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Cycloaddition zwitterionic

Cycloaddition. Zwitterionic adducts from PhiP and allenyl ketones or 2,3-butadienoic esters are dipolarophiles toward tropone. [Pg.462]

Ozonation ofAlkenes. The most common ozone reaction involves the cleavage of olefinic carbon—carbon double bonds. Electrophilic attack by ozone on carbon—carbon double bonds is concerted and stereospecific (54). The modified three-step Criegee mechanism involves a 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition of ozone to an olefinic double bond via a transitory TT-complex (3) to form an initial unstable ozonide, a 1,2,3-trioxolane or molozonide (4), where R is hydrogen or alkyl. The molozonide rearranges via a 1,3-cycloreversion to a carbonyl fragment (5) and a peroxidic dipolar ion or zwitterion (6). [Pg.493]

Most ozonolysis reaction products are postulated to form by the reaction of the 1,3-zwitterion with the extmded carbonyl compound in a 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition reaction to produce stable 1,2,4-trioxanes (ozonides) (17) as shown with itself (dimerization) to form cycHc diperoxides (4) or with protic solvents, such as alcohols, carboxyUc acids, etc, to form a-substituted alkyl hydroperoxides. The latter can form other peroxidic products, depending on reactants, reaction conditions, and solvent. [Pg.117]

The reactions of electrophilic alkenes (alkenes attached to electron-withdrawing groups) with enamines produce one or more of the following products simple alkylation (2), 1,2 cycloaddition (3), and 1,4 cycloaddition (4). Competition with C alkylation by N alkylation is inconsequential and therefore will be largely ignored (5,7). A stepwise ionic mechanism leading to these products necessarily involves the formation of a zwitterion intermediate (1) as the first step, which is then followed either by one of the... [Pg.213]

The initial product formed when methyl vinyl ketone is mixed with an enamine [such as N,N-dimethylisobutenylamine (10)] is the dihydropyran (11) from a 1,4 cycloaddition (ll,20a,20b). The chemical reactions that the dihydropyran undergoes indicate that it is readily equilibrated with the cyclobutane isomer 12a and zwitterion 12 (11). Treatment of adduct 11 with phenyllithium gives cyclobutane 13, possibly via intermediate 12a (11). [Pg.215]

Olefins conjugated with electron-withdrawing groups other than a carbonyl group undergo reactions with enamines in a manner similar to the carbonyl-conjugated electrophilic alkenes described above. Namely, they condense with an enamine to form a zwitterion intermediate from which either 1,2 cycloaddition to form a cyclobutane ring or simple alkylation can take place. [Pg.222]

The initial reaction between a ketene and an enamine is apparently a 1,2 cycloaddition to form an aminocyclobutanone adduct (58) (68-76a). This reaction probably occurs by way of an ionic zwitterion intermediate (75). The thermal stability of this adduct depends upon the nature of substituents Rj, R2, R3, and R. The enolic forms of 58 can exist only if Rj and/or R4 are hydrogens. If the enamine involved in the reaction is an aldehydic enamine with no 3 hydrogens and the ketene involved is di-substituted (i.e., R, R2, R3, and R4 are not hydrogens), then the cyclo-butanone adduct is thermally stable. For example, the reaction of dimethyl-ketene (61) with N,N-dimethylaminoisobutene (10) in isopropyl acetate... [Pg.225]

The mechanism of the cycloaddition of sulfenes to enamines does not involve a concerted process in many if not all cases, but rather a two-step process in which a zwitterion is the initially formed intermediate (158,159). [Pg.239]

