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Diels-Alder dienes 1.3- Butadiene

An alternative putative route to 62 is from 63, an adduct of cubene with the poorer Diels-Alder diene 1,3-butadiene. In 62, the proximity of the double bond to the two hydrogens which mnst be removed for formation of two new CC bonds may enable, possibly with the aid of a transition metal reagent, closure of the cyclobutene cap onto the cubane moiety to give [3,4]prismane. One could imagine halogenating... [Pg.223]

See afeo Retro-Diels-Alder entries butadiene, 4 372-373 ionic liquids in, 26 893 of maleic anhydride, 15 488-489 microwaves in, 16 542-544 Die materials, properties of, 17 826t Dienes... [Pg.266]

Diels-Alder dienes 1-Acetoxybutadiene. Butadiene. Cyclopentadiene. (rans,mins-l,4-Diacetoxybutadiene. 2,5-Di-o-anisyl-3,4-diphenylcyclopentadienone. 5,5-Dimethoxy-l, 2,3,4-tetrachlorocyclopentadienone. 2,3-Dimethylbutadiene. 6,6-Dimethylfulvene (see o-Acetoxy acrylonitrile). 2,4-Dimethyl-l,3-pentadiene (see Diethyl azodicarboxylate). 2,3-Diphenyl-butadiene. 1,3-Diphenylisobenzofurane (see Potassium I-butoxide). rrans,/nus-l,4-Diphenyl-butadiene. 1,3-Diphenylisobenzofurane. Hexachlorocyclopentadiene. Isobenzofurane. l-o-Nitrophenylbutadiene-1,3. Oxepin (see Diazabicyclo[3.4.0]nonene-S). Phenylcyclone. Piperylene. n-Pyrone (see also Methyl vinyl ketone). Tetrachlorocyclopentadienone. Tetra-chlorofurane. Tetraphenylcyclopentadienone. [Pg.657]

In the Diels-Alder reaction, butadiene (x = 4.3 eV) is less reactive towards olefins than cyclopentadiene (y = 3.8 eV). This suggests that the diene is the electron donor to the olefin... [Pg.72]

Let us now examine the Diels-Alder cycloaddition from a molecular orbital perspective Chemical experience such as the observation that the substituents that increase the reac tivity of a dienophile tend to be those that attract electrons suggests that electrons flow from the diene to the dienophile during the reaction Thus the orbitals to be considered are the HOMO of the diene and the LUMO of the dienophile As shown m Figure 10 11 for the case of ethylene and 1 3 butadiene the symmetry properties of the HOMO of the diene and the LUMO of the dienophile permit bond formation between the ends of the diene system and the two carbons of the dienophile double bond because the necessary orbitals overlap m phase with each other Cycloaddition of a diene and an alkene is said to be a symmetry allowed reaction... [Pg.414]

Since the six carbons shown above have 10 additional bonds, the variety of substituents they carry or the structures they can be a part of is quite varied, making the Diels-Alder reaction a powerful synthetic tool in organic chemistry. A moment s reflection will convince us that a molecule like structure [XVI] is monofunctional from the point of view of the Diels-Alder condensation. If the Diels-Alder reaction is to be used for the preparation of polymers, the reactants must be bis-dienes and bis-dienophiles. If the diene, the dienophile, or both are part of a ring system to begin with, a polycyclic product results. One of the first high molecular weight polymers prepared by this synthetic route was the product resulting from the reaction of 2-vinyl butadiene [XIX] and benzoquinone [XX] ... [Pg.337]

Acrolein a.s Dienophile. The participation of acrolein as the dienophile in Diels-Alder reactions is, in general, an exothermic process. Dienes such as cyclopentadiene and l-dieth5laniino-l,3-butadiene react rapidly with acrolein at room temperature. [Pg.127]

Isoprene is highly reactive both as a diene and through its allyhc hydrogens, and its reactions are similar to those of butadiene (qv) (8). Apart from polymerisation, the most widely investigated isoprene reactions are the formation of six-membered rings by the Diels-Alder reaction ... [Pg.463]

Sulfur dioxide acts as a dienophile ia the Diels-Alder reaction with many dienes (253,254) and this reaction is conducted on a commercial scale with butadiene. The initial adduct, sulfolene [77-79-2] is hydrogenated to a solvent, sulfolane [126-33-0] which is useful for selective extraction of aromatic hydrocarbons from... [Pg.145]

A process has been disclosed in which the mixture of naphthoquinones is reacted with a diene such as butadiene. Owing to the fact that the undesked product is an unsubstituted naphthoquinone, this dieneophile readily reacts to form a Diels-Alder adduct. By appropriate control of reaction parameters, Htde reaction is observed with the substituted naphthoquinone. Differential solubiUty of the adduct and vitamin allows for a facile separation (57,58). [Pg.154]

