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Carbene with alkynes

Table 26 Photo-driven reactions of Group 6 imine carbenes with alkynes ... Table 26 Photo-driven reactions of Group 6 imine carbenes with alkynes ...
Barluenga and co-workers reported a novel [2 + 2 + 2 + 1 (-reaction based on the use of two metals, the nickel-mediated [2 + 2 + 2 + l]-reaction of Fischer carbenes with alkynes (Scheme 73).142 While, at present, this process requires the stoichiometric use of both metals, it is highly regioselective, affords good yields, and is a novel route to seven-membered rings. [Pg.639]

Thermal reactions of Fischer carbenes with alkynes afford a variety of prodncts depending on the snbstrates. The reactions can be visnalized mechanistically as a [2 -F 2]cycloaddition... [Pg.3224]

The benzannnlation reaction of aryl- and alkenyl-substituted Fischer carbenes with alkynes has been used... [Pg.3227]

A variety of annulations leading to ring systems other than benzenes can be isolated from reactions of Fischer carbenes. Cyclopentenone derivatives are formed from a reaction of Z-6-amino-Q ,jS-unsaturated chromium carbenes with alkynes (Scheme 66). In contrast, -B-amino-Q, /3-unsaturated chromium carbenes reacts with alkynes to give cyclopentadienes (Scheme 67). [Pg.3230]

Formation of polycyclic ring systems via intermolecular reactions of Fischer carbenes with alkynes can be achieved. In a metathesis-type reaction, reactions of 1,6-enynes afford... [Pg.3230]

The first carbene compound to be well characterized was prepared in 1966 and was one of many Fischer-Type Carbene Complexes io be reported (see equation 7). Fischer carbenes are characterized by heteroatom substituents at the carbene carbon, stabilization by a low-valent metal center, and a partial positive charge at the carbene carbon. In contrast, Schrock Type Carbene Complexes, or alkylidenes, that have alkyl substituents, are found on metal centers in higher oxidation states, and are nucleophilic at carbon. Many Fischer carbenes are known for chromium, whereas chromium alkylidenes are much less common. Monohalocarbenes of chromium, for example, (OC)5Cr=C(F)NEt2, have also been extensively investigated. Two carbene reactions of note for their application to organic synthesis are the cycloaddition of alkenes with carbene complexes and the reaction of aromatic carbenes with alkynes to yield complexed naphthols (the Dotz reaction ). ... [Pg.781]

The solvent may also influence the product distribution. [43] The reaction of chromium carbenes with alkynes in donors solvents like ethers or in benzene reveals a strong preference for benzannulation whereas non-coordinating solvents such as hexane or polar solvents such as DMF increase the yields of cyclo-pentannulation products. A strongly coordinating solvent like acetonitrile leads to the formation of moderate yields of cyclobutenones. [Pg.245]

The [2+2] reactions of the zirconium-imido compounds with alkynes and alkenes occurs by a mechanism similar to that for the [2+2] reactions of carbenes with alkynes and alkenes. The alkene or alkyne first binds to an open coordination site at the metal, and this coordination is followed by conversion of the alkyne or alkene complex to the metallacyhc product (e.g. Equation 13.76). Thus, the [2+2] reaction requires a 16-electron intermediate to bind the olefin or alkyne, even though the metallacyHc product and the imido complex have the same overall electron count. In support of the coordination of alkyne or alkene, albeit weakly, to the d° metal center, the rate of the reaction of alkynes with the 18-electron zirconocene-imido compound containing bound pyridine-N-oxide was inhibited by added pyridine-N-oxide (Equation 13.76). ... [Pg.517]

The reaction of carbenes with alkynes seems to give metalacyclobutenes, but these often rearrange. Equation 11.19 shows the Dotz reaction for the synthesis of naphthols. Note that two naphthol haptomers are found. [Pg.279]

Cocydizations of a,/MJnsaturatecl Fischer Carbene Complexes with Alkynes... [Pg.28]

Alkylideneaminocarbene complexes 76, which are aza analogs of alkenyl-carbene complexes, upon reaction with alkynes primarily give formal [3+2] cycloadducts analogous to the 1-aminocarbene complexes (Scheme 16) [74,75]. Aumann et al. proposed that this should be considered as a formal 1,3-dipo-... [Pg.33]

