Big Chemical Encyclopedia

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

Articles Figures Tables About

Boranes amines from

Amines from boranes. A sequential reaction of RBH with BClj and an organic azide leads to the amine with retention of configuration. The following equation illustrates a stereoselective approach to cycloalkylamines on the basis of organoborane... [Pg.54]

Several A7-substituted ketimines have been reduced to optically active secondary amines with a reagent 1 prepared from borane and (-)-(5 )-2-amino-3-methyl-l.l-diphenyl-l-butanol28. [Pg.924]

The reduction of ketoxime ethers by borane in the presence of (—)-norephedrine yields (S)-amines from a/ i-kctoximcs and (/ )-isomers from. s i/ -ketoximes, e.g. from phenyl-4-tolyl-methyl ketoxime methyl ether40. [Pg.927]

Secondary amines from azides. The reaction of alkyldichloroboranes with azides leads to secondary amines directly. This process has been incorporated into a polyamine synthesis. Note that the dichloroboranes can be prepared from organobis (diisopropylamino)boranes. ... [Pg.175]

The addition reaction of carbon-11 labelled cyanide ion to the bisulphite addition adduct of an aldehyde has been extended to prepare carbon-11 labelled amines. Maeda and coworkers prepared both p- and m-octopamine [2-(p-and m-hydroxyphenyl)-2-hydroxyethyl-amine] from the corresponding benzaldehyde by reducing the cyanohydrin formed in the reaction between the appropriate benzaldehyde and cyanide ion both under enzymatic conditions and by the basic modification of the Bucherer-Strecker synthesis, with borane-THF. The synthesis of / -octopamine is presented in equation 64. [Pg.653]

Dimethylamine borane Sec. amines from azomethines Selective reduction... [Pg.322]

Borane-tetrahydrofuranitrimethylsilyl azide Prim, amines from ethylene derivs. under neutral conditions... [Pg.356]

The desired pyridylamine was obtained in 69 % overall yield by monomethylation of 2-(aminomethyl)pyridine following a literature procedure (Scheme 4.14). First amine 4.48 was converted into formamide 4.49, through reaction with the in situ prepared mixed anhydride of acetic acid and formic acid. Reduction of 4.49 with borane dimethyl sulfide complex produced diamine 4.50. This compound could be used successfully in the Mannich reaction with 4.39, affording crude 4.51 in 92 % yield (Scheme 4.15). Analogous to 4.44, 4.51 also coordinates to copper(II) in water, as indicated by a shift of the UV-absorption maximum from 296 nm to 308 nm. [Pg.116]

Diborane [19287-45-7] the first hydroborating agent studied, reacts sluggishly with olefins in the gas phase (14,15). In the presence of weak Lewis bases, eg, ethers and sulfides, it undergoes rapid reaction at room temperature or even below 0°C (16—18). The catalytic effect of these compounds on the hydroboration reaction is attributed to the formation of monomeric borane complexes from the borane dimer, eg, borane-tetrahydrofuran [14044-65-6] (1) or borane—dimethyl sulfide [13292-87-0] (2) (19—21). Stronger complexes formed by amines react with olefins at elevated temperatures (22—24). [Pg.308]

A number of less hindered monoalkylboranes is available by indirect methods, eg, by treatment of a thexylborane—amine complex with an olefin (69), the reduction of monohalogenoboranes or esters of boronic acids with metal hydrides (70—72), the redistribution of dialkylboranes with borane (64) or the displacement of an alkene from a dialkylborane by the addition of a tertiary amine (73). To avoid redistribution, monoalkylboranes are best used /V situ or freshly prepared. However, they can be stored as monoalkylborohydrides or complexes with tertiary amines. The free monoalkylboranes can be hberated from these derivatives when required (69,74—76). Methylborane, a remarkably unhindered monoalkylborane, exhibits extraordinary hydroboration characteristics. It hydroborates hindered and even unhindered olefins to give sequentially alkylmethyl- and dialkylmethylboranes (77—80). [Pg.310]

The synthesis of a number of other amine—borane complexes from THF BH [14044-65-6] have also been described (10). [Pg.261]


See other pages where Boranes amines from is mentioned: [Pg.135]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.59]    [Pg.309]    [Pg.235]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.731]    [Pg.732]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.200]    [Pg.121]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.1258]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.1922]    [Pg.531]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.414]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.116]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.16]    [Pg.125]    [Pg.240]    [Pg.268]    [Pg.347]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.130]   


SEARCH



Azides boranes, amines from

From aminals

From amines

From boranes

© 2024 chempedia.info