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Fumaric’esters

Free-radical reaction rates of maleic anhydride and its derivatives depend on polar and steric factors. Substituents added to maleic anhydride that decrease planarity of the transition state decrease the reaction rate. The reactivity decreases in the order maleic anhydride > fumarate ester > maleate ester. [Pg.452]

As the quinone stabilizer is consumed, the peroxy radicals initiate the addition chain propagation reactions through the formation of styryl radicals. In dilute solutions, the reaction between styrene and fumarate ester foUows an alternating sequence. However, in concentrated resin solutions, the alternating addition reaction is impeded at the onset of the physical gel. The Hquid resin forms an intractable gel when only 2% of the fumarate unsaturation is cross-linked with styrene. The gel is initiated through small micelles (12) that form the nuclei for the expansion of the cross-linked network. [Pg.317]

PPF catalyzed an enantioselective polymerization of bis(2,2,2-trichloroethyl) tra 5-3,4-epoxyadipate with 1,4-butanediol in diethyl ether to give a highly optically active polyester (Scheme 9). °° The molar ratio of the diester to the diol was adjusted to 2 1 to produce the (-) polymer with enantiomeric purity of >96%. The polymerization of racemic bis(2-chloroethyl) 2,5-dibromoadipate with excess of 1,6-hexanediol using lipase A catalyst produced optically active trimer and pentamer. The polycondensation of 1,4-cyclohexanedimethanol with fumarate esters using PPL catalyst afforded moderate diastereoselectivity for the cis/trans monocondensate and markedly increased diastereoselectivity for the dicondensate product. [Pg.220]

The question of the identity of the reactive excited state was left open, although n-n excited state was considered to be more probable.140 The interaction diagram, Fig. 7, shows that a n-n state would have an additional stabilizing interaction Ri(tt) ->-R2(7r) with orbital coefficients in phase for an all-suprafacial concerted reaction. The dominant reaction would theoretically depend upon the relative placements of the several levels, and since no experimental information for maleic and fumarate esters is presently available, a clear choice cannot be made. It is interesting that the reactive excited state could be inferred if both stereochemistry and a good molecular diagram were available. [Pg.173]

An important competing process with significant practical consequences is the catalytic dimerization of diazoacetate to form maleate and fumarate esters. Most catalysts suffer from this side reaction, leading to the use of the alkene as solvent in order to accelerate the productive pathway and the slow addition of diazo compound in order to minimize dimerization. Since this problem is generally shared across most catalyst architectures, it will be mentioned in discussions of individual asymmetric catalyst systems only in those instances where these precautions prove to be unnecessary. [Pg.6]

Pd(II)-catalyzed dialkoxy- or dihydroxycarbonylation of alkynes (Eq. 22, R = alkyl or H, respectively) with formation of maleic and fumaric esters or acids (and, in the case of acetylene, of muconic esters too), has been reported to occur in the presence of CuCl2 and/or 02 as oxidant [73-79] electrochemical reoxidation of Pd(0) has also been described [80]. [Pg.251]

Unsaturated polyesters are low-molecular-weight fumarate esters containing various chemical structures designed for their specific cost and performance purposes. The two most important features of unsaturated polyesters are the fumarates, which provide the active sites for radical cross-linking with the diluent monomer and the random, low molecular weight, irregular nature of the rest of the molecule, which provide the necessary solubility in the diluent monomer. The preparation of the polyester thus requires the following considerations ... [Pg.700]

Further supporting evidence for the occurrence of diradicals was obtained by Reich and Cram when they heated [2.2]paracyclophane with either dimethyl maleate or fumarate esters at 200 °C for 40 h in the absence of air. The cis- and trans-2,3-dicarboxymethyl[4.2]paracyclophanes 162 and 163 were formed in about equal amounts, irrespective of the configuration of the olefin employed. Other similar reactions would also suggest a radical mechanism for this reaction furthermore, a concerted addition of the olefinic double bond to 2, or to the postulated intermediate diradical 157, can be ruled out because of lack of stereospecificity of insertion. [Pg.125]

