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Exocyclic effect

Scheme 10. The exocyclic effect Lewis acid complexation to enhance stereoselectivity... Scheme 10. The exocyclic effect Lewis acid complexation to enhance stereoselectivity...
These selected examples show the importance of Lewis acid in diastereoselective radical reactions. Complexation with Lewis acid, in an endocyclic manner or by using extremely bulky metal complexes such as MABR or MAD, reduces the conformational flexibility of intermediate radicals resulting in an improved facial bias. Lewis acid has been shown to effectively enhance facial selectivity by making a temporary ring a to the radical, thus mimicking the exocyclic effect. Radical reactions involving chiral auxiliaries have also benefited from the use of Lewis acid. [Pg.458]

The N-basicity of the commonly used amines (pyrrolidine > piperidine > morpholine) drops by 2-3 orders of magnitude as a consequence of electron pair delocalization in the corresponding enamines. This effect is most pronounced in morpholino enamines (see table below). Furthermore there is a tendency of the five-membered ring to form an energetically favorable exocyclic double bond. This causes a much higher reactivity of pyrroUdino enamines as compared to the piperidino analogues towards electrophiles (G.A. Cook, 1969). [Pg.13]

If the medium is sufficiently basic to generate the arabident anion 31. mixtures of products resulting from N-nng and N-exocyclic reactivity are observed. Here again steric effects can preferentially orient the whole reaction toward one of the two nitrogens. A general study clearly delineating the rules of behavior for 31 accordine to the nature of R. the... [Pg.39]

Fully saturated seven-membered heterocycles with one or two heteroatoms are normally in mobile twist-chair conformations (Section 5.17.1.1, Chapter 5.18) (b-77SH(2)123). Annelation and the introduction of exocyclic double bonds can have profound effects oxepan-2-one, for example, is in a near chair conformation (67JA5646). [Pg.14]

An E-Z discrimination between isomeric oxaziridines (27) was made by NMR data (69JCS(C)2650). The methyl groups of the isopropyl side chains in the compounds (27) are nonequivalent due to the neighboring carbon and nitrogen centres of asymmetry and possibly due to restricted rotation around the exocyclic C—N bond in the case of the Z isomer. The chemical shift of a methyl group in (Z)-(27) appears at extraordinarily high field, an effect probably due to the anisotropic effect of the p-nitrophenyl group in the isomer believed to be Z. [Pg.199]

Steric and stereoelectronic effects control the direction of approach of an electrophile to the enolate. Electrophiles approach from the least hindered side of the enolate. Numerous examples of such effects have been observed. In ketone and ester enolates that are exocyclic to a conformationally biased cyclohexane ring there is a slight... [Pg.438]

Successive treatment with propanol and then acid serves in effect to hydrolyze the amide linkage. [Note particularly that this sequence is selective for the exocyclic amide over the azetidone.) Reaction of the protected 6-APA derivative (32) with the acid chloride from 24 affords the pivaloylmethylenedioxy derivative, pivampicillin (33) This last is a drug in its own right,... [Pg.414]

The molecular mass determined osmometrically corresponds to the formula S5O. The SO stretching vibration was observed in the infrared spectrum at 1119 cm (at -65 °G) indicating an exocyclic sulfoxide group similar to the one in SsO (see below). At -50 °G the solution of S5O may be kept for several days without decomposition which usually results in a Tyndall effect caused by a colloidal polymeric sulfuroxide which is the expected decomposition product. At 25 °G some decomposition already occurs within... [Pg.213]

Alkyl sulfonates are very effective cationic initiators of e-caprolactone, although only the more reactive methyl triflate and methyl fluorosulfate result in a high conversion. The mechanism of polymerization in the presence of these initiators is believed to involve methylation of the exocyclic carbonyl oxygen, followed by partial ring opening of the activated lactone by the counteranion (Fig. [Pg.77]

