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Dienes electron-poor

The presence of electron-donating substituents in the diene enables it to react with simple aldehydes thus both acetaldehyde and benzaldehyde add to 1-methoxy-1,3-butadiene at 50-65 °C under high pressure (20 Kbar) to give dihydropyrans as 70 30 mixtures of cis- and frans-isomers (equation 5)4. The combination of electron-rich diene/electron-poor dienophile makes it possible to perform the reaction under milder conditions. 2-Alkyl-l-ethoxy-1,3-butadienes and diethyl mesoxalate afford dihydropyrans almost quantitatively (equation 6)5. [Pg.482]

FMO theory requires that a HOMO of one reactant has to be correlated with the LUMO of the other reactant. The decision between the two alternatives - i.e., from which reactant the HOMO should be taken - is made on the basis of which is the smaller energy difference in our case the HOMO of the electron rich diene, 3.1, has to be correlated with the LUMO of the electron-poor dienophile, 3.2. The smaller this HOMO-LUMO gap, the higher the reactivity will be. With the HOMO and LUMO fixed, the orbital coefficients of these two orbitals can explain the regios-electivity of the reaction, which strongly favors the formation of 3.3 over 3.4. [Pg.179]

A more efficient agent than peroxy compounds for the epoxidation of fluoro-olefins with nonfluonnated double bond is the hypofluorous acid-acetomtrile complex [22] Perfluoroalkylethenes react with this agent at room temperature within 2-3 h with moderate yields (equation 13), whereas olefins with strongly electron-deficient double bond or electron-poor, sterically hindered olefins, for example l,2-bis(perfluorobutyl)ethene and perfluoro-(l-alkylethyl)ethenes, are practically inert [22] Epoxidation of a mixture of 3 perfluoroalkyl-1-propenes at 0 C IS finished after 10 mm in 80% yield [22] The trifluorovinyl group in partially fluorinated dienes is not affected by this agent [22] (equation 13)... [Pg.326]

The most common and synthetically most useful Diels-Alder reactions involve the addition of an electron-rich diene and an electron-poor dienophile, e.g. [Pg.273]

According to Frontier Molecular Orbital (FMO) theory, Diels-Alder reaction between an electron-rich diene and an electron-poor dienophile involves interaction between the highest-occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) on the diene and the lowest-unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) on the dienophile. The better the HOMO/LUMO overlap and the smaller their energy difference, the more favorable the interaction and the faster the reaction. [Pg.275]

Experimentally, the rates of Diels-Alder reactions between electron-rich dienes and electron-poor dienophiles generally increase with increased alkyl substitution on the diene. This is because alkyl groups act as electron donors and lead to buildup of electron density on the diene. An exception to this is the reaction of Z,Z-hexa-2,4-diene with tetracyanoethylene (TCNE), which is actually slower than the corresponding addition involving E-penta-1,3-diene. [Pg.277]

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]

For the ordinary Diels-Alder reaction the dienophile preferentially is of the electron-poor type electron-withdrawing substituents have a rate enhancing effect. Ethylene and simple alkenes are less reactive. Substituent Z in 2 can be e.g. CHO, COR, COOH, COOR, CN, Ar, NO2, halogen, C=C. Good dienophiles are for example maleic anhydride, acrolein, acrylonitrile, dehydrobenzene, tetracya-noethylene (TCNE), acetylene dicarboxylic esters. The diene preferentially is of the electron-rich type thus it should not bear an electron-withdrawing substituent. [Pg.92]

There are Diels-Alder reactions known where the electronic conditions outlined above are just reversed. Such reactions are called Diels-Alder reactions with inverse electron demand For example the electron-poor diene hexachlorocy-clopentadiene 21 reacts with the electron-rich styrene 22 ... [Pg.92]

Another reaction unique to conjugated dienes is the Diels-Alder cycloaddition. Conjugated dienes react with electron-poor aikenes (dienophiles) in a single step through a cyclic transition slate to yield a cyclohexene product. The reaction is stereospecific, meaning that only a single product stereoisomer is formed, and can occur only if the diene is able to adopt an s-cis conformation. [Pg.507]

The comparison of rates of cycloaddition of maleic anhydride, tetracyanoethylene, and styrene to PPA shows that the latter, irrespective of the presence of electronegative groups, behaves in these reactions not as an electron-poor diene system. This fact, together with the composition of side products (giving evidence of PPA decarboxylation), allows the assumption to be made that the cycloaddition of dienophiles involves mainly decarboxylated polyene sections of cis-transoid structure213, 266. This is in agreement with the fact that PPA with predominant trans-transoid configuration interacts with these dienophiles at a substantially lower rate. The ultimate amounts of the dienophile combined with PPA of this structure is also considerably smaller. [Pg.31]

