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Homoenolates siloxycyclopropanes

The aryl- and heteroarylfluorosilanes 541 can be used for the preparation of the unsymmetrical ketones 542[400], Carbonylation of aryl triflate with the siloxycyclopropane 543 affords the 7-keto ester 545. In this reaction, transme-tallation of the siloxycyclopropane 543 with acylpalladium and ring opening generate Pd homoenolate as an intermediate 544 without undergoing elimination of/3-hydrogen[401],... [Pg.203]

The transmetallation of the siloxycyclopropane 751 with the aryl- or alke-nylpalladium 752 generates the Pd homoenolate 753. and subsequent reductive elimination gives the /3-aryl or alkenyl ketone 754[618]. It should be noted that the Pd homoenolate 753 generated in this reaction undergoes reductive elimination without d-elimination. [Pg.239]

The chiral siloxycyclopropane 106 undergoes carbonylative homocoupling to form the 4-ketopimelate derivative 108 via the palladium homoenolate 107 without racemization. The reaction is catalytic in CHCI3, but stoichiometric in benzene[93]. [Pg.540]

Kuwajima, I. and Nakamura, E. Metal Homoenolates from Siloxycyclopropanes. 155,1-39 (1990). [Pg.148]

The last few years have seen the development of an entirely new methodology in which the metal homoenolate is prepared by ring opening of siloxycyclopropanes with metal halides Eq. (4). In these reactions, a very subtle balance of... [Pg.3]

The chemistry of cyclopropanol [7] has long been studied in the context of electrophilic reactions, and these investigations have resulted in the preparation of some 3-mercurio ketones. As such mercury compounds are quite unreactive, they have failed to attract great interest in homoenolate chemistry. Only recent studies to exploit siloxycyclopropanes as precursors to homoenolates have led to the use of 3-mercurio ketones for the transition metal-catalyzed formation of new carbon-carbon bonds [8] (vide infra). [Pg.4]

In 1977, an article from the authors laboratories [9] reported an TiCV mediated coupling reaction of 1-alkoxy-l-siloxy-cyclopropane with aldehydes (Scheme 1), in which the intermediate formation of a titanium homoenolate (path b) was postulated instead of a then-more-likely Friedel-Crafts-like mechanism (path a). This finding some years later led to the isolation of the first stable metal homoenolate [10] that exhibits considerable nucleophilic reactivity toward (external) electrophiles. Although the metal-carbon bond in this titanium complex is essentially covalent, such titanium species underwent ready nucleophilic addition onto carbonyl compounds to give 4-hydroxy esters in good yield. Since then a number of characterizable metal homoenolates have been prepared from siloxycyclopropanes [11], The repertoire of metal homoenolate reactions now covers most of the standard reaction types ranging from simple... [Pg.4]

The recent surge of interests in metal homoenolate chemistry has been stimulated by the recognition that the siloxycyclopropane route can afford novel reactive homoenolate species that are stable enough for isolation, purification, and characterization. The stability of such homoenolates crucially depends on the subtle balance of nucleophilic and electrophilic reactivity of the two reactive sites in the molecule. Naturally, homoenolates with metal-carbon bonds that are too stable do not serve as nucleophiles in organic synthesis. [Pg.7]

The common Lewis acids in this group, A1C13 and BX3, do not form metal homoenolates in their reaction with siloxycyclopropanes, only GaCl3 reacts with 1-alkoxy-l-siloxycyclopropanes 1 to give propionate homoenolates [11]. [Pg.9]

Various types of carbon-carbon bond forming reactions of metal homoenolates have been reported, some of which are highly synthetically useful. Scheme 3 illustrates reaction types of zinc homoenolates (8 or 9). In this section the reactions of stable homoenolates are presented according to the reaction types. Examples, in which siloxycyclopropanes generate transient, unstable homoenolates, are described in Sect. 5. [Pg.12]

Treatment of zinc homoenolates with Me3SiCl in a polar solvent also results in cyclopropane formation Eq. (23). This provides a very mild route to the siloxycyclopropanes [24]. [Pg.13]

This section presents a summary of some recent reports on the chemistry of reactive metal homoenolates, which are generated by methods other than the siloxycyclopropane ring cleavage. [Pg.23]

Two groups independently reported the formation of titanium homoenolates by the transmetalation reaction of 3-stannyl-propionate esters with TiCl, Eq. (48) [45, 46]. Amide homoenolates become available along this route [47], The trichlorotitanium species thus obtained have been shown ( H NMR) to be similar to that generated along the siloxycyclopropane route and indeed exhibit very similar reactivities. This method does provide a conventient alternative to the siloxycyclopropane route. [Pg.24]

Reactions of Transient Homoenolates Generated from Siloxycyclopropanes... [Pg.25]

There have been several reports on reactions of siloxycyclopropanes involving transient metal homoenolates which eluded characterization owing to their instability. [Pg.25]

Reaction between a siloxycyclopropane and Cu(BF3)2 in ether gives a product due to symmetrical coupling of two homoenolate moieties (Eq. 53, Table 12) [51]. This is particularly noteworthy as a simple route to 1,6-ketones superior to classical approaches such as the Kolbe electrolysis [52], Several lines of evidence suggest the intermediacy of Cu(II) homoenolates. AgBF3 and CuF2 effect the same reaction albeit with lower yields. The reactions with cupric halides give... [Pg.26]


See other pages where Homoenolates siloxycyclopropanes is mentioned: [Pg.215]    [Pg.188]    [Pg.395]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.11]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.17]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.21]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.28]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.31]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.44 ]




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Homoenol

Homoenolate

Homoenolates

Siloxycyclopropane

Siloxycyclopropanes

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