Diels-Alder Reactions. The important dimerization between 1,3-dienes and a wide variety of dienoplules to produce cyclohexene derivatives was discovered in 1928 by Otto Diels and Kurt Alder. In 1950 they won the Nobel prize for their pioneering work. Butadiene has to be in the j -cis form in order to participate in these concerted reactions. Typical examples of reaction products from the reaction between butadiene and maleic anhydride (1), or cyclopentadiene (2), or itself (3), are <7 -1,2,3,6-tetrahydrophthaHc anhydride [27813-21 -4] 5-vinyl-2-norbomene [3048-64-4], and 4-vinyl-1-cyclohexene [100-40-3], respectively. [Pg.343]

Elastomers. Ethylene—propylene terpolymer (diene monomer) elastomers (EPDM) use a variety of third monomers during polymerization (see Elastomers, ethyiene-propylene-diene rubber). Ethyhdenenorbomene (ENB) is the most important of these monomers and requires dicyclopentadiene as a precursor. ENB is synthesized in a two step preparation, ie, a Diels-Alder reaction of CPD (via cracking of DCPD) with butadiene to yield 5-vinylbicyclo[2.2.1]-hept-2-ene [3048-64-4] (7) where the external double bond is then isomerized catalyticaHy toward the ring yielding 5-ethyhdenebicyclo[2.2.1]-hept-2-ene [16219-75-3] (ENB) (8) (60). [Pg.434]

Since diazaquinones are among the most powerful dienophiles, they undergo [4+2] cycloaddition (Diels-Alder) reactions with a great variety of dienes to give various heterocyclic systems accessible with difficulty by other methods. Diazaquinone reacts with butadiene and substituted butadienes, carbocyclic and heterocyclic dienes, 1-vinylcycloalkenes, polyaromatic compounds and vinylaromatic compounds to afford bicyclic and polycyclic bridgehead diaza systems, including diazasteroids (Scheme 56). [Pg.38]

Cycloaddition involves the combination of two molecules in such a way that a new ring is formed. The principles of conservation of orbital symmetry also apply to concerted cycloaddition reactions and to the reverse, concerted fragmentation of one molecule into two or more smaller components (cycloreversion). The most important cycloaddition reaction from the point of view of synthesis is the Diels-Alder reaction. This reaction has been the object of extensive theoretical and mechanistic study, as well as synthetic application. The Diels-Alder reaction is the addition of an alkene to a diene to form a cyclohexene. It is called a [47t + 27c]-cycloaddition reaction because four tc electrons from the diene and the two n electrons from the alkene (which is called the dienophile) are directly involved in the bonding change. For most systems, the reactivity pattern, regioselectivity, and stereoselectivity are consistent with describing the reaction as a concerted process. In particular, the reaction is a stereospecific syn (suprafacial) addition with respect to both the alkene and the diene. This stereospecificity has been demonstrated with many substituted dienes and alkenes and also holds for the simplest possible example of the reaction, that of ethylene with butadiene ... [Pg.636]

In a definitive study of butadiene s reaction with l,l-dichloro-2,2-difluoio-ethylene, Bartlett concluded that [2+4] adducts of acyclic dienes with fluorinated ethylenes are formed through a mixture of concerted and nonconcerted, diradical pathways [67] The degree of observed [2+4] cycloaddition of fluorinated ethylenes IS related to the relative amounts of transoid and cisoid conformers of the diene, with very considerable (i.e., 30%) Diels-Alder adduct being observed in competition with [2+2] reaction, for example, in the reaction of 1,1 -dichloro-2,2-difluoro-ethylene with cyclopentadiene [9, 68]... [Pg.818]

Lastly, in perfluorobutadiene s codimerization reaction with butadiene, a significant amount of Diels-Alder adduct is obtained, with the perfluorodiene acting as the diene component [125] (equation 105)... [Pg.834]

Soon after the discovery of the addition reaction between diene-ophiles and dienes which now bears their names, Diels and Alder extended their investigations to include potential heterocyclic dienes. In 1929 the first compound investigated, furan, was observed to combine with maleic anhydride, like butadiene in a typical Diels-Alder reaction, across the 2,5-positions yielding a 1 1 molar adduct... [Pg.125]

When Diels and Alder published their famous paper in 1928, Diels had been working with related reactions for several years [6]. In 1925, Diels reported the reaction of azodicarboxylic ester (Et0C(0)2CN=NCC(0)0Et) with compounds containing a conjugated diene system. He found that addition of the azodicarboxylic ester occurs at the 1,4-position of the conjugated system as with cyclopentadiene and with butadiene. This work probably led to the famous Diels-Alder reaction. In 1927, Diels and his student Alder published a paper on the reaction of azodicarboxylic ester with styrene. [Pg.2]

