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Hydroamination oxidative amination

With some secondary amines, especially morpholine, the reaction leads to a mixture of the oxidative amination product and of the hydroamination product, both corresponding to an anh-Markovnikov addition (Eq. 4.39) [166]. [Pg.109]

Some of the hydroarylation product is also observed substituted anilines afford the two products to varying degrees (Equation (15)). The closely related rhodium complexes [Rh(PCy3)2Cl]2, [Rh(dmpe)Cl]2 (where dmpe= l,2-bis(dimethylphosphino)ethane), and [Rh(C8H14)Cl]2 show essentially no catalytic activity.166 Application of [Rh(PEt3)2Cl]2 to the reaction of aniline with styrene gives a mixture of hydroamination and oxidative amination products, the latter predominating.167 Other related rhodium-catalyzed amination reactions (oxidative amination) have been reported.168 169... [Pg.291]

The first example of anti-Markovnikoff hydroamination of aromatic alkenes has been demonstrated with cationic rhodium complexes.170 A combination of [Rh(COD)2]+/2PPh3 in THF under reflux yields the N-H addition product as the minor species alongside that resulting from oxidative amination (Scheme 37). Hydrogenation products are also detected. [Pg.291]

If the more activated alkene 2-vinylpyridine is used in place of styrene with the same catalysts and the same range of substrates, anti-Markovnikoff hydroamination is also found. Thus, N-[2-(2 -pyridyl)ethyl]piperidine was isolated in 53% yield from reaction of 2-vinylpyridine with piperidine in the presence of [Rh(COD)2]+/2PPh3 under reflux. N H addition was observed with other amines, the remaining product in all cases being primarily that from oxidative amination (Table 12). When the catalytic reaction was run in the absence of phosphine, the yield of hydroamination product increased dramatically.171... [Pg.292]

A facile intramolecular hydroamination of unactivated alkenes (58), catalysed by the palladium complex (60), has been reported to take place at room temperature. The formation of hydroamination products (59) rather than oxidative amination products is believed to be due to the use of a tridentate ligand, which effectively inhibits -hydride elimination.78... [Pg.332]

Earher mechanistic studies by Milstein on a achiral Ir catalyst system indicated that the iridium catalyzed norbornene hydroamination involves amine activation as a key step in the catalytic cycle [27] rather than alkene activation, which is observed for most other late transition metal catalyzed hydroamination reactions [28]. Thus, the iridium catalyzed hydroamination of norbornene with aniline is initiated by an oxidative addition of aniline to the metal center, followed by insertion of the strained olefin into the iridium amido bond (Scheme 11.4). Subsequent reductive elimina tion completes the catalytic cycle and gives the hydroamination product 11. Unfor tunately, this catalyst system seems to be limited to highly strained olefins. [Pg.345]

Thus, N-H bond cleavage in this system provides a foundation for the development of mild catalytic transformation of ammonia as in arene-oxidative amination and olefin hydroamination. [Pg.531]

Subsequent C-C multiple-bond coordination and insertion into one of the aforementioned reactive bonds results in the generation of a metal-alkyl complex, which can then undergo reductive elimination to release the hydroamination product and regenerate the electron-rich catalyticaUy active metal complex. Once again, in this mechanistic profile, reductive elimination must proceed more efficiently than potentially competing P-hydride elimination [134-144], and often, competing oxidative amination products are observed in efforts to realize hydroamination reactions [145],... [Pg.1164]

Some contaminating oxidative amination products were obtained, resulting in satisfactory isolated yields of the desired hydroamination products (from approximately 55-75%) [245]. [Pg.1194]

Rhodium catalysts have also found application in oxidative aminations of styrenes. Beller and co-workers observed that numerous styrenes reacted with various kinds of secondary aliphatic amines in the presence of the cationic rhodium complexe [Rh(cod)2]BF4 and PPhs. Regioselectively the corresponding anti-Markovnikov products ( -enamines) were formed [49], While the Markovnikov product was never observed under such conditions, the target enamine was mostly obtained along with hydrogenated olefin, and in some cases even small amounts of hydroaminated products were detected [50],... [Pg.59]

Amine activatitMi pathway has been well studied in catalysis by lanthanides, early transition metals, and alkali metals. In metal amide chemistry of late transition metals, there are mainly two pathways to synthesize metal amide complexes applicable under hydroamination conditions [54], One is oxidative addition of amines to produce a metal amide species bearing hydride (Scheme 8a). The other gives a metal amide species by deprotonation of an amine metal intermediate derived from the coordination of amines to metal center, and it often occurs as ammonium salt elimination by the second amine molecule (Scheme 8b). Although the latter type of amido metal species is rather limited in hydroamination by late transition metals, it is often proposed in the mechanism of palladium-catalyzed oxidative amination reaction, which terminates the catalytic cycle by p-hydride elimination [26]. Hydroamination through aminometallation with metal amide species demands at least two coordination sites on metal, one for amine coordination and another for C-C multiple bond coordination. Accordingly, there is a marked difference between the hydroamination via C-C multiple bond activation, which demands one coordination site on metal, and via amine activation. [Pg.126]

