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Conjugate addition hydrogen chloride

Kinetic studies of the addition of hydrogen chloride to styrene support the conclusion that an ion-pair mechanism operates because aromatic conjugation is involved. The reaction is first-order in hydrogen chloride, indicating that only one molecule of hydrogen chloride participates in the rate-determining step. ... [Pg.355]

The reaction of crotonaldehyde and methyl vinyl ketone with thiophenol in the presence of anhydrous hydrogen chloride effects conjugate addition of thiophenol as well as acetal formation. The resulting j3-phenylthio thioacetals are converted to 1-phenylthio-and 2-phenylthio-1,3-butadiene, respectively, upon reaction with 2 equivalents of copper(I) trifluoromethanesulfonate (Table I). The copper(I)-induced heterolysis of carbon-sulfur bonds has also been used to effect pinacol-type rearrangements of bis(phenyl-thio)methyl carbinols. Thus the addition of bis(phenyl-thio)methyllithium to ketones and aldehydes followed by copper(I)-induced rearrangement results in a one-carbon ring expansion or chain-insertion transformation which gives a-phenylthio ketones. Monothioketals of 1,4-diketones are cyclized to 2,5-disubstituted furans by the action of copper(I) trifluoromethanesulfonate. ... [Pg.106]

The bicyclic tropane ring of cocaine of course presented serious synthetic difficulties. In one attempt to find an appropriate substitute for this structural unit, a piperidine was prepared that contained methyl groups at the point of attachment of the deleted ring. Condensation of acetone with ammonia affords the piperidone, 17. Isophorone (15) may well be an intermediate in this process conjugate addition of ammonia would then give the aminoketone, 16. Further aldol reaction followed by ammonolysis would afford the observed product. Hydrogenation of the piperidone (18) followed then by reaction with benzoyl chloride gives the ester, 19. Ethanolysis of the nitrile (20) affords alpha-eucaine (21), an effective, albeit somewhat toxic, local anesthetic. [Pg.27]

An alternative approach to the formation of p-enamino esters was through conjugate addition of a primary amine to an alkyne (eq. 51).57-59 This complementary method provided a route from alkyne 205 to P-enamino ester 233, which underwent aza-annulation with acryloyl chloride to give 234. Catalytic hydrogenation efficiently gave the cis substituted tetrahydropyridone species (235). [Pg.345]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.363 ]




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Addition, hydrogenation

Additives, hydrogenated

Conjugate additions chloride

Conjugate hydrogenation

Conjugated hydrogenation

Hydrogen chloride addition

Hydrogenative addition

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