Coupling of alkenylcarbene complexes and siloxy-substituted 1,3-dienes affords vinylcyclopentene derivatives through a formal [3C+2S] cycloaddition process. This unusual reaction is explained by an initial [4C+2S] cycloaddition of the electron-poor chromadiene system as the 471 component and the terminal double bond of the siloxydiene as the dienophile. The chromacyclohexene intermediate evolves by a reductive elimination of the metal fragment to generate the [3C+2S] cyclopentene derivatives [73] (Scheme 26). [Pg.79]

For a work where [4+1 ] cycloaddition products are obtained by the use of an electron-poor diene, see reference [17b]... [Pg.119]

Ethylene disulfonyl-1,3-butadiene (43) is an example of an outer-ring diene with a non-aromatic six-membered heterocyclic ring containing sulfur. It is prepared by thermolysis of sulfolenes in the presence of a basic catalyst. It is very reactive [43] and even though it is electron-deficient, it readily reacted with both electron-rich and electron-poor dienophiles (Equation 2.15). [Pg.44]

Arylethenes are inner-outer-ring dienes in which the vinyl group is linked to an aromatic system. These dienes are poorly or moderately reactive the presence of electron-donating substituents in the diene moiety markedly increases their reactivity. Their cycloadditions are usually accelerated in order to be carried out under mild conditions. 1-Vinylnaphthalene is more reactive than 2-vinyl-naphthalene and styrenes. [Pg.219]

The first microwave-assisted hetero-Diels-Alder cycloaddition reaction was described by Diaz-Ortiz and co-workers in 1998 between 2-azadiene 198 and the same electron-poor dienophiles as for the preparation of pyrazolo[3,4-b]pyridines 200 (Scheme 72) [127]. These dienes reacted with... [Pg.249]

Kahn and Hehre straightforwardly extended this idea to the description of Jt-facial selectivity in Diels Alder reactions. They simply stated cycloaddition involving electron-rich dienes and electron-poor dienophiles should occur preferentially onto the diene face which is the more nucleophilic and onto the diene face which exhibits the greater electrophihcity (Scheme 40) [49],... [Pg.208]

Mataka and coworkers reported the studies of the Diels-Alder reactions of [3.3] orthoanthracenophanes 96 and 97, of which anthraceno unit, the potential diene, has two nonequivalent faces, inside and outside. The reactions of 96 with dien-ophiles gave the mixtures of inside and outside adducts with the ratios between 1 1 and 1 1.5. However, the ratio changes drastically, in favor of the inside adducts, when 97 reacts with dienophiles such as maleic anhydride, maleimide and naphto-quinone [55] (Scheme 46). Mataka suggested that the Jt-facial selectivity is controlled by an orbital interaction between the electron-poor dienophiles and the Jt-orbital of the facing aromatics, which would lead to a stabilization of the transition state, while Nishio suggested that the selectivity is due to the attractive k/k or CH/jt interaction [53]. [Pg.211]

Diels-Alder reactions in supercritical water have also been investigated.57 Kolis has shown that Diels-Alder reactions of dienes with various electron-poor dienophiles can be performed in supercritical water with high yields of the desired product without the addition of... [Pg.385]

The authors propose that this reaction proceeds by initial insertion of the 7t-bond into a Pd - H bond, in contrast to the Pd - Si insertion seen in the reaction between El3SiH and dienes catalyzed by 100 (Scheme 24) [71]. A weak bond between the cationic palladium and the electron-poor C Si group favoring Pd - H formation accounts for the change in mechanism. [Pg.242]

Some remarks concerning the scope of the cobalt chelate catalysts 207 seem appropriate. Terminal double bonds in conjugation with vinyl, aryl and alkoxy-carbonyl groups are cyclopropanated selectively. No such reaction occurs with alkyl-substituted and cyclic olefins, cyclic and sterically hindered acyclic 1,3-dienes, vinyl ethers, allenes and phenylacetylene95). The cyclopropanation of electron-poor alkenes such as acrylonitrile and ethyl acrylate (optical yield in the presence of 207a r 33%) with ethyl diazoacetate deserve notice, as these components usually... [Pg.165]

Diels-Alder cycloaddition reactions of electron-poor dienophiles to electron-rich dienes, which are generally carried out thermally, afford widespread applications for C—C bond formation. On the basis of their electronic properties, numerous dienes can be characterized as electron donors and dienophiles as electron acceptors. Despite the early suggestions by Woodward,206 the donor/ acceptor association and electron-transfer paradigm are usually not considered as the simplest mechanistic formulation for the Diels-Alder reaction. However, the examples of cycloaddition reactions described below will show that photoirradiation of various D/A pairs leads to efficient cycloaddition reactions via electron-transfer activation. [Pg.264]

Donor (electron-rich) diene and acceptor (electron-poor) ene (dienophile), designated DdEa. [Pg.717]

