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Chemoselective reducing agents aldehydes

Midland, M. M., Tramontane, A. B-Alkyl-9-borabicyclo[3.3.1]nonanes as mild, chemoselective reducing agents for aldehydes. J. Org. Chem. 1978,43, 1470-1471. [Pg.630]

Lithium tri-fert-Butoxyaluminohydride is a bulky chemo- and stereoselective hydride reducing agent. Aldehydes are reduced chemoselectively in the presence of ketones and esters at low temperature. Ethers acetals, epoxides, chlorides, bromides, and nitro compounds are unaffected by this reagent. Reviews (a) Seyden-Penne, J. Reductions by the Alumino- and Borohydrides in Organic Synthesis Wiley-VCH NewYork, 1997, 2" edition, (b) Malek, J. Org. React. 1985, 34, 1-317. [Pg.114]

Reductions using Boron Compounds.—The advantages of lithium triethylboro-hydride as a very powerful reducing agent, and of amine—boranes derived from primary and secondary amines as mild, chemoselective reducing agents for aldehydes and ketones, have been extolled. Several reagents are recom-... [Pg.34]

Reduction.—/8-(3 -Methyl-2 -butyl)-9-borabicyclo[3,3,l]nonane and the 9-borabicyclo[3,3,l]nonane-pyridine complex are mild chemoselective reducing agents for aldehydes. Tri-n-butyltin hydride on dried silica gel reduces aldehydes rapidly and unhindered ketones relatively slowly yielding the corresponding alcohols in high yields. Sodium borohydride adsorbed on to alumina and the zirconium borohydride (9) reduce aldehydes and ketones to alcohols in aprotic... [Pg.49]

The use of B-alkyl-9-BBN compounds, especially (15), as mild and very chemoselective reducing agents for aldehydes (Scheme 8), even in the presence of ketones, has been explored and the variation in reducing ability with different S-alkyl groups examined. The cyclic transition state (16) is consistent with an increase in rate both with increase in substitution /3- to boron and when the B—C C—H unit can adopt a planar arrangement. This system has also been... [Pg.135]

Chemoselectivity between aldehydes and ketones is demonstrated by this method in the competitive reduction of a mixture of pentanal and cyclohexanone. The ratios of primary and secondary alcohols are 75 25 when catechol is used at 0° and 79 21 when 2,2/-dihydroxybiphenyl is used at room temperature. These regents are not as chemoselective as other reducing agents such as LiAlH(OBu-i)3 (87 13) and LiAlH(OCEt3)3 (94 6) at 0°.93... [Pg.62]

The relatively inexpensive and safe sodium borohydride (NaBH4) has been extensively used as a reducing agent because of its compatibility with protic solvents. Varma and coworkers reported a method for the expeditious reduction of aldehydes and ketones that used alumina-supported NaBH4 and proceeded in the solid state accelerated by microwave irradiation (Scheme 7) [50]. The chemoselectivity was apparent from the reduction of frarcs-cinnamaldehyde to afford cinnamyl alcohol. [Pg.210]

We shall use this synthesis as a basis for discussion on chemoselectivity in reductions. In the first step, sodium borohydride leaves the black carbonyl group of the ester untouched while it reduces the ketone (in yellow) in the last step, lithium aluminium hydride reduces the ester (in black). These chemoselectivities are typical of these two most commonly used reducing agents borohydride can usually be relied upon to reduce an aldehyde or a ketone in the presence of an ester, while lithium aluminium hydride will reduce almost any carbonyl group. [Pg.617]

A comparison of four tri-f-alkoxyaluminum hydrides revealed that lithium tris[(3-ethyl-3-pen-tyl)oxy]aluminum hydride, prepared from LAH and 3-ethyl-3-pentanol, was the most selective for reduction of aldehydes over ketones of all types. Even the less reactive benzaldehyde was reduced in THE at -78 C faster than cyclohexanone (97.7 2.3). A good correlation between the steric demands of the reducing agent and the observed chemoselectivity was observed. [Pg.17]

Potassium triisopropoxyborohydride, a mild selective reducing agent, rapidly converted ketones and aldehydes to the corresponding alcohols, while many common functional groups were inert.The reaction of potassium hydride with triphenylborane produced the triphenylborohydride, which is highly hindered and which exhibited excellent chemoselectivity between ketones. Cyclohexanone was reduced in preference to cyclopentanone (97 3) and 4-heptanone (99.4 0.6), while methyl ketones were more reactive than 4-heptanone (2-heptanone, 94 6 acetophenone, 97.8 2.2). [Pg.18]

Zinc-modified cyanoborohydride, prepared from anhydrous zinc chloride and sodium cyanoborohy-dride in the ratio 1 2 in ether, selectively reduced aldehydes and ketones but not acids, anhydrides, esters and tertiary amides. In methanol the reactivity paralleled the unmodified reagent. Zinc and cadmium borohydrides form solid complexes with DMF, which may prove to be convenient sources of the reducing agents.Aromatic and a,p-unsaturated ketones were reduced much more slowly than saturated ketones, so chemoselective reduction should be possible. [Pg.18]

A more versatile reducing agent is samarium diiodide, which promotes chemoselective cyclizations of functionalized keto aldehydes in a stereodefined manner to form 2,3-dihydrocyclopentane carboxylate derivatives in good yields and with diastereoselectivities of up to 200 1 (equation 38)7 The reaction proceeds via selective one-electron reduction of the aldehyde component and subsequent nucleophilic attack on the ketone moiety. Stereochemical control is established by chelation of the developing diol (19) with Sm " " which thereby selectively furnishes cis diols (equation 39). The stereoselective M/-cyclization of 1,5-diketones to cis cyclopentane-1,2-diols using TiCU/Zn has been used to prepare stereodefined sterically hindered acyclic 1,2-diols when a removable heteroatom, such as sulfur or selenium, is included in the linking chain (equation 40). [Pg.574]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.1794 ]




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Chemoselective

Chemoselective aldehyde

Chemoselective reducing agents

Chemoselectivity

Reducing agent

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