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Reactions, with cyclohexene

Morpholmo-l cyclohexene, reaction with methyl vinyl ketone, 46, 80... [Pg.133]

Polyall lene Oxide Block Copolymers. The higher alkylene oxides derived from propjiene, butylene, styrene (qv), and cyclohexene react with active oxygens in a manner analogous to the reaction of ethylene oxide. Because the hydrophilic oxygen constitutes a smaller proportion of these molecules, the net effect is that the oxides, unlike ethylene oxide, are hydrophobic. The higher oxides are not used commercially as surfactant raw materials except for minor quantities that are employed as chain terminators in polyoxyethylene surfactants to lower the foaming tendency. The hydrophobic nature of propylene oxide units, —CH(CH2)CH20—, has been utilized in several ways in the manufacture of surfactants. Manufacture, properties, and uses of poly(oxyethylene- (9-oxypropylene) have been reviewed (98). [Pg.254]

S-Alkylthiiranium salts, e.g. (46), may be desulfurized by fluoride, chloride, bromide or iodide ions (Scheme 62) (78CC630). With chloride and bromide ion considerable dealkylation of (46) occurs. In salts less hindered than (46) nucleophilic attack on a ring carbon atom is common. When (46) is treated with bromide ion, only an 18% yield of alkene is obtained (compared to 100% with iodide ion), but the yield is quantitative if the methanesulfenyl bromide is removed by reaction with cyclohexene. Iodide ion has been used most generally. Sulfuranes may be intermediates, although in only one case was NMR evidence observed. Theoretical calculations favor a sulfurane structure (e.g. 17) in the gas phase, but polar solvents are likely to favor the thiiranium salt structure. [Pg.154]

At higher temperatures the mixture of 10 and methyl vinyl ketone yields the 1,4-carbocyclic compound as described previously. Methyl isopropenyl ketone (5), ethyl acetylacrylate (d), 2-cyclohexenone (21), and 1-acetyl-1-cyclohexene (22) also undergo this type of cyclization reaction with enamines at higher temperatures. This cycloalkylation reaction occurs with enamines made of strongly basic amines such as pyrrolidine, but the less reactive morpholine enamine combines with methyl vinyl ketone to give only a simple alkylated product (7). Chlorovinyl ketones yield pyrans when allowed to react with the enamines of either alicyclic ketones or aldehydes (23). [Pg.216]

The Prins reaction often yields stereospecifically the and-addition product this observation is not rationalized by the above mechanism. Investigations of the sulfuric acid-catalyzed reaction of cyclohexene 8 with formaldehyde in acetic acid as solvent suggest that the carbenium ion species 7 is stabilized by a neighboring-group effect as shown in 9. The further reaction then proceeds from the face opposite to the coordinating OH-group " ... [Pg.233]

In general the Stork reaction gives moderate yields with simple alkyl halides better yields of alkylated product are obtained with more electrophilic reactants such like allylic, benzylic or propargylic halides or an a-halo ether, a-halo ester or a-halo ketone. An example is the reaction of 1-pyrrolidino-l-cyclohexene 6 with allyl bromide, followed by aqueous acidic workup, to yield 2-allylcyclohexanone ... [Pg.268]

Reaction with Acrylonitrile (9) As in the preceding case, a mixture of 61 g (0.45 mole) of aluminum chloride in 300 ml of benzene is heated to 60°, and a solution of 26.6 g (0.5 mole) of acrylonitrile in 100 ml of benzene is added. Butadiene (0.9 mole) is bubbled into the stirred and heated solution over a period of 4 hours, and the reaction mixture is worked up as above. Distillation gives 3-cyclohexene-1-carbonitrile, bp 80-87°/20 mm, nj,° 1.4742, in about 85% yield. [Pg.75]

Another method for preparing alkyl halides from alkenes is by reaction with jV-brotnosuccinimide (abbreviated NBS) in the presence of light to give products resulting from substitution of hydrogen by bromine at the allylic position—the position next to the double bond. Cyclohexene, for example, gives 3-bromo-cyclohexene. [Pg.339]

Perhaps the most striking difference between conjugated and nonconjugated dienes is that conjugated dienes undergo an addition reaction with alkenes to yield substituted cyclohexene products. For example, 1,3-butadiene and 3-buten-2-one give 3-cycIohexenyl methyl ketone. [Pg.492]