The reaction of alkoxyarylcarbene complexes with alkynes mainly affords Dotz benzannulated [3C+2S+1C0] cycloadducts. However, uncommon reaction pathways of some alkoxyarylcarbene complexes in their reaction with alkynes leading to indene derivatives in a formal [3C+2S] cycloaddition process have been reported. For example, the reaction of methoxy(2,6-dimethylphenyl)chromium carbene complex with 1,2-diphenylacetylene at 100 °C gives rise to an unusual indene derivative where a sigmatropic 1,5-methyl shift is observed [60]. Moreover, a related (4-hydroxy-2,6-dimethylphenyl)carbene complex reacts in benzene at 100 °C with 3-hexyne to produce an indene derivative. However, the expected Dotz cycloadduct is obtained when the solvent is changed to acetonitrile [61] (Scheme 19). Also, Dotz et al. have shown that the introduction of an isocyanide ligand into the coordination sphere of the metal induces the preferential formation of indene derivatives [62]. [Pg.75]

Other examples of [2C+2S+1C0] cycloaddition reactions have been described by Herndon et al. by the use of chromium cyclopropyl(methoxy)carbenes. These complexes react with alkynes releasing ethene and forming cyclopenta-dienone derivatives, which evolve to cyclopentenone derivatives in the presence of chromium(O) and water [122] (Scheme 76). This reaction has been extended to intramolecular processes and also to the synthesis of some natural products [123]. These authors have also described another process involving a formal [2C+2S+1C0] cycloaddition reaction. Thus, the reaction of methyl and cyclo-propylcarbene complexes with phenylacetylene derivatives does not afford the expected benzannulated products, and several regioisomers of cyclopentenone derivatives are the only products isolated [124] (Scheme 76). [Pg.110]

Aryl- and alkenylcarbene complexes are known to react with alkynes through a [3C+2S+1C0] cycloaddition reaction to produce benzannulated compounds. This reaction, known as the Dotz reaction , is widely reviewed in Chap. Chromium-Templated Benzannulation Reactions , p. 123 of this book. However, simple alkyl-substituted carbene complexes react with excess of an alkyne (or with diynes) to produce a different benzannulated product which incorporates in its structure two molecules of the alkyne, a carbon monoxide ligand and the carbene carbon [128]. As referred to before, this [2S+2SH-1C+1C0] cycloaddition reaction can be carried out with diyne derivatives, showing these reactions give better yields than the corresponding intermolecular version (Scheme 80). [Pg.112]

Alkoxy(carbene)iron(0) and amino(carbene)iron(0) complexes usually react with alkynes to give rj4-pyrone iron complexes and furans, respectively [54]. Nevertheless the chemoselective formation of naphthols was reported for alkoxy(carbene)iron(0) complexes with the electron-poor alkyne dimethyl... [Pg.141]

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]

This photodriven benzannulation was used in the synthesis of indolocar-bazoles (Eq. 22) [96] and calphostins (Eq. 23) [97]. The thermal insertion of isonitriles into these same classes of carbenes provided a complementary approach to similar benzannulations [98-100]. Manganese alkoxycarbene complexes underwent both inter- [101] and intramolecular [102] photodriven benzannulation reactions with alkynes (Eqs. 24 and 25). [Pg.181]

The regioselective preparation of 2-substltuted naphthalenediol derivatives having the diols differentially protected in a predictable and straightforward manner, previously not directly attainable, is readily accomplished using chromium carbene complexes. First prepared by E. O. Fischer, chromium carbene complexes react readily with alkynes (extensively investigated by K. H. D6tz, and others).3 Steric effects dictate the substitution pattern observed2-4 and the reaction mechanism has been widely studied.2... [Pg.174]

The presence of a cyclopropyl moiety in the carbene complexes makes them useful for synthesis. The cyclopropylcarbene complexes 95 undergo a cycloaddition reaction with alkynes to give the cyclopentenones 96 [51]. The reaction course is explained as being metallacyclopentene fragmentation. (Scheme 34)... [Pg.122]

