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Carbene complexes thermally

Similar to alkynes, cyclopropenes also readily form transition metal 7i-complexes which can isomerize to carbene complexes thermally, photochemically, or che-... [Pg.99]

The activation of silylene complexes is induced both photochemically or by addition of a base, e.g. pyridine. A similar base-induced cleavage is known from the chemistry of carbene complexes however, in this case the carbenes so formed dimerize to give alkenes. Finally, a silylene cleavage can also be achieved thermally. Melting of the compounds 4-7 in high vacuum yields the dimeric complexes 48-51 with loss of HMPA. The dimers, on the other hand, can be transformed into polysilanes and iron carbonyl clusters above 120 °C. In all cases, the resulting polymers have been identified by spectroscopic methods. [Pg.27]

The ability of Fischer carbene complexes to transfer their carbene ligand to an electron-deficient olefin was discovered by Fischer and Dotz in 1970 [5]. Further studies have demonstrated the generality of this thermal process, which occurs between (alkyl)-, (aryl)-, and (alkenyl)(alkoxy)carbene complexes and different electron-withdrawing substituted alkenes [6] (Scheme 1). For certain substrates, a common side reaction in these processes is the insertion of the carbene ligand into an olefinic C-H bond [6, 7]. In addition, it has been ob-... [Pg.62]

Simple 1,3-dienes also undergo a thermal monocyclopropanation reaction with methoxy(alkyl)- and methoxy(aryl)carbene complexes of molybdenum and chromium [27]. The most complete study was carried out by Harvey and Lund and they showed that this process occurs with high levels of both regio-and diastereoselectivity. The chemical yield is significantly higher with molybdenum complexes [27a] (Scheme 7). Tri- and tetrasubstituted 1,3-dienes and 3-methylenecyclohexene (diene locked in an s-trans conformation) fail to react [28]. The monocyclopropanation of electronically neutral 1,3-dienes with non-heteroatom-stabilised carbene complexes has also been described [29]. [Pg.67]

Carbene complexes which have an all-carbon tether between the diene and the dienophile react via intramolecular Diels-Alder reaction to give the corresponding bicyclic compound. The stereoselectivities of these reactions are comparable to those observed for the Lewis acid-catalysed reactions of the corresponding methyl esters and much higher than those of the thermal reactions of the methyl esters which are completely unselective. Moreover, the ris-sub-stituted complexes undergo endo-selective reactions where the corresponding reaction of the ester fails [109] (Scheme 61). [Pg.100]

Several examples of [5C+1S] cycloaddition reactions have been described involving in all cases a 1,3,5-metalahexatriene carbene complex as the C5-syn-thon and a CO or an isocyanide as the Cl-synthon. Thus,Merlic et al. described the photochemically driven benzannulation of dienylcarbene complexes to produce ortho alkoxyphenol derivatives when the reaction is performed under an atmosphere of CO, or ortho alkoxyanilines when the reaction is thermally performed in the presence of an isonitrile [111] (Scheme 63). In related works, Barluenga et al. carried out analogous reactions under thermal conditions [36a, c, 47a]. Interestingly, the dienylcarbene complexes are obtained in a first step by a [2+2] or a [3S+2C] process (see Sects. 2.3 and 2.5.1). Further reaction of these complexes with CO or an isonitrile leads to highly functionalised aromatic compounds (Scheme 63). [Pg.101]

The first and rate-determining step involves carbon monoxide dissociation from the initial pentacarbonyl carbene complex A to yield the coordinatively unsaturated tetracarbonyl carbene complex B (Scheme 3). The decarbonyla-tion and consequently the benzannulation reaction may be induced thermally, photochemically [2], sonochemically [3], or even under microwave-assisted conditions [4]. A detailed kinetic study by Dotz et al. proved that the initial reaction step proceeds via a reversible dissociative mechanism [5]. More recently, density functional studies on the preactivation scenario by Sola et al. tried to propose alkyne addition as the first step [6],but it was shown that this... [Pg.125]

