new resting state for the catalyst under these conditions, in addition to or in place of the dimeric complex. [Pg.186]

Muller has explored enantioselective C-H insertion using optically active rhodium complexes, NsN=IPh as the oxidant, and indane 7 as a test substrate (Scheme 17.8) [35]. Chiral rhodium catalysts have been described by several groups and enjoy extensive application for asymmetric reactions with diazoalkanes ]46—48]. In C-H amination experiments, Pirrung s binaphthyl phosphate-derived rhodium system was found to afford the highest enantiomeric excess (31%) of the product sulfonamide 8 (20equiv indane 7, 71% yield). [Pg.383]

Oxidative amination of carbamates, sulfamates, and sulfonamides has broad utility for the preparation of value-added heterocyclic structures. Both dimeric rhodium complexes and ruthenium porphyrins are effective catalysts for saturated C-H bond functionalization, affording products in high yields and with excellent chemo-, regio-, and diastereocontrol. Initial efforts to develop these methods into practical asymmetric processes give promise that such achievements will someday be realized. Alkene aziridina-tion using sulfamates and sulfonamides has witnessed dramatic improvement with the advent of protocols that obviate use of capricious iminoiodinanes. Complexes of rhodium, ruthenium, and copper all enjoy application in this context and will continue to evolve as both achiral and chiral catalysts for aziridine synthesis. The invention of new methods for the selective and efficient intermolecular amination of saturated C-H bonds still stands, however, as one of the great challenges. [Pg.406]

Kollner et al. (29) prepared a Josiphos derivative containing an amine functionality that was reacted with benzene-1,3,5-tricarboxylic acid trichloride (11) and adamantane-l,3,5,7-tetracarboxylic acid tetrachloride (12). The second generation of these two types of dendrimers (13 and 14) were synthesized convergently through esterification of benzene-1,3,5-tricarboxylic acid trichloride and adamantane-1,3,5,7-tetracarboxylic acid with a phenol bearing the Josiphos derivative in the 1,3 positions. The rhodium complexes of the dendrimers were used as chiral dendritic catalysts in the asymmetric hydrogenation of dimethyl itaconate in methanol (1 mol% catalyst, 1 bar H2 partial pressure). The enantioselectivities were only... [Pg.91]

Counterions for the anionic rhodium complexes present in catalyst solutions may also be provided by the addition of salts. A salt may be used as the sole promoter, but it appears that under many conditions a combination of salt and amine provides the best results. Table XI indicates that... [Pg.359]

Both the rhodium and the cobalt complexes catalyze olefin isomerization as well as olefin hydroformylation. In the case of the rhodium(I) catalysts, the amount of isomerization decreases as the ligands are altered in the order CO > NR3 > S > PR3. When homogeneous and supported amine-rhodium complexes were compared, it was found that they both gave similar amounts of isomerization, whereas with the tertiary phosphine complexes the supported catalysts gave rather less olefin isomerization than their homogeneous counterparts (44, 45). [Pg.219]

Rhodium(II) acetate catalyzes C—H insertion, olefin addition, heteroatom-H insertion, and ylide formation of a-diazocarbonyls via a rhodium carbenoid species (144—147). Intramolecular cyclopentane formation via C—H insertion occurs with retention of stereochemistry (143). Chiral rhodium (TT) carboxamides catalyze enantioselective cyclopropanation and intramolecular C—N insertions of CC-diazoketones (148). Other reactions catalyzed by rhodium complexes include double-bond migration (140), hydrogenation of aromatic aldehydes and ketones to hydrocarbons (150), homologation of esters (151), carbonylation of formaldehyde (152) and amines (140), reductive carbonylation of dimethyl ether or methyl acetate to 1,1-diacetoxy ethane (153), decarbonylation of aldehydes (140), water gas shift reaction (69,154), C—C skeletal rearrangements (132,140), oxidation of olefins to ketones (155) and aldehydes (156), and oxidation of substituted anthracenes to anthraquinones (157). Rhodium-catalyzed hydrosilation of olefins, alkynes, carbonyls, alcohols, and imines is facile and may also be accomplished enantioselectively (140). Rhodium complexes are moderately active alkene and alkyne polymerization catalysts (140). In some cases polymer-supported versions of homogeneous rhodium catalysts have improved activity, compared to their homogenous counterparts. This is the case for the conversion of alkenes direcdy to alcohols under oxo conditions by rhodium—amine polymer catalysts... [Pg.181]

The cationic rhodium complexes such as [Rh(cod)(MeCN)2]BF4/dppb were the most efficient catalysts for addition of arylboronic acids or Ph4BNa to both aromatic and aliphatic A-sulfonyl imines.993 994 The asymmetric version giving optically active amines was achieved by amidomonophosphine catalysts (Equation (225)).995... [Pg.217]

Heterogeneisation of chiral rhodium complex of 1,2-diphosphines already known as very efficient catalysts for enantioselective hydrogenation32 was achieved through amine functionality borne by pyrrolidine molecule. The supported Rh complex revealed as its homogeneous counterpart very high enantioselectivity (<90%) in hydrogenation of a-(acetylamino)cinnamic acid and its methyl ester. [Pg.39]

The addition of arylboronic acids to imines in an aqueous solvent gave a mixture of amine (Eq. 6) and alcohol (Eq. 4) because the imines were partially hydrolyzed to the aldehyde during the reaction. The use of Ph4BNa in place of phenylboronic acid allowed the catalytic addition to various N-sulfonyl imines in the absence of water (Eq. 6). The representative results are summarized in Table 5. The cationic rhodium complexes such as [Rh(cod)(MeCN)2]BF4 was found to be the most efficient catalyst for both aromatic and aliphatic N-sulfonyl imines whereas no reactions were observed for N-alkyl and N-aryl imine derivatives. [Pg.406]

The oxidative carbonylation of amines has been performed using palladium complex catalysts. Rhodium and ruthenium complexes have also been sho vn to have catalytic activity in the preparation of carbamates and ureas [93, 94]. An example is sho vn in Eq. 11.47. The usual carbonylation of amines to give formamides vas discussed in Section 11.2.3. [Pg.292]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.277 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.277 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.6 , Pg.277 ]




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Rhodium catalysts catalyst

Rhodium complex catalysts

Rhodium complexes amines

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