Merlic demonstrated the direct, non-photochemical insertion of carbon monoxide from acylamino chromium carbene complexes 14 to afford a presumed chromium-complexed ketene 15 <00JA7398>. This presumed metal-complexed ketene leads to a munchnone 16 or munchnone complex which undergo dipolar cycloaddition with alkynes to yield the pyrroles 17 upon loss of carbon dioxide. [Pg.112]

The currently known carbometallation chemistry of the group 6 metals is dominated by the reactions of metal-carbene and metal-carbyne complexes with alkenes and alkynes leading to the formation of four-membered metallacycles, shown in Scheme 1. Many different fates of such species have been reported, and the readers are referred to reviews discussing these reactions.253 An especially noteworthy reaction of this class is the Dotz reaction,254 which is stoichiometric in Cr in essentially all cases. Beyond the formation of the four-membered metallacycles via carbometallation, metathesis and other processes that may not involve carbometallation appear to dominate. It is, however, of interest to note that metallacyclobutadienes containing group 6 metals can undergo the second carbometallation with alkynes to produce metallabenzenes, as shown in Scheme 53.255 As the observed conversion of metallacyclobutadienes to metallabenzenes can also proceed via a Diels-Alder-like... [Pg.284]

Vinyl Fischer carbenes can be used as three-carbon components in Ni(0)-mediated and Rh(l)-catalyzed [3 + 2 + 21-reactions with alkynes (Schemes 48 and 49)142 and with allenes (Schemes 50 and 51).143 All three of the proposed mechanisms for the [3 + 2 + 2]-cycloadditions involve an initial carbene transfer from chromium to nickel or rhodium (Schemes 49, 52, and 53). As is seen from the products of the two [3 + 2 + 2]-reactions with 1,1-dimethylallene, although the nickel and rhodium carbenes 147G and 147K appear similar, the initial insertion of the allene occurs with opposite regioselectivity. [Pg.629]

The potential synthetic utility of titanium-based olefin metathesis and related reactions is evident from the extensive documentation outlined above. Titanium carbene complexes react with organic molecules possessing a carbon—carbon or carbon—oxygen double bond to produce, as metathesis products, a variety of acyclic and cyclic unsaturated compounds. Furthermore, the four-membered titanacydes formed by the reactions of the carbene complexes with alkynes or nitriles serve as useful reagents for the preparation of functionalized compounds. Since various types of titanium carbene complexes and their equivalents are now readily available, these reactions constitute convenient tools available to synthetic chemists. [Pg.497]

Reaction of Titanium Carbene Complexes with Alkynes 493... [Pg.529]

The Dotz reaction mechanism has received further support from kinetic and theoretical studies. An early kinetic investigation [37] and the observation that the reaction of the metal carbene with the alkyne is supressed in the presence of external carbon monoxide [38] indicated that the rate-determining step is a reversible decarbonylation of the original carbene complex. Additional evidence for the Dotz mechanistic hyphotesis has been provided by extended Hiickel molecular orbital [23, 24] and quantum chemical calculations [25],... [Pg.274]

An alternative mechanistic scenario for the initial steps of this reaction (associative route) was the subject of a study by TDS [27, 39], It considers the possibility that the cycloaddilion with alkynes takes place initially by direct reaction with the coordinatively saturated chromium carbene complex 9. [Pg.276]


See other pages where Carbene with alkynes is mentioned: [Pg.194]    [Pg.3230]    [Pg.194]    [Pg.3230]    [Pg.363]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.28]    [Pg.75]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.111]    [Pg.124]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.196]    [Pg.224]    [Pg.363]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.276]    [Pg.275]    [Pg.347]    [Pg.115]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.42 , Pg.49 , Pg.50 , Pg.51 , Pg.52 , Pg.53 , Pg.54 , Pg.67 ]




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Alkynes coupling with carbene complexes

Alkynes reaction with carbene complexes

Alkynes reaction with carbenes

Alkynes reactions with Fischer carbene complexes

Alkynes, annulation with Fischer carbenes

Carbene complexes with alkynes

Carbenes with alkynes

Carbenes with alkynes

Carbenes, generation with alkynes

With Carbenes

With alkynes

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