The selectivity for two-alkyne annulation can be increased by involving an intramolecular tethering of the carbene complex to both alkynes. This was accomplished by the synthesis of aryl-diynecarbene complexes 115 and 116 from the triynylcarbene complexes 113 and 114, respectively, and Danishefsky s diene in a Diels-Alder reaction [70a]. The diene adds chemoselectively to the triple bond next to the electrophilic carbene carbon. The thermally induced two-alkyne annulation of the complexes 115 and 116 was performed in benzene and yielded the steroid ring systems 117 and 118 (Scheme 51). This tandem Diels-Alder/two-alkyne annulation, which could also be applied in a one-pot procedure, offers new strategies for steroid synthesis in the class O—>ABCD. [Pg.149]

Merlic developed a new variation of the thermally induced benzannulation reaction. The dienylcarbene complex 132 was reacted with isonitrile to give an orf/zo-alkoxyaniline derivative 135 [76] (Scheme 56). This annulation product is regiocomplementary to those reported from photochemical reaction of chromium dienyl(amino)carbene complexes. The metathesis of the isocyanide with the dienylcarbene complex 132 generates a chromium-complexed di-enylketenimine intermediate 133 which undergoes electrocyclisation. Final tau-tomerisation and demetalation afford the orf/zo-alkoxyaniline 135. [Pg.151]

Several stable Group 6 metal-ketene complexes are known [14], and photo-driven insertion of CO into a tungsten-carbyne-carbon triple bond has been demonstrated [15]. In addition, thermal decomposition of the nonheteroatom-stabilized carbene complexes (CO)5M=CPh2 (M=Cr, W) produces diphenylke-tene [16]. Thus, the intermediacy of transient metal-ketene complexes in the photodriven reactions of Group 6 Fischer carbenes seems at least possible. [Pg.159]

Photolysis of chromium alkoxycarbenes with azoarenes produced 1,2- and 1,3-diazetidinones, along with imidates from formal azo metathesis (Eq. 21) [85, 86]. Elegant mechanistic studies [87-89] indicated the primary photoprocess was trans-to-cis isomerization of the azoarene followed by subsequent thermal reaction with the carbene complex. Because of the low yields and mixtures obtained the process is of little synthetic use. [Pg.178]

The thermal benzannulation of Group 6 carbene complexes with alkynes (the Dotz reaction) is highly developed and has been used extensively in synthesis [90,91]. It is thought to proceed through a chromium vinylketene intermediate generated by sequential insertion of the alkyne followed by carbon monoxide into the chromium-carbene-carbon double bond [92]. The realization that photodriven CO insertion into Z-dienylcarbene complexes should generate the same vinylketene intermediate led to the development of a photochemical variant of the Dotz reaction (Table 14). [Pg.178]

Photodriven reactions of Fischer carbenes with alcohols produces esters, the expected product from nucleophilic addition to ketenes. Hydroxycarbene complexes, generated in situ by protonation of the corresponding ate complex, produced a-hydroxyesters in modest yield (Table 15) [103]. Ketals,presumably formed by thermal decomposition of the carbenes, were major by-products. The discovery that amides were readily converted to aminocarbene complexes [104] resulted in an efficient approach to a-amino acids by photodriven reaction of these aminocarbenes with alcohols (Table 16) [105,106]. a-Alkylation of the (methyl)(dibenzylamino)carbene complex followed by photolysis produced a range of racemic alanine derivatives (Eq. 26). With chiral oxazolidine carbene complexes optically active amino acid derivatives were available (Eq. 27). Since both enantiomers of the optically active chromium aminocarbene are equally available, both the natural S and unnatural R amino acid derivatives are equally... [Pg.182]

One of the earliest reported thermal reactions of Fischer carbene complexes was the reaction with olefins to give cyclopropanes [127]. More recently it has been shown that photolysis accelerates inter molecular cydopropanation of electron-poor alkenes [128]. Photolysis of Group 6 imine carbenes with alkenes... [Pg.192]

Independently, Caddick et al. reported microwave-assisted amination of aryl chlorides using a palladium-N-heterocyclic carbene complex as the catalyst (Scheme 99) [lOlj. Initial experiments in a domestic microwave oven (reflux conditions) revealed that the solvent is crucial for the reaction. The Pd source also proved very important, since Pd(OAc)2 at high power in DMF gave extensive catalyst decomposition and using it at medium and low power gave no reaction at all. Pd(dba)2/imidazohum salt (1 mol% catalyst loading) in DME with the addition of some DMF was found to be suitable. Oil bath experiments indicated that only thermal effects are governing the amination reactions. [Pg.203]

