Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Deoxygenation, catalytic triphenylphosphine

The bicyclic ozonides 12 23) and thiaozonides 13 2S) afford on catalytic hydrogenation (Pd-C) the expected 1,4-diones 61 (Eq. 47). Alternatively, deoxygenation of 12 or desulfurization of 13 with triphenylphosphine led to the same products essentially quantitatively. Both reductions served for the chemical characterization of these... [Pg.155]

Alkenes are converted to epoxides by oxidation with peroxy acids, and thereby they are protected with regard to certain chemical transformations. Alkaline hydrogen peroxide selectively attacks enone double bonds in the presence of other alkenes. The epoxides can be transformed back to alkenes by reduction-dehydration sequences or using triphenylphosphine, chromous salts, zinc, or sodium iodide and acetic acid. A more advantageous and fairly general method consists, however, of the treatment of epoxides with dimethyl diazomalonate in the presence of catalytic amounts of binuclear rhodium(II) car-boxylate salts. This deoxygenation proceeds under neutral conditions and without isomerization or cy-clopropanation of the liberated alkene (Scheme 97). Furthermore, epoxides can be converted to alkenes with the aid of various metal carbonyl complexes. Thus, they may be nucleophilically opened with... [Pg.685]


See other pages where Deoxygenation, catalytic triphenylphosphine is mentioned: [Pg.304]    [Pg.304]    [Pg.405]    [Pg.500]    [Pg.876]    [Pg.876]    [Pg.171]    [Pg.876]    [Pg.157]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.146 , Pg.148 ]




SEARCH



Catalytic deoxygenation

© 2024 chempedia.info