Methyl phenyl sulfide, see Thioanisole Methyl phenyl sulfoxide, 46, 78 from methylsulfinyl chloride and benzene with anhydrous alumi num chloride, 46, 80 Methyl vinyl ketone, reaction with 1-morpholino 1 cyclohexene, 45,... [Pg.133]

The relative configuration of the diastcrcomers obtained on reaction of A-benzoyl a-methoxy-glycine methyl ester and various activated cyclohexenes is dependent on the cyclohexene substituent88. Whereas the boron trifiuoride catalyzed reaction with l-(4-morpholinyl)cyclohexene gives predominantly the awt/ -isomer, the. vrn-isomcr is predominantly formed in the titan-ium(IV) chloride catalyzed reaction with trimethylsilyloxycyclohexene. These results arc explained by a cyclic and an acyclic transition state, respectively. As expected, acetoxycyclohex-ene is less reactive. [Pg.820]

The analogous reaction with 1,1,3-trimethyl-2-(trimethylsilyloxy)cyclohexene employing titani-um(IV) as the Lewis acid also proceeded in the same stereochemical sense and gave 1,2-benzox-azin-2-ium 2-oxide 6 as the only diastereomeric product in 75% yield16. [Pg.1017]

Cyclohexene, purification of, 41, 74 reaction with zinc-copper couple and methylene iodide, 41, 73 2-CyclohEXENONE, 40,14 Cydohexylamine, reaction with ethyl formate, 41, 14... [Pg.110]

Melhylenecydobutane-l,2-dicar-boxylic anhydride, 43,27 Methylenecydobutanes by addition of allenes to alkenes, 43, 30 Methylenecyclohexane, 40, 66 Methylene iodide, reaction with zinc-copper couple and cyclohexene, 41, 73... [Pg.117]

Zinc-copper couple, 41, 72 reaction with methylene iodide and cyclohexene, 41, 73... [Pg.124]

A low ion pair yield of products resulting from hydride transfer reactions is also noted when the additive molecules are unsaturated. Table I indicates, however, that hydride transfer reactions between alkyl ions and olefins do occur to some extent. The reduced yield can be accounted for by the occurrence of two additional reactions between alkyl ions and unsaturated hydrocarbon molecules—namely, proton transfer and condensation reactions, both of which will be discussed later. The total reaction rate of an ion with an olefin is much higher than reaction with a saturated molecule of comparable size. For example, the propyl ion reacts with cyclopentene and cyclohexene at rates which are, respectively, 3.05 and 3.07 times greater than the rate of hydride transfer with cyclobutane. This observation can probably be accounted for by a higher collision cross-section and /or a transmission coefficient for reaction which is close to unity. [Pg.274]

The reactivity of T8[OSiMe2H]g is dominated by its capacity to undergo hydrosilylation reactions with a wide variety of vinyl and allyl derivatives (Figure 30) that have subsequently mainly been used as precursors to polymers and nanocomposites by the introduction of reactive terminating functions as shown in Table 19. For example, T8[OSiMe2H]g has been modified with allyglycidyl ether, epoxy-5-hexene, and 1,2-cyclohexene-epoxide to give epoxy-terminated FOSS. These have then been treated with m-phenylenediamine, with polyamic acids or... [Pg.53]

By studying the NMR spectra of the products, Jensen and co-workers were able to establish that the alkylation of (the presumed) [Co (DMG)2py] in methanol by cyclohexene oxide and by various substituted cyclohexyl bromides and tosylates occurred primarily with inversion of configuration at carbon i.e., by an 8 2 mechanism. A small amount of a second isomer, which must have been formed by another minor pathway, was observed in one case (95). Both the alkylation of [Co (DMG)2py] by asymmetric epoxides 129, 142) and the reduction of epoxides to alcohols by cobalt cyanide complexes 105, 103) show preferential formation of one isomer. In addition, the ratio of ketone to alcohol obtained in the reaction of epoxides with [Co(CN)5H] increases with pH and this has been ascribed to differing reactions with the hydride (reduction to alcohol) and Co(I) (isomerization to ketone) 103) (see also Section VII,C). [Pg.353]


See other pages where Reactions, with cyclohexene is mentioned: [Pg.155]    [Pg.155]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.366]    [Pg.196]    [Pg.125]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.135]    [Pg.98]    [Pg.139]    [Pg.169]    [Pg.1059]    [Pg.60]    [Pg.222]    [Pg.237]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.85]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.3 , Pg.647 ]




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