Hydrolase-catalyzed domino reactions incorporating a resolution and a subsequent cycloaddition reaction have been described [95-97]. This constitutes an attractive approach to complex synthetic intermediates. For example, the l-(3-methyl-2-furyl)]propanol roc-93 reacts with ethoxyvinyl methyl fumarate (94) catalyzed by Lipase LIP (from Pseudomonas aeruginosa) to furnish a dienophilic fumarate ester, which spontaneously undergoes an intramolecular Diels-Alder reaction with the furan moiety furnishing exclusively the syn-adduct, the oxabicy-clohexene 95 in excellent along with the remaining alcohol S-96 (Scheme 4.31) [95]. A similar approach has been used for a procedure that includes a series of domino reactions that includes dynamic kinetic resolution of the 3-vinylcyclohex-... [Pg.97]

Hydroformylation - [CARBON MONOXIDE] (Vol 5) - [OXO PROCESS] (Vol 17) -of allyl alcohol [ALLYL ALCOHOL AND MONOALLYL DERIVATIVES] (Vol 2) -catalysts for [CATALYSIS] (Vol 5) -C-19 dicarboxylic acids from [DICARBOXYLIC ACIDS] (Vol 8) -of ethylene [ETHYLENE] (Vol 9) -of ethylene [PROPYL ALCOHOLS - N-PROPYLALCOLHOL] (Vol 20) -of maleate and fumarate esters [MALEIC ANHYDRIDE, MALEIC ACID AND FUMARIC ACID] (Vol 15) -phosphine catalyst [PHOSPHORUS COMPOUNDS] (Vol 18) -platinum-group metal catalysts for [PLATINUM-GROUP METALS] (Vol 19) -rhodium catalysis [PLATINUM-GROUP METALS, COMPOUNDS] (Vol 19) -ruthenium cmpds or catalyst [PLATINUM-GROUP METALS, COMPOUNDS] (Vol 19) -use of coordination compounds [COORDINATION COMPOUNDS] (Vol 7)... [Pg.489]

Asymmetric ethylidene transfer has been achieved in the reactions of 1-cyclohexenyl ethers carrying a chiral auxiliary with 1,1-diodoethane/diethylzinc 39. Asymmetric induction in the reaction of diazofluorene with fumaric esters bearing chiral alcohol moieties has been investigated (equation 84)140,141. Kinetics of intramolecular cyclopropanation in... [Pg.287]

The intermediacy of >/2-cyclopropene complexes of nickel has been proposed in catalyzed 2+1 reactions of free cyclopropene with electron-poor olefins, to give vinylcyclo-propanes. For example, the reaction of fumarate esters with 3,3-disubstituted cyclopropenes in the presence of Ni(COD)2 catalyst gave vinyl-substituted trans-2,3-cyclopropane dicarboxylate esters (equation 235)72 302. However, when maleic esters were used instead, a mixture of both cis and trans vinylcyclopropane diesters is obtained. [Pg.588]

The mesoionic pyrazoles 116 and 117123 on heating with DMAD yield the pyrazolium fumaric esters 118 and 119 with concomitant loss of a methyl group.124... [Pg.301]

Likewise with the dienophile the maleate and fumarate esters 2.90 and 2,92 react with butadiene to give diastereoisomeric adducts 2.91 and 2.93, in which the substituents retain, as a consequence of the suprafacial nature of the developing overlap, the cis and trans relationships they had in the dienophiles. Diels-Alder reactions are much used in organic synthesis, not only because two new C-C bonds are made in one step, but also because the relative stereochemistry of up to four new stereogenic centres is predictable. [Pg.19]

Treatment of 1-phenyl-2,4-hexadien-l-ol with the acid chloride of fumaric acid monomethyl ester in ether/triethylamine gave a quantitative yield of the crude ester as an oil. Attempted purification by Kugelrohr distillation at 180-190°C under high vacuum gave the bicyclic lactone 1 in 45% yield. It was subsequently found that the fumarate esters of the isomeric alcohols 1-phenyl-l,4-hexadien-3-ol and l-phenyl-l,3-hexadien-5-ol also gave compound 1 in 43 and 35% yield respectively when distilled in a Kugelrohr apparatus. [Pg.71]

