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Photo-Induced Diels-Alder Reaction

Photo-induced Diels Alder reaction occurs either by direct photo activation of a diene or dienophile or by irradiation of a photosensitizer (Rose Bengal, Methylene Blue, hematoporphyrin, tetraphenylporphyrin) that interacts with diene or dienophile. These processes produce an electronically excited reagent (energy transfer) or a radical cation (electron transfer) or a radical (hydrogen abstraction) that is subsequently trapped by the other reagent. [Pg.163]

The single-electron transfer from one excited component to the other component acceptor, as the critical step prior to cycloaddition of photo-induced Diels Alder reactions, has been demonstrated [43] for the reaction of anthracene with maleic anhydride and various maleimides carried out in chloroform under irradiation by a medium-pressure mercury lamp (500 W). The (singlet) excited anthracene ( AN ), generated by the actinic light, is quenched by dienophile... [Pg.163]

The photo-induced exo selectivity was observed in other classic Diels-Alder reactions. Data relating to some exo adducts obtained by reacting cyclopentadiene or cyclohexadiene with 2-methyl-1,4-benzoquinone, 5-hydroxynaphtho-quinone, 4-cyclopentene-l,3-dione and maleic anhydride are given in Scheme 4.13. The presence and amount of EtsN plays a decisive role in reversing the endo selectivity. The possibility that the prevalence of exo adduct is due to isomerization of endo adduct under photolytic conditions was rejected by control experiments, at least for less reactive dienophiles. [Pg.164]

Acetylchloride is a trapping agent that allows the reaction to go completion, transforming the product into a less oxidizable compound.The results of other reactions between indole (57) and substituted cyclohexa-1,3-dienes show that the photo-induced Diels-Alder reaction is almost completely regioselective. In the absence of 59 the cycloaddition did not occur the presence of [2+2] adducts was never detected. Experimental data support the mechanism illustrated in Scheme 4.14. The intermediate 57a, originated from bond formation between the indole cation radical and 58, undergoes a back-electron transfer to form the adduct 60 trapped by acetyl chloride. [Pg.165]

The cycloaddition of photoenol of o-methylbenzaldehyde 66 with 5-alkyli-dene-l,3-dioxane-4,6-dione derivatives 67 is an example of a photo-induced Diels Alder reaction in which one component, the diene in this case, is generated by irradiation [48]. The yields of some cycloadducts 68, generated by photo-irradiation of a benzene solution of 66 and 67 at room temperature, are reported in Table 4.14. The first step of the reaction is the formation of (E)-enol 69 and (Z)-enol 70 (Equation 4.7) by an intramolecular hydrogen abstraction of 66 followed by a stereo- and regioselective cycloaddition with... [Pg.166]

The low solubility of fullerene (Ceo) in common organic solvents such as THE, MeCN and DCM interferes with its functionalization, which is a key step for its synthetic applications. Solid state photochemistry is a powerful strategy for overcoming this difficulty. Thus a 1 1 mixture of Cgo and 9-methylanthra-cene (Equation 4.10, R = Me) exposed to a high-pressure mercury lamp gives the adduct 72 (R = Me) with 68% conversion [51]. No 9-methylanthracene dimers were detected. Anthracene does not react with Ceo under these conditions this has been correlated to its ionization potential which is lower than that of the 9-methyl derivative. This suggests that the Diels-Alder reaction proceeds via photo-induced electron transfer from 9-methylanthracene to the triplet excited state of Ceo-... [Pg.168]

The photo-induced single and double Diels-Alder reactions between [60]fullerene and 9-methylanthracene (212) which gave 213 and 214 were performed in the solid state by Mikami and colleagues (equation 60)141. The Diels-Alder reaction was considered to proceed following a photo-induced electron transfer from 9-methylanthracene to fullerene. The higher ionization potential of anthracene should explain its inreactivity toward the cycloaddition reaction with [60]fullerene. [Pg.379]

Alder reaction the major Diels-Alder product is the trans adduct rather than the cis adduct (Scheme 11). Such a stereochemistry indicates that the Diels-Alder reactions proceed by a stepwise mechanism rather than a concerted mechanism. The photo-induced electron transfer from Danishefsky s diene to Ceo gives the triplet radical ion pair. The triplet radical ion pair is then converted to the singlet radical ion pair to give a zwitterionic intermediate (or a diradical intermediate) in competition with the back electron transfer to the reactant pair. The bond formation occurs stepwise with no symmetry restriction for the bond formation. Thus, both trans and cis adducts were obtained as the final products [305]. [Pg.970]