Dienamines undergo 1,4 cycloaddition with sulfenes as well as 1,2 cycloaddition. For example, l-(N,N-diethylamino)butadiene (111), when treated with sulfene (generated from methanesulfonyl chloride and triethyl-amine), produces 1,4 cycloadduct 116 in an 18 % yield and di-1,2-cycloadduct 117 in a 60 % yield (160). Cycloadduct 116 was shown not to be the precursor for 117 by treating 116 with excess sulfene and recovering the starting material unchanged (160). This reaction probably takes place by way of zwitterion 115, which can close in either a 1,4 or 3,4 manner to form cycloadducts 116 and 118, respectively. The 3,4 cycloaddition would then be followed by a 1,2 cycloaddition of a second mole of sulfene to form 117. Cycloadduct 117 must form in the 3,4 cycloaddition followed by a 1,2-cycloaddition sequence rather than the reverse sequence since sulfenes undergo cycloaddition only in the presence of an electron-rich olefinic center (159). Such a center is present as an enamine in 118, but it is not present in 119. [Pg.239]

In addition there are certain other methods for the preparation such compounds. Upon heating of the thionocarbonate 2 with a trivalent phosphorus compound e.g. trimethyl phosphite, a -elimination reaction takes place to yield the olefin 3. A nucleophilic addition of the phosphorus to sulfur leads to the zwitterionic species 6, which is likely to react to the phosphorus ylide 7 via cyclization and subsequent desulfurization. An alternative pathway for the formation of 7 via a 2-carbena-l,3-dioxolane 8 has been formulated. From the ylide 7 the olefin 3 is formed stereospecifically by a concerted 1,3-dipolar cycloreversion (see 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition), together with the unstable phosphorus compound 9, which decomposes into carbon dioxide and R3P. The latter is finally obtained as R3PS ... [Pg.69]

Snider and coworkers125 have reported the Lewis acid catalyzed [2 + 2]cycloaddition of (phenylsulfonyl)allene 112. The reaction with methylenecyclohexane in dichloro-methane gives a 25% yield of an 8 1 mixture of 210 and 211 (equation 132). An addition reaction of l-(p-tolylsulfonyl)ethylene with enamines gives aminocyanobutanes via the zwitterionic intermediate (212) as shown in equation 133126. [Pg.807]

Stabilised sulphur ylides react with alkenylcarbene complexes to form a mixture of different products depending on the reaction conditions. However, at -40 °C the reaction results in the formation of almost equimolecular amounts of vinyl ethers and diastereomeric cyclopropane derivatives. These cyclopropane products are derived from a formal [2C+1S] cycloaddition reaction and the mechanism that explains its formation implies an initial 1,4-addition to form a zwitterionic intermediate followed by cyclisation. Oxidation of the formed complex renders the final products [30] (Scheme 8). [Pg.68]

A strong acceptor TCNE undergoes [2+2] rather than [4+2] cycloaddition reactions even with dienes. 1,1-Diphenylbutadiene [20] and 2,5-dimethyl-2,4-hexadiene (Scheme 5) [21] afford mainly and exclusively vinyl cyclobutane derivatives, respectively. In the reactions of 2,5-dimethyl-2,4-hexadiene (1) the observed rate constant, is greater for chloroform solvent than for a more polar solvent, acetonitrile (2) the trapping of a zwitterion intermediate by either methanol or p-toluenethiol was unsuccessful (3) radical initiators such as benzyl peroxide, or radical inhibitors like hydroquinone, have no effect on the rate (4) the entropies of activation are of... [Pg.29]

The Staudinger reaction [92], a [2 + 2]-cycloaddition of a ketene and a nucleophilic imine, usually proceeds by an initial imine attack on the ketene thus forming a zwitterionic enolate which subsequently cyclizes. This reaction is an expedient route to p-lactams, the core of numerous antibiotics (e.g., penicillins) and other biologically active molecules [93]. In contrast, for Lewis-base catalyzed asymmetric reactions, nonnucleophilic imines are required (to suppress a noncatalyzed background reaction), bearing, for example, an N-Ts [94] or -Boc-substituent [95]. [Pg.166]

Such a stepwise reaction would not be expected to change the regiochemistry of cycloaddition, but it could lead to loss of stereospecificity if the zwitterionic intermediate has a long enough lifetime. In most reactions where only carbon-carbon bonds are being formed, the D-A reaction remains stereospecific. [Pg.484]