Give reasonable explanations for the formation of 1 from the fumarate esters of the three isomeric alcohols. [Pg.71]

A phenyl group as a /3-substituent on the vinyl group apparently increases the electron density of the 5-carbon of the pyrrole ring, so Michael-type addition is favored. The fumarate ester 43a was obtained in 37% yield in the reaction of 42a with DMAD (83JOC2488). With a methyl group as a /8-substituent in 42b, a mixture of the fumarate ester 43b (37%) and the 3a,6-dihydroindole 44 (40%) was obtained (84MI1). [Pg.347]

Further examples of dinuclear CO-bridged compounds of Group VIB are the complexes [MofCOljL, which we have synthesized from C7H8Mo(CO)3 (C7H8 = cycloheptatriene) and maleic and fumaric esters (L) (175, 176). [Pg.44]

The amino benzopyran of step 5 (2.0 g) and dimethyl acetylene dicarboxylate (1.24 g 1.01 ml) were refluxed in ethanol (30 ml) for 26 hours. The reaction mixture was cooled to 0°C and the insoluble yellow-brown solid was collected by filtration and washed with a little ethanol and dried to give 2.0 g of a product which was a mixture of maleic and fumaric esters obtained by Michael addition of the amine to the acetylene. This mixture of esters (2.0 g) was treated with polyphosphoric acid (30 ml) and heated on the steam bath with stirring for 20 minutes. The reaction mixture was then poured onto ice and stirred with ethyl acetate. The organic layer was separated, washed with water and dried. The solvent was evaporated to leave 1.6 g of a yellow orange solid. Recrystallisation of this solid from ethyl acetate gave the required product as fluffy orange needles, mp 187°-188°C. [Pg.2409]

A similar conclusion based on experiments in which 9-diazofluorene was decomposed thermally in the presence of maleic and fumaric esters is unreliable, since these olefins could react directly with the diazoalkane giving the observed cyclopropanes by way of intermediate pyrazolines, and the appropriate kinetic cheek was not carried out. [Pg.196]

A further factor which causes a fast addition of the carbamoyl radical to the maleate or fumarate esters may be the nature of the radical, that it is a nucleophilic radical (or "donor"). This can be pictured through resonance ... [Pg.97]

The use of a chiral fumarate ester allows for asymmetric induction irrespective to the approach of the dienophile to the diene. In particular, dimenthyl fumarate (6) has been advocated for large scale because of its ready availability, low cost, excellent yields, and high asymmetric induction.35128129 203-208 Although other more exotic chiral auxiliaries may be used,32 the use of 5 coupled with a homogeneous Lewis acid catalyst at low temperatures allows for remarkably high diastereo-selectivity with a number of dienes (Scheme 26.5).125 164-209... [Pg.511]


See other pages where Fumaric’esters is mentioned: [Pg.489]    [Pg.451]    [Pg.84]    [Pg.135]    [Pg.277]    [Pg.133]    [Pg.66]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.280]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.723]    [Pg.279]    [Pg.277]    [Pg.516]    [Pg.161]    [Pg.537]    [Pg.161]    [Pg.226]    [Pg.226]    [Pg.388]    [Pg.193]    [Pg.674]    [Pg.51]    [Pg.96]    [Pg.98]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.4 , Pg.29 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.4 , Pg.29 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.4 , Pg.29 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.4 , Pg.29 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.271 ]




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Fumarate Half-Esters

Fumarate esters

Fumaric acid esters

Fumaric acid esters psoriasis

Fumaric acid monoethyl ester

Fumaric acid, 2,3-dicyanodimethyl ester

Fumaric acid, 2,3-dicyanodimethyl ester cycloadditions

Fumaric acid, cyanodimethyl ester

Fumaric acid, cyanodimethyl ester 2 + 2] cycloaddition reactions

Fumaric acid, diethyl ester

Fumaric acid, dimethyl ester

Fumaric acid, methyl ester

Fumaric diethyl ester

Rosin fumarate ester

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