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Cyclopropane formation with carbenoids

Diazomethane is also decomposed by N O)40 -43 and Pd(0) complexes43 . Electron-poor alkenes such as methyl acrylate are cyclopropanated efficiently with Ni(0) catalysts, whereas with Pd(0) yields were much lower (Scheme 1)43). Cyclopropanes derived from styrene, cyclohexene or 1-hexene were formed only in trace yields. In the uncatalyzed reaction between diazomethane and methyl acrylate, methyl 2-pyrazoline-3-carboxylate and methyl crotonate are formed competitively, but the yield of the latter can be largely reduced by adding an appropriate amount of catalyst. It has been verified that cyclopropane formation does not result from metal-catalyzed ring contraction of the 2-pyrazoline, Instead, a nickel(0)-carbene complex is assumed to be involved in the direct cyclopropanation of the olefin. The preference of such an intermediate for an electron-poor alkene is in agreement with the view that nickel carbenoids are nucleophilic 44). [Pg.85]

It has been widely accepted that the carbene-transfer reaction using a diazo compound and a transition metal complex proceeds via the corresponding metal carbenoid species. Nishiyama et al. characterized spectroscopically the structure of the carbenoid intermediate that underwent the desired cyclopropanation with high enantio- and diastereoselectivity, derived from (91).254,255 They also isolated a stable dicarbonylcarbene complex and demonstrated by X-ray analysis that the carbene moiety of the complex was almost parallel in the Cl—Ru—Cl plane and perpendicular to the pybox plane (vide infra).255 These results suggest that the rate-determining step of metal-catalyzed cyclopropanation is not carbenoid formation, but the carbene-transfer reaction.254... [Pg.249]

The detailed mechanism of transition metal-catalyzed cyclopropanation using diazo compounds as a carbene source is still covered by clouds of controversy, but it is generally accepted that the reaction proceeds through metal-carbenoid complexes,17-21 and the valency of the metal ions (M) changes with carbenoid formation (Scheme 85). [Pg.255]

A widely exploited procedure for bringing about carbenoid reactions of organic mono- and fifem-dihalides is by use of lithium alkyls. Examples are given in equations (11) and (12). Dimeric olefin formation, stereospecific cyclopropane formation from olefins, and insertion into carbon-hydrogen bonds have all been observed in suitable cases, together with further reactions of these products with excess of the lithium alkyl. [Pg.181]

On heating the sulfonium ylide 464 (R = H) the isomeric bis(methoxycarbonyl)methyl-thiophene 465 is formed. Thermolysis of the ylide 464 (R = Cl) yields the thienofuran 466. When heated in the presence of copper or rhodium catalysts, 464 (R = Cl) undergoes cleavage of the carbonsulfur bond resulting in the formation of carbenoid intermediates which can trapped with activated aromatic substrates or alkenes to yield the corresponding arylmalonates or cyclopropanes, respectively. [Pg.472]

In addition to cyclopropane formation arising via carbenoid-trapping [2-1-1] cycloaddition reactions with adjacent unsaturation, Mioskowski and co-workers have also observed cyclopropanation via carbenoid insertion into an adjacent C-H bond (Scheme S3) optimization of this pathway has proved only moderately successful <1999JOC9279, 2003T9701>. [Pg.278]

As already mentioned for rhodium carbene complexes, proof of the existence of electrophilic metal carbenoids relies on indirect evidence, and insight into the nature of intermediates is obtained mostly through reactivity-selectivity relationships and/or comparison with stable Fischer-type metal carbene complexes. A particularly puzzling point is the relevance of metallacyclobutanes as intermediates in cyclopropane formation. The subject is still a matter of debate in the literature. Even if some metallacyclobutanes have been shown to yield cyclopropanes by reductive elimination [15], the intermediacy of metallacyclobutanes in carbene transfer reactions is in most cases borne out neither by direct observation nor by clear-cut mechanistic studies and such a reaction pathway is probably not a general one. Formation of a metallacyclobu-tane requires coordination both of the olefin and of the carbene to the metal center. In many cases, all available evidence points to direct reaction of the metal carbenes with alkenes without prior olefin coordination. Further, it has been proposed that, at least in the context of rhodium carbenoid insertions into C-H bonds, partial release of free carbenes from metal carbene complexes occurs [16]. Of course this does not exclude the possibility that metallacyclobutanes play a pivotal role in some catalyst systems, especially in copper-and palladium-catalyzed reactions. [Pg.797]

Some examples of catalytic cyclopropanation reactions with diazoacetamides are given in Table 14. In reactions with a-diazo-A,7V-dimethylacetamide catalyzed by tetraacetatodi-rhodium, cyclopropane yields decrease with decreasing alkene reactivity (ethoxyethene, 82% styrene, 47% cyclohexene, 21%). - Furthermore, with A-alkyl substituents larger than methyl, intramolecular carbenoid C-H insertion is in competition with alkene addition, e.g. formation of 4.i -259... [Pg.465]