Herrmann et al. reported for the first time in 1996 the use of chiral NHC complexes in asymmetric hydrosilylation [12]. An achiral version of this reaction with diaminocarbene rhodium complexes was previously reported by Lappert et al. in 1984 [40]. The Rh(I) complexes 53a-b were obtained in 71-79% yield by reaction of the free chiral carbene with 0.5 equiv of [Rh(cod)Cl]2 in THF (Scheme 30). The carbene was not isolated but generated in solution by deprotonation of the corresponding imidazolium salt by sodium hydride in liquid ammonia and THF at - 33 °C. The rhodium complexes 53 are stable in air both as a solid and in solution, and their thermal stability is also remarkable. The hydrosilylation of acetophenone in the presence of 1% mol of catalyst 53b gave almost quantitative conversions and optical inductions up to 32%. These complexes are active in hydrosilylation without an induction period even at low temperatures (- 34 °C). The optical induction is clearly temperature-dependent it decreases at higher temperatures. No significant solvent dependence could be observed. In spite of moderate ee values, this first report on asymmetric hydrosilylation demonstrated the advantage of such rhodium carbene complexes in terms of stability. No dissociation of the ligand was observed in the course of the reaction. [Pg.210]

The remainder of the work on Ni(II) complexes involves the use of chelating ligands in which the carbene is functionalised with pendant heteroatom donor(s). The picolyl-functionalised NHC dicationic complex 29 (Fig. 4.11) was tested for ethylene polymerisation after treatment with MAO [34]. This complex was found to be highly active in a preliminary test (330 kg moF bar h" ), giving predominantly linear polyethylene. Unfortunately this work does not seem to have been followed up. The same system was active for norbomene polymerisation (TOF = 24 400 h" over 1 h). Maximum activity was achieved at 80°C whereafter thermal deactivation became significant, although the nature of this deactivation was not studied. The phenoxide-functionalised carbene complex 30 (Fig. 4.11) was also... [Pg.113]

Following the synthesis of the first methyl-palladium NHC complexes it was subsequently found that the complexes undergo a facile thermal decomposition process in which the NHC is lost as 2-methylimidazolium salt and the Pd is rednced to Pd(0) (Scheme 13.1) [15-17]. In ensuing studies investigating the reaction behavionr of a range of hydrocarbyl Pd and Ni carbene complexes, it was found that the decomposition reaction is ubiquitous. It occurs with varying ease, for mono-NHC, bis-NHC and donor functionalised-NHC complexes [16-23]. [Pg.300]

The q1-coordinated carbene complexes 421 (R = Ph)411 and 422412) are rather stable thermally. As metal-free product of thermal decomposition [421 (R = Ph) 110 °C, 422 PPh3, 105 °C], one finds the formal carbene dimer, tetraphenylethylene, in both cases. Carbene transfer from 422 onto 1,1-diphenylethylene does not occur, however. Among all isolated carbene complexes, 422 may be considered the only connecting link between stoichiometric diazoalkane reactions and catalytic decomposition [except for the somewhat different results with rhodium(III) porphyrins, see above] 422 is obtained from diazodiphenylmethane and [Rh(CO)2Cl]2, which is also known to be an efficient catalyst for cyclopropanation and S-ylide formation with diazoesters 66). [Pg.240]

Elimination to yield alkenes can be induced thermally or by treatment with acids or bases (for one possible mechanism, see Figure 3.39) [138,206]. Less common thermal demetallations include the thermolysis of arylmethyloxy(phenyl)carbene complexes, which can lead to the formation of aryl-substituted acetophenones [276]. Further, (difluoroboroxy)carbene complexes of molybdenum, which can be prepared by treating molybdenum hexacarbonyl with an organolithium compound and then with boron trifluoride etherate at -60 °C, decompose at room temperature to yield acyl radicals [277]. [Pg.37]

Several reaction sequences have been reported in which Fischer-type carbene complexes are converted in situ into non-heteroatom-substituted carbene complexes, which then cyclopropanate simple olefins [306,307] (Figure 2.22). This can, for instance, be achieved by treating the carbene complexes with dihydropyridines, forming (isolable) pyridinium ylides. These decompose thermally to yield pyridine and highly electrophilic, non-heteroatom-substituted carbene complexes (Figure 2.22) [46]. [Pg.45]