The photo-induced single and double Diels-Alder reactions between [60]fullerene and... [Pg.379]

The studies reported last year on the stereoisomeric control of the photo-induced Diels Alder reaction of maleic anhydride with homo-chiral anthracene derivatives such as (46) have been extended using 320-400 nm radiation, and this gives the head-to-tail anthracene dimer as well as the previously reported adduct (47) with excellent diastereoselectivity. The thermal and photochemical retroaddition process has been examined and the results suggest that this facile process may promote the anthracene as a new chiral auxiliary. [Pg.84]

Electron-transfer photosensitization (2,4,6-triphenylpyrylium tetrafluorobor-ate) is reported to induce a photo-Diels Alder reaction between A-arylimines (55) and styrene or a-methylstyrene. The reaction is considered to proceed by attack of the styrene radical cation onto the arylimine and affords both dia-stereoisomers (56) and (57) in reasonable yields, although amounts of the quinoline (58) and the amine (59) are formed in some cases. [Pg.86]

The Diels-Alder reaction of 1,2-dihydrophosphinine oxides with dienophiles, such as acetylenic derivatives and maleic acid derivatives affords 2-phosphabicyclo [2.2.2]octadiene and 2-phosphabicyclo[2.2.2]octene 2-oxides that may be regarded as the precursors of low-coordinate, methylenephosphine oxides that are useful in the phosphorylation of 0- and N-nucleophiles. It was observed that the photo-chemically induced fragmentation-related phosphorylation may follow a novel addition-elimination mechanism instead of the classical elimination-addition protocol. [Pg.40]

Some highly substituted carbazoles were obtained by photo-induced Diels-Alder reactions of 2-(l-cyano-vinyl)indoles using stabilized enamines as dienophiles. <94SL141>... [Pg.122]

There are many well-studied photochemical reactions that are clean, high yielding, relatively fast, and require no chemical catalysts. A number of these have been examined for SCNP formation, including the photochemically triggered Diels-Alder reaction between 2,5-dimethylbenzophenone and maleimide, the photo-dimerization of coumarin, the photodimerization of anthracene, and the photo-induced nitrile imine mediated tetrazole-ene cycloaddition. ... [Pg.137]

Indole 17 undergoes photo-induced radical cation Diels-Alder reaction with cyclohexa-1,3-diene 18 in the presence of triphenylpyrylium tetrafluoroborate to give diastereoselective product 19 [33]. [Pg.287]

WIN 12] Winkler M., Mueller J.O., Oehlenschlaeger K.K., Highly Orthogonal Functionalization of ADMET Polymers via Photo-Induced Diels-Alder Reactions , et al. Macromolecules, vol. 45, pp. 5012-5019,2012. [Pg.326]

Actually, the earliest derivative of a vinylcyclopropane radical cation was a serendipitous discovery. It was formed by an unusual hydrogen shift upon photo-induced electron transfer oxidation of tricyclo[4.1.0.0 ]heptane (26). This result has been questioned on the grounds that the same rearrangement was not observed in a Freon matrix. However, there is no basis for the assumption that radical cation reactions in frozen matrices at cryogenic temperatures should follow the same course as those at room temperature in fluid solution and in the presence of a radical anion, which is potentially a strong base. In several cases, matrix reactions have taken a decidedly different course from those in solution. For example, radiolysis of 8 in a Freon matrix generated the bicyclo[3.2.0]hepta-2,6-diene radical cation (27 ), or caused retro-Diels-Alder cleavage yet, the... [Pg.285]


See other pages where Photo-Induced Diels-Alder Reaction is mentioned: [Pg.163]    [Pg.164]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.78]    [Pg.122]    [Pg.173]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.1319]    [Pg.337]    [Pg.122]    [Pg.215]    [Pg.379]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.164]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.459]    [Pg.2368]    [Pg.227]    [Pg.142]    [Pg.82]    [Pg.246]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.163 , Pg.164 , Pg.165 , Pg.166 , Pg.167 , Pg.168 ]




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Inducing reaction

Photo-Diels-Alder reactions

Photo-induced reactions

Photo-reaction

Reactions induced

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