Bis(phenylsulfanyl)](trimethylsilyl)methyllithium and trimethylsilyloxirane do not afford a homo-Peterson reaction product, but a cyclopropane 4a with a shifted phenylsulfanyl group. [Bis(phenylsulfanyl)](trimethylsilyl)methyllithium may be looked on as a carbenoid species which is in equilibrium with carbene and phenylsulfonate. This equilibrium may lie towards the carbanion. On addition of trimethylsilyloxirane, phenylsulfonate is trapped with formation of an alkoxide, which corresponds to the intermediate of a Peterson olefination of formaldehyde, and leads to phenyl vinyl sulfide. This provides a reaction partner for the liberated carbene giving cA-l,2-bis(phenylsulfanyl)-l-trimethylsilylcyclopropane (4a) in a stereospecific [2 + 1] cycloaddition.16 17... [Pg.839]

Several cyclic enol ethers are intramolccularly cyclopropanated using rhodium(II) acetate as a highly effective catalyst 1 7. When the connecting chain becomes too long (n = 2, 3, 4), carbon-hydrogen insertion of the carbenoid competes with the intramolecular [2 + 1] cycloaddition. However, when R is methyl and n is 2 or 3, cyclopropane formation is again the dominant... [Pg.1027]

SIMMONS - SMITH Cyclopropan ation Cyclopropane formation from afcenes with akyldflodides and Zn-Cu (carbenoid addition to double bonds). [Pg.178]

Interestingly, Dixneuf has shown recently that vinyl metal carbenoid intermediate 176 generated with an electrophilic ruthenium catalyst [RuCl(cod)Cp ] (Cp = CsMes) could be trapped by a diazoalkane carbene to yield acetoxy dienes 186 through carbene dimerization, in good yields (Scheme 77) [162], No dimerization product and no cyclopropane formation could be noticed even when the reaction was run in the beneficial presence of 5 equiv. of styrene. [Pg.129]

The possibility of a radical mechanism is supported by the observation of the accelerating effect of molecular oxygen on the cyclopropanation. Miyano et al. discovered that the addition of dioxygen accelerated the formation of the zinc carbenoid in the Furukawa procedure [24a, b]. The rate of this process was monitored by changes in the concentration of ethyl iodide, the by-product of reagent formation. Comparison of the reaction rate in the presence of oxygen with that in the... [Pg.92]

Muller et al. have also examined the enantioselectivity and the stereochemical course of copper-catalyzed intramolecular CH insertions of phenyl-iodonium ylides [34]. The decomposition of diazo compounds in the presence of transition metals leads to typical reactions for metal-carbenoid intermediates, such as cyclopropanations, insertions into X - H bonds, and formation of ylides with heteroatoms that have available lone pairs. Since diazo compounds are potentially explosive, toxic, and carcinogenic, the number of industrial applications is limited. Phenyliodonium ylides are potential substitutes for diazo compounds in metal-carbenoid reactions. Their photochemical, thermal, and transition-metal-catalyzed decompositions exhibit some similarities to those of diazo compounds. [Pg.80]

Aziridines have been synthesized, albeit in low yield, by copper-catalyzed decomposition of ethyl diazoacetate in the presence of an inline 260). It seems that such a carbenoid cyclopropanation reaction has not been realized with other diazo compounds. The recently described preparation of 1,2,3-trisubstituted aziridines by reaction of phenyldiazomethane with N-alkyl aldimines or ketimines in the presence of zinc iodide 261 > most certainly does not proceed through carbenoid intermediates rather, the metal salt serves to activate the imine to nucleophilic attack from the diazo carbon. Replacement of Znl2 by one of the traditional copper catalysts resulted in formation of imidazoline derivatives via an intermediate azomethine ylide261). [Pg.188]

The reaction of aryldiazoacetates with cyclohexene is a good example of the influence of steric effects on the chemistry of the donor/acceptor-substituted rhodium carbenoids. The Rh2(reaction with cyclohexene resulted in the formation of a mixture of the cyclopropane and the G-H insertion products. The enantios-electivity of the C-H insertion was high but the diastereoselectivity was very low (Equation (31)). 0 In contrast, the introduction of a silyl group on the cyclohexene, as in 15, totally blocked the cyclopropanation, and, furthermore, added sufficient size differentiation between the two substituents at the methylene site to make the reaction to form 16 proceed with high diastereoselectivity (Equation (32)).90 The allylic C-H insertion is applicable to a wide array of cyclic and acyclic substrates, and even systems capable of achieving high levels of kinetic resolution are known.90... [Pg.177]


See other pages where Cyclopropane formation with carbenoids is mentioned: [Pg.41]    [Pg.310]    [Pg.366]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.128]    [Pg.5230]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.320]    [Pg.461]    [Pg.795]    [Pg.290]    [Pg.289]    [Pg.5229]    [Pg.409]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.897]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.181]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.122]    [Pg.155]    [Pg.209]    [Pg.219]    [Pg.90]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.134]    [Pg.188]    [Pg.321]    [Pg.869]    [Pg.313]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.358 , Pg.373 ]




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Carbenoid

Carbenoid cyclopropanation

Carbenoids

Carbenoids cyclopropanation

Carbenoids formation

Cyclopropane formation

With cyclopropane

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