An alternative mechanism starts from the coordination of an amine, and the successive deprotonation gives a metal amide species (Scheme 8b). Coordination of a C-C multiple bond to this metal center is followed by migratory insertion into the M-N bond. The newly formed M-C bond is cleaved by protonolysis to regenerate the active metal species. The advantage of this pathway is that it does not require the change of oxidation number of metal, and it looks similar in mechanism to hydroamination of other group metals (for group 4 metals, metathet-ical reaction takes place at the step of C-N bond formation) and partially similar in mechanism to oxidative amination of late transition metals. However, so far, most hydroamination reactions catalyzed by late transition metals can be explained by the mechanisms discussed in Sects. 3.1 and 3.2.2. If the activation of the C-C... [Pg.127]

In 1974, Hegedus and coworkers reported the pa]ladium(II)-promoted addition of secondary amines to a-olefins by analogy to the Wacker oxidation of terminal olefins and the platinum(II) promoted variant described earlier. This transformation provided an early example of (formally) alkene hydroamination and a remarkably direct route to tertiary amines without the usual problems associated with the use of alkyl halide electrophiles. [Pg.136]

Hegedus et al. have thoroughly studied the homogeneous hydroamination of olefins in the presence of transition metal complexes. However, most of these reactions are either promoted or assisted, i.e. are stoichiometric reactions of an amine with a coordinated alkene [98-101] or, if catalytic, give rise to the oxidative hydroamination products, as for example in the cyclization of o-allylanilines to 2-alkylindoles [102, 103], i.e. are relevant to Wacker-type chemistry [104]. [Pg.97]

Transition metal complex-catalyzed carbon-nitrogen bond formations have been developed as fundamentally important reactions. This chapter highlights the allylic amination and its asymmetric version as well as all other possible aminations such as crosscoupling reactions, oxidative addition-/3-elimination, and hydroamination, except for nitrene reactions. This chapter has been organized according to the different types of reactions and references to literature from 1993 to 2004 have been used. [Pg.695]

Amination Through Oxidative Addition, / -Elimination, and Hydroamination... [Pg.710]

Laurel Schafer of the University of British Columbia reports (Organic Lett. 2003,5,4733-4736) that terminal alkynes undergo smooth hydroamination with a Ti catalyst. The intermediate imine 4 can be hydrolyzed to the aldehyde 5 or reduced directly to the amine 6. The alkyne to aldehyde conversion has previously been carried out by hydroboration/oxidation (J. Org. Chem. 1996, 61, 3224), hydrosilylation/oxidation (Tetrahedron Lett. 1984,25, 321), or Ru catalysis (J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2001, 123, 11917). There was no previous general procedure for the anti-Markownikov conversion of a terminal alkyne to the amine. [Pg.118]

Cazes et al. reported the Pd-catalyzed intermolecular hydroamination of substituted allenes using aliphatic amines in the presence of triethylammonium iodide leading to allylic amines [19]. In a way similar to the Pd-catalyzed hydrocarbona-tion reactions we reported that the hydroamination of allenes [20], enynes [21], methylenecyclopropanes [22], and cyclopropene [10] proceeds most probably via oxidative addition of an N-H bond under neutral or acidic conditions to give allylic amines. The presence of benzoic acid as an additive promotes the Pd-medi-ated inter- and intramolecular hydroamination of internal alkynes [23]. Intramolecular hydroamination has attracted more attention in recent years, because of its importance in the synthesis of a variety of nitrogen-containing heterocycles found in many biologically important compounds. The metal-catalyzed intramolecular hydroamination/cyclization of aminoalkenes, aminodienes, aminoallenes, and aminoalkynes has been abundantly documented [23]. [Pg.338]

A different catalytic cycle for alkene hydroamination is initiated by the oxidative addition of the N-H bond to the metal, followed by insertion of the alkene into the metal-nitrogen bond and reductive elimination to form the amine. The oxidative addition of unactivated N-H bonds to platinum(O) complexes is thermodynamically unfavorable, so the catalytic cycle cannot be completed17, but the successful iridium(I)-catalyzed amination of norbornene with aniline has been reported18. [Pg.861]

Scheme 2. Catalytic cycle for the hydroamination of olefins with activation of the amine by N-H oxidative addition to the transition metal. Scheme 2. Catalytic cycle for the hydroamination of olefins with activation of the amine by N-H oxidative addition to the transition metal.
Group 4 bis(amidate)bis(amido) complexes have also been identified as precatalysts for the more challenging hydroamination of alkenes. The majority of investigations in this field focus on the intramolecular cychzation of aminoalkenes with zirconium-based catalysts. [64e] Neutral group 4 bis(amidate) zirconium amido or imido complexes are efficient precatalysts for the intramolecular cychzation of primary amines to form pyrrolidine and piperidine products (Scheme 12). The monomeric imido complex can be generated by reaction of the bis(amido) complex with 2,6-dimethylaniline and trapped with triphenylphosphine oxide. [64e] The bis(amido) and imido complexes... [Pg.388]


See other pages where Hydroamination oxidative amination is mentioned: [Pg.147]    [Pg.706]    [Pg.4]    [Pg.1149]    [Pg.1165]    [Pg.417]    [Pg.463]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.717]    [Pg.720]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.49]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.21]    [Pg.204]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.21]    [Pg.167]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.108 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.108 ]




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Amination hydroamination

Hydroamination

Hydroamination amines

Hydroaminations

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