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Donors, hydride

The synthetic equivalents of the synthon H" are the hydride donors sodium borohydride NaBH4, and lithium aluminium hydride LiAIHi. How might you make TM 21 using this disconnection ... [Pg.9]

A traditional method for such reductions involves the use of a reducing metal such as zinc or tin in acidic solution. Examples are the procedures for preparing l,2,3,4-tetrahydrocarbazole[l] or ethyl 2,3-dihydroindole-2-carbox-ylate[2] (Entry 3, Table 15.1), Reduction can also be carried out with acid-stable hydride donors such as acetoxyborane[4] or NaBHjCN in TFA[5] or HOAc[6]. Borane is an effective reductant of the indole ring when it can complex with a dialkylamino substituent in such a way that it can be delivered intramolecularly[7]. Both NaBH -HOAc and NaBHjCN-HOAc can lead to N-ethylation as well as reduction[8]. This reaction can be prevented by the use of NaBHjCN with temperature control. At 20"C only reduction occurs, but if the temperature is raised to 50°C N-ethylation occurs[9]. Silanes cun also be used as hydride donors under acidic conditions[10]. Even indoles with EW substituents, such as ethyl indole-2-carboxylate, can be reduced[ll,l2]. [Pg.145]

Sodium borohydride and lithium aluminum hydride react with carbonyl compounds in much the same way that Grignard reagents do except that they function as hydride donors rather than as carbanion sources Figure 15 2 outlines the general mechanism for the sodium borohydride reduction of an aldehyde or ketone (R2C=0) Two points are especially important about this process... [Pg.629]

Sodium borohydride is not nearly as potent a hydride donor as lithium aluminum hydride and does not reduce carboxylic acids... [Pg.632]

The reverse reaction also occurs m living systems NADH reduces acetaldehyde to ethanol m the presence of alcohol dehydrogenase In this process NADH serves as a hydride donor and is oxidized to NAD" while acetaldehyde is reduced... [Pg.646]

Reductive cleavage of oxiranes to alcohols by lithium aluminum hydride is an important reaction (64HC(19-1)199), but the most powerful hydride donor for this purpose is lithium triethylborohydride (73JA8486). [Pg.112]

The hydride-donor class of reductants has not yet been successfully paired with enantioselective catalysts. However, a number of chiral reagents that are used in stoichiometric quantity can effect enantioselective reduction of acetophenone and other prochiral ketones. One class of reagents consists of derivatives of LiAlH4 in which some of die hydrides have been replaced by chiral ligands. Section C of Scheme 2.13 shows some examples where chiral diols or amino alcohols have been introduced. Another type of reagent represented in Scheme 2.13 is chiral trialkylborohydrides. Chiral boranes are quite readily available (see Section 4.9 in Part B) and easily converted to borohydrides. [Pg.110]

Bicyclo[3.3.1]nonan-9-one is another ketone that exhibits interesting stereoselectivity. Reduction by hydride donors is preferentially syn to electron-attracting substituents at C-5 (X = EWG in the structure shown below) and anti to electron-releasing substituents (X = ERG below). These effects are observed even for differentially substituted phenyl... [Pg.174]

Enantiomerically pure /J-keto sulfoxides are prepared easily via condensation of a-lithiosulfinyl carbanions with esters. Reduction of the carbonyl group in such /J-keto sulfoxides leads to diastereomeric /J-hydroxysulfoxides. The major recent advance in this area has been the discovery that non-chelating hydride donors (e.g., diisobutylaluminium hydride, DIBAL) tend to form one /J-hydroxysulfoxide while chelating hydride donors [e.g., lithium aluminium hydride (LAH), or DIBAL in the presence of divalent zinc ions] tend to produce the diastereomeric /J-hydroxysulfoxide. The level of diastereoselectivity is often very high. For example, enantiomerically pure /J-ketosulfoxide 32 is reduced by LAH in diethyl ether to give mainly the (RR)-diastereomer whereas DIBAL produces exclusively the (.S R)-diastereomer (equation 30)53-69. A second example is shown in... [Pg.836]

Comparative Reactivity of Common Hydride Donor Reagents... [Pg.396]

Table 5.3. Reactivity of Hydride-Donor Reducing Agents 397... [Pg.397]

A-methoxy-A-methyl amides.87 LiAlH4 and DiBAlH have both been used as the hydride donor. The partial reduction is again the result of the stability of the initial reduction product. The A-methoxy substituent leads to a chelated structure that is stable until acid hydrolysis occurs during workup. [Pg.402]

With less hindered hydride donors, particularly NaBH4 and LiAlH4, confor-mationally biased cyclohexanones give predominantly the equatorial alcohol, which is normally the more stable of the two isomers. However, hydride reductions are exothermic reactions with low activation energies. The TS should resemble starting ketone, so product stability should not control the stereoselectivity. A major factor in the preference for the equatorial isomer is the torsional strain that develops in the formation of the axial alcohol.117... [Pg.408]

A large amount of data has been accumulated on the stereoselectivity of reduction of cyclic ketones.120 Table 5.4 compares the stereoselectivity of reduction of several ketones by hydride donors of increasing steric bulk. The trends in the table illustrate... [Pg.408]

When a ketone is relatively hindered, as, for example, in the bicyclo[2.2. l]heptan-2-one system, steric approach control governs stereoselectivity even for small hydride donors. [Pg.409]

Enantioselective 1,4-reduction of enones can be done using a copper-BINAP catalyst in conjunction with silicon hydride donors.158 Polymethylhydrosilane (PMHS) is one reductants that is used. [Pg.419]

Reduction of Other Functional Groups by Hydride Donors... [Pg.422]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.728 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.54 ]




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