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Carbonyl ylide reduction reaction

This unusual reaction involves the reductive dimerization of protected iodohy-drin (44) that produced a symmetrically substituted carbonyl ylide (48). The mechanism proposed for this interesting process involved initial reduction of the... [Pg.260]

Scheme 7.52 Domino carbonyl ylide formation-enantioselective reduction reaction catalysed by chiral phosphoric acid catalysis and rhodium catalysis followed by benzoylation. Scheme 7.52 Domino carbonyl ylide formation-enantioselective reduction reaction catalysed by chiral phosphoric acid catalysis and rhodium catalysis followed by benzoylation.
A successful asymmetric organocatalytic based C=0 reduction with the Hantzsch ester was not reported until very recently. Terada and Toda developed a relay catalysis that combined Rh(ll) and a chiral phosphoric acid catalyst in a one-pot reaction (Scheme 32.15). In this reaction sequence, a rhodium carbene (I) forms in the first step and is followed with an intramolecular cyclization to afford carbonyl ylide intermediate II or oxidopyrylium III. These intermediates are protonated by 7 to yield the chiral ion pair between isobenzopyrylium and the conjugate base of 7 (IV). Intermediate IV is further reduced in situ by Hantzsch ester Id to produce the isochroman-4-one derivative 67, which is finally trapped with benzoyl chloride to afford the chiral product 68. Surprisingly, the reaction sequence proceeds well to give racemic product even without the addition of chiral 7, while giving rise to the desired product with high enantioselectivity in the presence of chiral Br0nsted acid 7 [38]. [Pg.952]

The Julia-Lythgoc olefination operates by addition of alkyl sulfone anions to carbonyl compounds and subsequent reductive deoxysulfonation (P. Kocienski, 1985). In comparison with the Wittig reaction, it has several advantages sulfones are often more readily available than phosphorus ylides, and it was often successful when the Wittig olefination failed. The elimination step yields exclusively or predominantly the more stable trans olefin stereoisomer. [Pg.34]

Recently, Ohmori and coworkers have used an anodic oxidation reaction to promote the reduction of an acid [34]. In this experiment, the anodic oxidation of triphenyl- or tributylphosphine in the presence of a carboxylic acid led to the formation of an acyl phosphonium ion. The acyl phosphonium ion was then reduced at the cathode to form an ylide which then trapped a second carbonyl... [Pg.64]

A structurally unusual 3-blocker that uses a second molecule of itself as the substituent on nitrogen is included here in spite of the ubiquity of this class of compounds. Exhaustive hydrogenation of the chromone (13-1) leads to a reduction of both the double bond and the carbonyl group, as in the case of (11-2). The car-boxyhc acid is then reduced to an aldehyde (13-2) by means of diisobutylaluminum hydride. Reaction of that intermediate with the ylide from trimethylsulfonium iodide gives the oxirane (13-3) via the addition-displacement process discussed earlier (see Chapters 3 and 8). Treatment of an excess of that epoxide with benzylamine leads to the addition of two equivalents of that compound with each basic nitrogen (13-4). The product is then debenzylated by catalytic reduction over palladium to afford nebivolol (13-5) [16]. The presence of four chiral centers in the product predicts the existence of 16 chiral pairs. [Pg.438]

EthytidenationThe ketone (2) undergoes Wittig reaction with ethylidene-triphenylphosphorane in yields of only about 40%, with recovery of 2. The difficulty may be enolization promoted by the basic ylide. Use of the Grignard reagent from a-chloroethyltrimethylsilane results only in reduction of the carbonyl group. The problem is solved by use of 1, which reacts with 2 to give the internal ketal 3. Hydro-... [Pg.442]

Rhodium(II) acetate catalyzes C—H insertion, olefin addition, heteroatom-H insertion, and ylide formation of a-diazocarbonyls via a rhodium carbenoid species (144—147). Intramolecular cyclopentane formation via C—H insertion occurs with retention of stereochemistry (143). Chiral rhodium (TT) carboxamides catalyze enantioselective cyclopropanation and intramolecular C—N insertions of CC-diazoketones (148). Other reactions catalyzed by rhodium complexes include double-bond migration (140), hydrogenation of aromatic aldehydes and ketones to hydrocarbons (150), homologation of esters (151), carbonylation of formaldehyde (152) and amines (140), reductive carbonylation of dimethyl ether or methyl acetate to 1,1-diacetoxy ethane (153), decarbonylation of aldehydes (140), water gas shift reaction (69,154), C—C skeletal rearrangements (132,140), oxidation of olefins to ketones (155) and aldehydes (156), and oxidation of substituted anthracenes to anthraquinones (157). Rhodium-catalyzed hydrosilation of olefins, alkynes, carbonyls, alcohols, and imines is facile and may also be accomplished enantioselectively (140). Rhodium complexes are moderately active alkene and alkyne polymerization catalysts (140). In some cases polymer-supported versions of homogeneous rhodium catalysts have improved activity, compared to their homogenous counterparts. This is the case for the conversion of alkenes direcdy to alcohols under oxo conditions by rhodium—amine polymer catalysts... [Pg.181]


See other pages where Carbonyl ylide reduction reaction is mentioned: [Pg.308]    [Pg.232]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.43]    [Pg.43]    [Pg.558]    [Pg.277]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.245]    [Pg.160]    [Pg.747]    [Pg.216]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.196]    [Pg.551]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.423]    [Pg.1161]    [Pg.247]    [Pg.201]    [Pg.651]    [Pg.430]    [Pg.147]    [Pg.104]    [Pg.225]    [Pg.243]    [Pg.1242]    [Pg.423]    [Pg.428]    [Pg.305]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.140 , Pg.141 ]




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Carbonyl ylide

Carbonyl ylides reaction

Reduction carbonylation

Reductive reactions carbonylation

Ylide reaction

Ylides reaction

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