Conjugate hydride abstractions have also been used for the generation of carbon-metal double bonds. An interesting reaction sequence, in which a (thermally unstable) cationic, non-heteroatom-substituted tungsten carbene complex is prepared by conjugate hydride abstraction, is shown in Figure 3.9. [Pg.84]

Because a-alkoxyalkyl iron complexes are thermally unstable [467] they cannot be stored for long periods of time. More suitable carbene precursors are the corresponding a-(dimethylsulfonium)alkyl complexes, which can be stored indefinitely under ambient conditions [468-473], These complexes are prepared by S-alkylation of a-(methylthio)alkyl complexes, which can be prepared by alkylation of metallates with a-halothioethers, by addition of C-nucleophiles to (alkylthio)carbene complexes, or by addition of thiols to carbene complexes. [Pg.87]

Halides are, not surprisingly, also suitable leaving groups for the generation of carbon-metal double bonds by a-abstraction. a-Haloalkyl complexes can be converted into carbene complexes either thermally [459,483] or by treatment with Lewis acids [180], The vinylogous variant of this reaction has also been reported (Figure 3.17). [Pg.89]

Alkynes react readily with a variety of transition metal complexes under thermal or photochemical conditions to form the corresponding 7t-complexes. With terminal alkynes the corresponding 7t-complexes can undergo thermal or chemically-induced isomerization to vinylidene complexes [128,130,132,133,547,556-569]. With mononuclear rj -alkyne complexes two possible mechanisms for the isomerization to carbene complexes have been considered, namely (a) oxidative insertion of the metal into the terminal C-Fl bond to yield a hydrido alkynyl eomplex, followed by 1,3-hydrogen shift from the metal to Cn [570,571], or (b) eoneerted formation of the M-C bond and 1,2-shift of H to Cp [572]. [Pg.98]

Metallacyclobutanes or other four-membered metallacycles can serve as precursors of certain types of carbene complex. [2 + 2] Cycloreversion can be induced thermally, chemically, or photochemically [49,591-595]. The most important application of this process is carbene-complex-catalyzed olefin metathesis. This reaction consists in reversible [2 + 2] cycloadditions of an alkene or an alkyne to a carbene complex, forming an intermediate metallacyclobutane. This process is discussed more thoroughly in Section 3.2.5. [Pg.100]

Low-valent, 18-electron carbene complexes (Fischer-type) are electronically and coordinatively saturated and must usually be activated to become efficient metathesis catalysts. This activation can be effected by thermal or photolytic [781,782] removal of one ligand, e.g. carbon monoxide, or by treatment with a Lewis acid (Table 3.15) [783]. [Pg.140]

This carbyne was shown not to be the RCM active species. At —20 °C it rearranged spontaneously into the indenylidene complex XV with release of TfOH. This intramolecular transformation corresponds to the electrophilic ortho-substitution of one phenyl group by the electrophilic carbyne carbon of XIV. The carbene complex XV was identified as the species thermally formed in situ from the catalyst precursors Ia,b in the range 25-80 °C. [Pg.260]

We reported the use of M-heterocyclic carbene complexes (NHC) for the catalytic activation of methane [55,56]. We found that solutions of N-heterocyclic carbene complexes of palladium(II) in carboxylic acids catalyze the conversion of methane to the corresponding methylesters. The high thermal stability of palladium(II) carbene complexes could be shown for complex 18 (Scheme 22), which we also structurally characterized [120]. An extraordinary feature is the unprecedented resistance of the palladium-NHC-complexes 18-22 under the acidic oxidizing conditions which are necessary for the CH-activation and functionalization. [Pg.194]

Carbene complexes undergo benzannulation under photochemical conditions with carbon monoxide to give the indolocarbazoles via a ketene intermediate, or aminobenzannulation with /t-butyl isonitrile under thermal conditions via a ketenimine (Equation (77) Table 3) <1997TL6787, 2001T5199>. [Pg.1170]


See other pages where Carbene complexes thermally is mentioned: [Pg.246]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.63]    [Pg.124]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.234]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.238]    [Pg.209]    [Pg.294]    [Pg.93]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.713]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.209]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.37]    [Pg.892]    [Pg.533]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.16 ]




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Fischer carbene complex thermal reaction

Metal-carbene complexes thermal decomposition

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