Big Chemical Encyclopedia

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

Articles Figures Tables About

Carbon nucleophiles allylic compounds. Tsuji-Trost reaction

The Pd-catalysed allylation of carbon nucleophiles with allylic compounds via Jt-aUylpaUadium complexes is called the Tsuji-Trost reaction [32]. Typically, an allyl acetate or carbonate (54) reacts with a Pd-catalyst resulting in displacement of the leaving group to generate a Jt-allylpalladium complex (55) that can undergo substitution by a nucleophile (56) (Scheme 4.14). In 1965, Tsuji reported the reaction of ti-aUylpaUadium chloride with nucleophiles such as enamines and anions of diethyl malonate and ethyl acetoacetate. A catalytic variant was soon reported thereafter in the synthesis of allylic amines [33]. In 1973, Trost described the alkylation of alkyl-substituted 7i-aUylpalladium complexes with methyl methylsulfonylacetate... [Pg.67]

The catalytic version of allylation of nucleophiles via 7r-allylpaUadium intermediates was discovered in 1970 using allylic esters and aUyl phenyl ethers as substrates (Scheme Formation of 7r-allylpaUadium complexes by oxidative addition of various allylic compounds to Pd(0) and subsequent reaction of electrophilic rr-allylpalladium complexes with soft carbon nucleophiles are the basis of the catalytic allylation. After the reaction, Pd(0) is regenerated, which undergoes oxidative addition to the allylic compounds again, making the whole reaction catalytic. The efficient catalytic cycle is ascribed to the characteristic feature that Pd(0) is more stable than Pd(II). Allylation of carbon nucleophiles with allyhc compounds via TT-allylpalladium complexes is called the Tsuji-Trost reaction. The reaction has wide synthetic applications, particularly for cyclization. " ... [Pg.41]

The Tsuji-Trost reaction is the palladinum-catalyzed substitution of allylic leaving groups by carbon nucleophiles. The nucleophile can be carbon-, nitrogen-, or oxygen- based compounds such as alcohols, enolates, phenols, and enamines, and the leaving group can be a halide or an acetate. This emerged as a powerful procedure for the formation of C—C, C—O and C—N bonds. The reaction, also known as Trost allylation or allylic alkylation, was named after Jiro Tsuij, who first reported the method in 1965 [42], and Barry Trost, who introduced an asymmetric version in 1973 [43]. [Pg.301]

In contrast to the processes based on the external attack of a nucleophile on the coordinated CO or olefin ligands on Pd(II) species, where re-oxidation of the Pd(0) produced to reactive Pd(II) presents a considerable problem, no such problem is involved in reaction of a Pd(0) complex with allylic substrates. As we have already discussed in Schemes 1.9 and 1.10, allylic compounds such as allylic acetates or carbonates readily oxidatively add to Pd(0) species to form 7 -allyl palladium(II) complexes that are susceptible to nucleophilic attack. The catalytic process converting allylic substrates to produce allylation products of nucleophiles has found extensive uses in organic synthesis, notably in the work of Tsuji and Trost. Employment of a chiral ligand in the catalytic allylation of nucleophiles allows catalytic asymmetric synthesis of allylation... [Pg.45]


See other pages where Carbon nucleophiles allylic compounds. Tsuji-Trost reaction is mentioned: [Pg.140]    [Pg.213]    [Pg.458]    [Pg.185]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.186]   


SEARCH



Allyl carbonate

Allyl carbonates allylation

Allyl compounds

Allyl compounds, nucleophilic

Allylation Tsuji-Trost reaction

Allylation carbon nucleophiles

Allylation nucleophiles

Allylation reactions. Tsuji-Trost reaction

Allylic carbon

Allylic carbon reactions

Allylic carbon, nucleophilic

Allylic compounds

Carbon allyl

Carbon allylation

Carbon nucleophile

Carbon nucleophiles

Carbon nucleophiles allylation reactions

Carbon nucleophiles, Tsuji-Trost reaction

Nucleophilic carbon compounds

Nucleophilic reactions allylations

Tsuji

Tsuji allylation

Tsuji-Trost reaction allyl carbonate allylation

Tsuji-Trost reaction reactions

© 2024 chempedia.info