Several highly enantioselective Diels-Alder reactions are known for which the di-enophile does not fit any of the above classes. Corey and coworkers applied the chiral aluminum reagent 36 with a C2-symmetric stilbenediamine moiety (videsu-pra) to the Diels-Alder reaction of maleimides as dienophiles [54] (Scheme 1.68). In most asymmetric Diels-Alder reactions the reactants are usually relatively simple dienes such as cyclopentadiene or monosubstituted butadienes, and unsym-... [Pg.43]

The FMOs of acrolein to the left in Fig. 8.2 are basically slightly perturbed butadiene orbitals, while the FMOs of protonated acrolein resemble those of an allyl cation mixed in with a lone-pair orbital on the oxygen atom (Fig. 8.2, right). Based on the FMOs of protonated acrolein, Houk et al. [2] argued that the predominant interaction in a normal electron-demand carbo-Diels-Alder reaction is between the dienophile LUMO and diene HOMO (Fig. 8.1, left). This interaction is greatly... [Pg.303]

The endo exo selectivity for the Lewis acid-catalyzed carbo-Diels-Alder reaction of butadiene and acrolein deserves a special attention. The relative stability of endo over exo in the transition state accounts for the selectivity in the Diels-Alder cycloadduct. The Lewis acid induces a strong polarization of the dienophile FMOs and change their energies (see Fig. 8.2) giving rise to better interactions with the diene, and for this reason, the role of the possible secondary-orbital interaction must be considered. Another possibility is the [4 + 3] interaction suggested by Singleton... [Pg.308]

The hetero-Diels-Alder reaction of formaldehyde with 1,3-butadiene has been investigated with the formaldehyde oxygen atom coordinated to BH3 as a model for a Lewis acid [25 bj. Two transition states were located, one with BH3 exo, and one endo, relative to the diene. The former has the lowest energy and the calculated transition-state structure is much less symmetrical than for the uncatalyzed reaction shown in Fig. 8.12. The C-C bond length is calculated to be 0.42 A longer, while the C-0 bond length is 0.23 A shorter, compared to the uncatalyzed reac-... [Pg.315]

The Diels-Alder reaction,is a cycloaddition reaction of a conjugated diene with a double or triple bond (the dienophile) it is one of the most important reactions in organic chemistry. For instance an electron-rich diene 1 reacts with an electron-poor dienophile 2 (e.g. an alkene bearing an electron-withdrawing substituent Z) to yield the unsaturated six-membered ring product 3. An illustrative example is the reaction of butadiene 1 with maleic anhydride 4 ... [Pg.89]

Node and co-workers have found that the Diels-Alder reaction of nitroalkenes v/ith 1-methoxy-3-trimethylsilyloxy-l,3-butadiene (Danishefsky s dienesi exhibit abnormal exo-se-lecdvity Electrostadc repulsion between the nitro and the silyloxy group of the diene induces this abnormal exc-selecdvity (Tq 8 10 This selecdve reacdon has been used for the asymmetric synthesis of various naniral products as shovm in Scheme 8 6... [Pg.235]

Amino-subsdnued dienes are also important dienophiles in Diels-Alder reactions Recently, chiral and achiral 2-amino-l,3-dienes have been prepared to snidy their reactivity Csee also asymmetric Diels-Alder reaction Section 8 1 2 The reaction of 2,3-diamino-l,3-butadienes v/ith nitrostyrene gives unusual [3t-2 carbocyclization products, 2-aminocyclopentanones, which are not formed by the direct cycloaddidon but derived from the Michael addidon products fsee secdon discussing the Michael addidon Secdon 4 1 3 "... [Pg.243]

Cyclo butadiene is highly reactive and shows none of the properties associated with aromaticity. In fact, it was not even prepared until 1965, when Rowland Pettit of the University of Texas was able to make it at low temperature. Even at —78 °C, however, cyclobutadiene is so reactive that it dimerizes by a Diels-Alder reaction. One molecule behaves as a diene and the other as a dienophile. [Pg.524]

The Diels-Alder cycloaddition reaction (Section 14.4) is a pericvclic process that takes place between a diene (four tt electrons) and a dienophile (two tr electrons) to yield a cyclohexene product. Many thousands of examples of Diels-Alder reactions are known. They often take place easily at room temperature or slightly above, and they are stereospecific with respect to substituents. For example, room-temperature reaction between 1,3-butadiene and diethyl maleate (cis) yields exclusively the cis-disubstituted cyclohexene product. A similar reaction between 1,3-butadiene and diethyl fumarate (trans) yields exclusively the trans-disubstituted product. [Pg.1187]

