Big Chemical Encyclopedia

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

Articles Figures Tables About

Carbonylation zinc derivatives

Treatment of P-carbonyl sulfoximines 296 (R=Bu , CO,Me, N(Pri)2) with diethylzinc gave the corresponding ethyl zinc derivatives.12 The X-ray crystal structure of the ethyl zinc derivative (R=Bu ) showed a dimeric 0-metallated... [Pg.356]

A regiospecific transposition of the allyl fragment involving exclusive y-reaction is observed e.g. 27 -> 28) in both studies. A related reaction between (presumably) allylic zinc derivatives and aldehydes or ketones occurs when a mixture of an allylic bromide and the carbonyl compound is passed along a column of zinc granules heated at the reflux temperature of THF. Hydrolysis of the resultant zinc alkoxide provides another route to homoallylic alcohols (Scheme 12), with no problem from Wurtz coupling of the bromide. The column may be used repeatedly without contamination, providing the zinc is replenished as it is used up. ... [Pg.164]

With hydrogen sulfide at 500—600°C, monochlorotoluenes form the corresponding thiophenol derivatives (30). In the presence of palladium catalysts and carbon monoxide, monochlorotoluenes undergo carbonylation at 150—300°C and 0.1—20 MPa (1—200 atm) to give carboxyHc acids (31). Oxidative coupling of -chlorotoluene to form 4,4 -dimethylbiphenyl can be achieved in the presence of an organonickel catalyst, generated in situ, and zinc in dipolar aprotic solvents such as dimethyl acetamide (32,33). An example is shown in equation 4. [Pg.53]

Borohydrides reduce a-substituted ketones to the corresponding a-substituted alcohols, and such products can be further reduced to olefins (see section VIII). Other reagents serve, through participation of the carbonyl group, to remove the substituent while leaving the ketone intact. The zinc or chromous ion reduction of a-halo ketones is an example of this second type, which is not normally useful for double bond introduction. However, when the derivative being reduced is an a,jS-epoxy ketone, the primary product is a -hydroxy ketone which readily dehydrates to the a,jS-unsaturated ketone. Since... [Pg.348]

An isoindol1 none moiety forms part of the aromatic moiety of yet another antiinflammatory propionic acid derivative. Carboxylation of the anion from -nitro-ethylbenzene (45) leads directly to the propionic acid (46). Reduction of the nitro group followed by condensation of the resulting aniline (47) with phthalic anhydride affords the corresponding phthalimide (48). Treatment of that intermediate with zinc in acetic acid interestingly results in reduction of only one of the carbonyl groups to afford the isoindolone. There is thus obtained indoprofen (49). ... [Pg.171]

Metal-induced reductive dimerization of carbonyl compounds is a useful synthetic method for the formation of vicinally functionalized carbon-carbon bonds. For stoichiometric reductive dimerizations, low-valent metals such as aluminum amalgam, titanium, vanadium, zinc, and samarium have been employed. Alternatively, ternary systems consisting of catalytic amounts of a metal salt or metal complex, a chlorosilane, and a stoichiometric co-reductant provide a catalytic method for the formation of pinacols based on reversible redox couples.2 The homocoupling of aldehydes is effected by vanadium or titanium catalysts in the presence of Me3SiCl and Zn or A1 to give the 1,2-diol derivatives high selectivity for the /-isomer is observed in the case of secondary aliphatic or aromatic aldehydes. [Pg.15]

Group IIB-Transition- and Inner-Transition-Metal Bonds 8.3.3.2. Reactions of Carbonyls with Divalent Group-IIB Salts 8.3.3.2.I. Derivatives of Zinc and Cadmium. [Pg.549]

Treatment of the 1,2-oxazines 52 with carbon monoxide at 1000 psi in the presence of cobalt carbonyl brings about insertion of carbon monoxide to form the 1,3-oxazepines S3 <96TL2713>. A convenient route to P-lactams fused to oxepines is made available by alkene metathesis. Thus reaction of 4-acetoxyazetidin-2-one with ally alcohol in the presence of zinc acetate, followed by iV-allylation of the nitrogen affords the derivative 54 which cyclises by RCM to form the oxazepinone 55 <96CC2231>. The same communication describes a similar synthesis of 1,3-dioxepines. [Pg.327]

One of the important new directions in the study of addition reactions of organozinc compounds to aldehydes is the use of ionic liquids. Usually, application of these compounds in reactions with common organometallic reagents has a serious problem ionic solvents are usually reactive toward them, particularly Grignard and organolithium derivatives. It has been recently reported that carbonyl compounds react with allylzinc bromide formed in situ from allyl bromide and zinc in the ionic liquid 3-butyl-l-methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate, [bmim][BF4].285 Another important finding is that the more reactive ZnEt2 alkylates aldehydes in a number of ionic liquids at room temperature.286 The best yields (up to 96%) were obtained in A-butylpyridinium tetrafluoroborate, [bpy][BF4] (Scheme 107). [Pg.387]

Another titanium-based reagent for the methylenation of carbonyl compounds is that prepared from dibromomethane/zinc/titanium tetrachloride and related systems (Scheme 14.25) [48]. These systems transform a wide variety of carboxylic acid derivatives to terminal olefins in the same way as titanocene-methylidene does. [Pg.487]

Carbohydrate lactones have been used as the carbonyl reagent in the Reformatsky reaction. Thus, 2,3 5,6-di-O-cyclohexylidene-D-mannono-1,4-lactone [44, obtained by oxidation of the mannofuranose derivative (49)] reacted with ethyl bromoacetate and zinc to give the protected 2-deoxy-3-octulosonic acid ethyl ester (45a) in 69% yield (50). Ketonic hydrolysis with potassium hydroxide in aqueous methanol, followed by acidification and heating, afforded the 1-deoxyheptulose derivative 45b. Similarly, starting from compound 44, the 1-C-substituted allyl and propar-gyl lactols were prepared on reaction with allyl or propaigyl bromides in the presence of zinc (51). [Pg.136]


See other pages where Carbonylation zinc derivatives is mentioned: [Pg.76]    [Pg.323]    [Pg.840]    [Pg.570]    [Pg.130]    [Pg.570]    [Pg.5218]    [Pg.5235]    [Pg.220]    [Pg.275]    [Pg.5217]    [Pg.5234]    [Pg.60]    [Pg.283]    [Pg.520]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.573]    [Pg.99]    [Pg.268]    [Pg.301]    [Pg.169]    [Pg.73]    [Pg.551]    [Pg.452]    [Pg.795]    [Pg.1221]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.367]    [Pg.620]    [Pg.1336]    [Pg.455]    [Pg.1151]    [Pg.1160]    [Pg.147]    [Pg.388]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.131]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.423 ]




SEARCH



Carbonyl derivatives

Carbonylation derivatives

© 2024 chempedia.info