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Eschweiler-Clark reductive alkylation amines

Amine synthesis from reductive amination of a ketone and an amine in the presence of excess formic acid, which serves as the reducing reagent by delivering a hydride. When the ketone is replaced by formaldehyde, it becomes Eschweiler-Clarke reductive alkylation of amines. [Pg.350]

Brewer, A. R. E. Eschweiler-Clarke reductive alkylation of amine. In Name Reactions for Functional Group Transformations-, Li, J. J., Corey, E. J., eds. John Wiley Sons Hoboken, NJ, 2007, pp 86-111. (Review). [Pg.211]

The previous sections have dealt with stable C=N-I- functionality in aromatic rings as simple salts. Another class of iminium salt reactions can be found where the iminium salt is only an intermediate. The purpose of this section is to point out these reactions even though they do not show any striking differences in their reactivity from stable iminium salts. Such intermediates arise from a-chloroamines (133-135), isomerization of oxazolidines (136), reduction of a-aminoketones by the Clemmensen method (137-139), reductive alkylation by the Leuckart-Wallach (140-141) or Clarke-Eschweiler reaction (142), mercuric acetate oxidation of amines (46,93), and in reactions such as ketene with enamines (143). [Pg.201]

The reductive alkylation of amines is called the Leuckart-Wallach reaction [112-115]. The primary or secondary amine reacts with the ketone or aldehyde. The formed imine is then reduced with formic acid as hydrogen donor (Scheme 20.27). When amines are reductively methylated with formaldehyde and formic acid, the process is termed the Eschweiler-Clarke procedure [116, 117]. [Pg.610]

Eschweiler-Clarke modification org chem A modification of the Leuckart reaction, involving reductive alkylation of ammonia or amines (except tertiary amines) by formaldehyde and formic acid. esh,vTl-3r klark. mad-o-fo ka-shon ... [Pg.139]

The Wallach-Leuckart reductive alkylation of ammonia, and primary and secondary amines, by means of aldehydes and ketones, and the methylation of secondary amines according to Clarke and Eschweiler,3160 all possess a reduction step which is very similar to that observed in the reduction of enamines.317... [Pg.211]


See other pages where Eschweiler-Clark reductive alkylation amines is mentioned: [Pg.216]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.765]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.235]    [Pg.810]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.678]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.794]    [Pg.288]    [Pg.160]   


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Alkyl reduction

Alkylation Reductive amination

Alkylative amination

Amines alkylation

Amines reductive alkylation

Clark

Clark-Eschweiler reductive alkylation of amines

Clarke 1

Clarke-Eschweiler alkylation

Clarke-Eschweiler reductive

Clark—Eschweiler reductive alkylation

Eschweiler-Clarke reductive alkylation

Eschweiler-Clarke reductive alkylation amines

Eschweiler-Clarke reductive alkylation amines

Eschweiler-Clarke reductive alkylation of amines

Reduction alkylation

Reduction reductive alkylation

Reductive alkylation

Reductive aminations alkylations

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