Hexamethyl[3]radialene (25) does not undergo Diels-Alder-reactions with the typical electron-poor dienophiles, probably because of the full substitution at the diene termini. With TCNE, however, a violet-blue charge-transfer complex is formed which disappears within 30 min at room temperature to form a 1 1 adduct (82% yield) to which structure 55 was assigned9. Similar observations were made with tris(2-adamantylidene)cyclopropane (34), but in this case cycloaddition product 56 (81% yield) was identified its allenic moiety is clearly indicated by IR and 13C NMR data12. [Pg.941]

A new entry to exocyclic dienes was reported by Sha who uncovered that a radical cyclization of the vinyl iodide 100 can lead to the formation of an exocyclic dienes fused with a tetrahydrofuran ring. The cyclization is proposed to proceed in a 5-(n-exo)-exo-dig fashion <00OL2011>. 3,4-Disubstituted tetrahydrofurans can also be constructed via the cyclization of O-stannyl ketyls and allylic 0-stannyI ketyls onto electron-rich or electron-poor alkenes <00TL8941>. [Pg.152]

Zwitterionic intermediates have been reported for reactions of strongly electron-rich 1,3-butadienes, e.g. 1,1-dimethoxy-1,3-butadiene, with strongly electron-poor dienophiles46. In the reactions of l,4-bis(dimethylamino)-1,3-butadiene with strongly electron-poor dienophiles, electron transfer from the diene to the dienophile was reported to occur47. [Pg.338]

The main stabilization in reactions with activated reaction partners, viz. when one partner is electron-rich and the other electron-poor, arises through interaction between the donor HOMO and the acceptor LUMO which are much closer in energy than the acceptor HOMO and the donor LUMO. Figure 2 illustrates which interactions between the frontier orbitals cause the main stabilization in normal, neutral and inverse Diels-Alder reactions. For example, the main stabilization in the reaction between an electron-rich diene and an electron-poor dienophile stems from the interaction of the diene HOMO with the dienophile LUMO. [Pg.340]

Murray and colleagues199 developed some 2,5-diketopiperazines as new chiral auxiliaries and examined their asymmetric induction in the Diels-Alder reactions of their A-acryloyl derivatives with several dienes. Some of their results with dienophile 320 have been summarized in Table 19 (equation 89). When the benzyl group on 320 was substituted by an isopropyl or /-butyl group, the diastereofacial selectivity dropped dramatically. It was proposed that tv-tt stacking between the phenyl group and the electron-poor double bond provided a more selective shielding of one face of the double bond in this special case. [Pg.402]

Examination of the reactivity of acyclic (diene)Fe(CO)3 complexes indicates that this nucleophilic addition is reversible. The reaction of (C4H6)Fe(CO)3 with strong carbon nucleophiles, followed by protonation, gives olefinic products 195 and 196 (Scheme 49)187. The ratio of 195 and 196 depends upon the reaction temperature and time. Thus, for short reaction time and low temperature (0.5 h, —78 °C) the product from attack at C2 (i.e. 195) predominates while at higher temperature and longer reaction time (2 h, 0 °C) the product from attack at Cl (i.e. 196) predominates. This selectivity is rationalized by kinetically controlled attack at the more electron-poor carbon (C2) at low temperature. Nucleophilic attack is reversible and, under conditions where an equilibrium is established, the thermodynamically more stable (allyl)Fe(CO)3" is favored. The regioselectivity for nucleophilic attack on substituted (diene)Fe(CO)3 complexes has been reported187. The... [Pg.951]

The interactions of the occupied orbitals of one reactant with the unoccupied orbitals of the other are described by the third term of the Klopman-Salem-Fukui equation. This part is dominant and the most important for uncharged reaction partners. Taking into account that the denominator is minimized in case of a small energy gap between the interacting orbitals, it is clear that the most important interaction is the HOMO-LUMO overlap. With respect to the Diels-Alder reaction, one has to distinguish between two possibilities depending on which HOMO-LUMO pair is under consideration. The reaction can be controlled by the interaction of the HOMO of the electron-rich diene and the LUMO of the electron-poor dienophile (normal electron demand) or by the interaction of the LUMO of an electron-poor diene and the HOMO of an electron-rich dienophile (inverse electron demand cf Figure 1). [Pg.1039]

A wide range of olefins can be cyclopropanated with acceptor-substituted carbene complexes. These include acyclic or cyclic alkenes, styrenes [1015], 1,3-dienes [1002], vinyl iodides [1347,1348], arenes [1349], fullerenes [1350], heteroare-nes, enol ethers or esters [1351-1354], ketene acetals, and A-alkoxycarbonyl-[1355,1356] or A-silyl enamines [1357], Electron-rich alkenes are usually cyclopropanated faster than electron-poor alkenes [626,1015],... [Pg.218]


See other pages where Dienes electron-poor is mentioned: [Pg.164]    [Pg.873]    [Pg.220]    [Pg.68]    [Pg.204]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.475]    [Pg.174]    [Pg.914]    [Pg.610]    [Pg.397]    [Pg.103]    [Pg.339]    [Pg.343]    [Pg.373]    [Pg.543]    [Pg.333]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.231 ]




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Electron-poor

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