Scheme 8 presents the sequence of reactions that led to the synthesis of the B-ring of vitamin B12 by the Eschenmoser group. An important virtue of the Diels-Alder reaction is that it is a stereospecific process wherein relative stereochemical relationships present in the diene and/or the dienophile are preserved throughout the course of the reaction.8 Thus, when the doubly activated dienophile 12 (Scheme 8) is exposed to butadiene 11 in the presence of stannic chloride, a stereospecific reaction takes place to give compound 27 in racemic form. As expected, the trans relationship between... [Pg.113]

Ahern and Gokel (1979) briefly mention that (jE -arenediazocyanides also react with a variety of dienes (cyclopentadiene, cyclohexadiene, butadiene, ( )-piperylene, etc.) in a [4+ 2]-cycloaddition reaction with formation of tetrahydropyridazines (Scheme 6-31). Here the two azo nitrogen atoms of the diazocyanide react as a dieneophile in a bis-aza Diels-Alder reaction. [Pg.129]

Most Diels-Alder reactions, particularly the thermal ones and those involving apolar dienes and dienophiles, are described by a concerted mechanism [17]. The reaction between 1,3-butadiene and ethene is a prototype of concerted synchronous reactions that have been investigated both experimentally and theoretically [18]. A concerted unsymmetrical transition state has been invoked to justify the stereochemistry of AICI3-catalyzed cycloadditions of alkylcyclohexenones with methyl-butadienes [12]. The high syn stereospecificity of the reaction, the low solvent effect on the reaction rate, and the large negative values of both activation entropy and activation volume comprise the chemical evidence usually given in favor of a pericyclic Diels-Alder reaction. [Pg.5]

Diels-Alder reactions of butadienes 13 and 2,3-di-w-propylbutadiene 14 with [60]-fullerene 15 led to several fullerene derivatives [15-17] (Scheme 2.10). Dienes 13 and 14 bore electron-donating groups, but the reactions also occurred with electron-withdrawing substituents due to the sufficiently low-energy LUMO of Ceo-... [Pg.36]

The presence of the catalyst can also favor multiple Diels-Alder reactions of cycloalkenones. Two typical examples are reported in Schemes 3.6 and 3.7. When (E)-l-methoxy-1,3-butadiene (14) interacted with 2-cyclohexenone in the presence of Yb(fod)3 catalyst, a multiple Diels-Alder reaction occurred [21] and afforded a 1 1.5 mixture of the two tricyclic ketones 15 and 16 (Scheme 3.6). The sequence of events leading to the products includes the elimination of methanol from the primary cycloadduct to afford a bicyclic dienone that underwent a second cycloaddition. Similarly, 4-acetoxy-2-cyclopenten-l-one (17) (Scheme 3.7) has been shown to behave as a conjunctive reagent for a one-pot multiple Diels-Alder reaction with a variety of dienes under AICI3 catalysis, providing a mild and convenient methodology to synthesize hydrofluorenones [22]. The role of the Lewis acid is crucial to facilitate the elimination of acetic acid from the cycloadducts. The results of the reaction of 17 with diene... [Pg.104]

The use of zeolites is particularly advantageous for self-Diels-Alder reactions of gaseous dienes because it reduces the polymerization of the reactant. An example is the cyclodimerization of 1,3-butadiene to 4-vinylcyclohexene [20a] carried out at 250 °C with satisfactory conversion when non-acidic zeolites, such as large-pore zeolites Na-ZSM-20, Na- S and Na-Y, are used. [Pg.148]

Engberts [3e, 9] has extensively investigated the Diels Alder reaction in aqueous medium. Recently Engberts and colleagues reported [9c] a kinetic study of a Diels Alder reaction of N-alkyl maleimides with cyclopentadiene, 2,3-dimethyl-1,3-butadiene and 1,3-cyclohexadiene in different solvents. The reaction rates of the cycloadditions with the open-chain diene relative to w-hexane are reported in Table 6.3. The aqueous medium greatly accelerates the Diels Alder reaction and the acceleration increases as the hydrophobic character of the alkyl group of the dienophile increases. These and other kinetic data [3e, 9], along with the observation that the intramolecular Diels-Alder reaction is also accelerated in... [Pg.253]


See other pages where Diels-Alder dienes 1.3- Butadiene is mentioned: [Pg.164]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.306]    [Pg.72]    [Pg.248]    [Pg.160]    [Pg.216]    [Pg.229]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.309 ]




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Diels-Alder dienes

Diels-Alder dienes 2- Acetoxy-1,3-butadiene

Dienes butadiene

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