The principle of active-site-directed inactivation of glycosidases by gly-con-related epoxides can be extended to compounds having an exocyclic oxirane ring, either directly attached to the six-membered ring (32) or at some distance (33,34). Studies with -o-glucosidase from sweet almonds and intestinal sucrase-isomaltase revealed that, in spite of the higher intrinsic reactivity of these epoxides, this shift of the position of the epoxide function causes a 10- to 30-fold decrease of kj(max)/Ki, an effect which probably reflects the limited flexibility of the catalytic groups involved in the epoxide reaction. [Pg.370]

For a number of reactions of cyclic di- and triesters of phosphoric acid, there are exchange data which can be rationalized on the assumption of trigonal bipyrami-dal intermediates which readily interconvert by pseudorotation. This constitutes a strong argument that at least these cyclic esters react by an associative mechanism and is suggestive evidence that simple trialkyl phosphates also react by this mechanism. The pH dependence of exocyclic versus endocyclic cleavage of methyl ethylene phosphate is readily interpreted in terms of the effect of ionization of the intermediate on the pseudorotation of these pentacoordinate intermediates. ... [Pg.22]

The preparation of ketones and ester from (3-dicarbonyl enolates has largely been supplanted by procedures based on selective enolate formation. These procedures permit direct alkylation of ketone and ester enolates and avoid the hydrolysis and decarboxylation of keto ester intermediates. The development of conditions for stoichiometric formation of both kinetically and thermodynamically controlled enolates has permitted the extensive use of enolate alkylation reactions in multistep synthesis of complex molecules. One aspect of the alkylation reaction that is crucial in many cases is the stereoselectivity. The alkylation has a stereoelectronic preference for approach of the electrophile perpendicular to the plane of the enolate, because the tt electrons are involved in bond formation. A major factor in determining the stereoselectivity of ketone enolate alkylations is the difference in steric hindrance on the two faces of the enolate. The electrophile approaches from the less hindered of the two faces and the degree of stereoselectivity depends on the steric differentiation. Numerous examples of such effects have been observed.51 In ketone and ester enolates that are exocyclic to a conformationally biased cyclohexane ring there is a small preference for... [Pg.24]

Gas phase reactivity toward allyltrimethylsilane was used to compare the reactivity of several cyclic A-acyliminium ions and related iminium ions.203 Compounds with endocyclic acyl groups were found to be more reactive than compounds with exocyclic acyl substituents. Five-membered ring compounds are somewhat more reactive than six-membered ones. The higher reactivity of the endocyclic acyl derivatives is believed to be due to geometric constraints that maximize the polar effect of the carbonyl group. [Pg.145]

The stabilization of the zwitterionic o-QM precursors is due to electrostatic interactions. It was reasonable to assume that also the other methods of stabilizing the zwitterions might be viable, and indeed it was confirmed that both steric and electronic effects are able to stabilize such intermediates. In 5-(4-octyl)-y-tocopherol (5a-butyl-5a-propyl-a-tocopherol, 21), the octyl group acts as a flywheel, which impedes the rotation of the C-5a moiety into the ring plane as compared to the parent zwitterions with the unsubstituted exocyclic methylene group. The situation is... [Pg.183]

Stabilization of the zwitterionic intermediate in o-QM formation can also occur intramolecularly. In this case, the stabilizing moieties must be able to dissipate the positive charge at the benzylic group by a resonance effect and prevent rotation of the exocyclic methylene group by a steric blocking. One example for such a temporary stabilization is the nitration of a-tocopheryl acetate (25) by concentrated HNO3, which produced 6-0-acetyl-5-nitro-a-tocopherol (27) in quite good yields,48 the... [Pg.185]


See other pages where Exocyclic effect is mentioned: [Pg.143]    [Pg.430]    [Pg.452]    [Pg.143]    [Pg.430]    [Pg.452]    [Pg.274]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.277]    [Pg.634]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.154]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.540]    [Pg.287]    [Pg.295]    [Pg.121]    [Pg.169]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.201]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.51]    [Pg.118]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.72]    [Pg.180]    [Pg.182]    [Pg.184]    [Pg.329]    [Pg.332]    [Pg.336]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.143 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.143 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.452 , Pg.458 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.98 , Pg.143 ]




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Exocyclic

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