The stereochemistry of these reactions depends on the lifetime of the dipolar intermediate, which, in turn, is influenced by the polarity of the solvent. In the reactions of enol ethers with tetracyanoethylene, the stereochemistry of the enol ether is retained in nonpolar solvents. In polar solvents, cycloaddition is nonstereospecific, as a result of a longer lifetime for the zwitterionic intermediate.177... [Pg.542]

Amouri and coworkers also demonstrated that the nucleophilic reactivity of the exocyclic carbon of Cp Ir(T 4-QM) complex 24 could be utilized to form carbon -carbon bonds with electron-poor alkenes and alkynes serving as electrophiles or cycloaddition partners (Scheme 3.17).29 For example, when complex 24 was treated with the electron-poor methyl propynoate, a new o-quinone methide complex 28 was formed. The authors suggest that the reaction could be initiated by nucleophilic attack of the terminal carbon of the exocyclic methylene group on the terminal carbon of the alkyne, generating a zwitterionic oxo-dienyl intermediate, followed by proton transfer... [Pg.78]

The electrostatic interactions in the complexes 19 were obviously sufficient to favor the zwitterionic structure in a manner that formation of the usual o-QM was suspended, so that all reactions typical of o-QMs in their quinoid form (such as [4 + 2]-cycloadditions) were suppressed or at least slowed down. Decomposition of the complex of a-tocopherol was immediate by fast heating to 40 °C or above. This caused disintegration of the complex 19, immediate rotation of the methylene group into the ring plane, and thus formation of the o-QM, which then showed the classical chemistry of such compounds. [Pg.181]

Reactions of 1 with epoxides involve some cycloaddition products, and thus will be treated here. Such reactions are quite complicated and have been studied in some depth.84,92 With cyclohexene oxide, 1 yields the disilaoxirane 48, cyclohexene, and the silyl enol ether 56 (Eq. 29). With ( )- and (Z)-stilbene oxides (Eq. 30) the products include 48, ( > and (Z)-stilbenes, the E- and Z-isomers of silyl enol ether 57, and only one (trans) stereoisomer of the five-membered ring compound 58. The products have been rationalized in terms of the mechanism detailed in Scheme 14, involving a ring-opened zwitterionic intermediate, allowing for carbon-carbon bond rotation and the observed stereochemistry. [Pg.262]

Using an alternative route involving [3+2] cycloaddition of phosphoranediyldi-azomethane (43) with trimethylsilylphosphaethyne (44), 5-trimethylsilyl derivative (45) of the zwitterionic 3-phosphino-[l,2,4]diazaphospholide (42) was obtained (Scheme 13) [44],... [Pg.184]

A theoretical study based on PM3 frontier molecular orbital (FMO) and potential energy surface (PES) analysis at the restricted Hartree-Fock (RHF)/6-31+G level was performed to examine the reaction of l-amino-2-ethoxycarbonyl-pyridinium mesitylenesulfonate and acrylonitrile in the presence of Hilnig s base leading to the formation of l,2-dihydropyrido[l,2-A]pyridazinium inner salt 17 <1999JOC9001>. The calculations indicated that both the [3+2] cycloaddition reaction and the ring expansion occurred in a concerted manner rather than through a stepwise mechanism via a zwitterionic intermediate 16 (Scheme 1). [Pg.82]


See other pages where Cycloaddition zwitterionic is mentioned: [Pg.324]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.88]    [Pg.909]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.213]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.243]    [Pg.235]    [Pg.63]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.164]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.195]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.344]    [Pg.187]    [Pg.188]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.320]    [Pg.378]    [Pg.351]    [Pg.775]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.143 , Pg.147 , Pg.148 , Pg.149 ]




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Cycloaddition reactions zwitterionic intermediates

Cycloadditions zwitterion intermediate

Stereochemistry zwitterionic -cycloaddition

Steric course of zwitterionic ketene cycloaddition

Zwitterion

Zwitterion intermediates in 2+4-cycloaddition

Zwitterionics

Zwitterions

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