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Hydrogen transfer double

An extremely wide variety of catalysts, Lewis acids, Brmnsted acids, metal oxides, molecular sieves, dispersed sodium and potassium, and light, are effective (Table 5). Generally, acidic catalysts are required for skeletal isomerization and reaction is accompanied by polymerization, cracking, and hydrogen transfer, typical of carbenium ion iatermediates. Double-bond shift is accompHshed with high selectivity by the basic and metallic catalysts. [Pg.365]

Clay-catalyzed dimerization of unsaturated fatty acids appears to be a carbonium ion reaction, based on the observed double bond isomerization, acid catalysis, chain branching, and hydrogen transfer (8,9,11). [Pg.114]

Abstract The use of A-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) complexes as homogeneous catalysts in addition reactions across carbon-carbon double and triple bonds and carbon-heteroatom double bonds is described. The discussion is focused on the description of the catalytic systems, their current mechanistic understanding and occasionally the relevant organometallic chemistry. The reaction types covered include hydrogenation, transfer hydrogenation, hydrosilylation, hydroboration and diboration, hydroamination, hydrothiolation, hydration, hydroarylation, allylic substitution, addition, chloroesterification and chloroacylation. [Pg.23]

Some hydrometalation reactions have been shown to be catalyzed by zirconocene. For instance, CpiZrCf-catalyzed hydroaluminations of alkenes [238] and alkynes [239] with BU3AI have been observed (Scheme 8-34). With alkyl-substituted internal alkynes the process is complicated by double bond migration, and with terminal alkynes double hydrometalation is observed. The reaction with "PrjAl and Cp2ZrCl2 gives simultaneously hydrometalation and C-H activation. Cp2ZrCl2/ BuIi-cat-alyzed hydrosilation of acyclic alkenes [64, 240] was also reported to involve hydrogen transfer via hydrozirconation. [Pg.273]

Catalytic hydrogenation transfers the elements of molecular hydrogen through a series of complexes and intermediates. Diimide, HN=NH, an unstable hydrogen donor that can be generated in situ, finds specialized application in the reduction of carbon-carbon double bonds. Simple alkenes are reduced efficiently by diimide, but other easily reduced functional groups, such as nitro and cyano are unaffected. The mechanism of the reaction is pictured as a concerted transfer of hydrogen via a nonpolar cyclic TS. [Pg.388]

Another important family of elimination reactions has as its common mechanistic feature cyclic TSs in which an intramolecular hydrogen transfer accompanies elimination to form a new carbon-carbon double bond. Scheme 6.20 depicts examples of these reaction types. These are thermally activated unimolecular reactions that normally do not involve acidic or basic catalysts. There is, however, a wide variation in the temperature at which elimination proceeds at a convenient rate. The cyclic TS dictates that elimination occurs with syn stereochemistry. At least in a formal sense, all the reactions can proceed by a concerted mechanism. The reactions, as a group, are often referred to as thermal syn eliminations. [Pg.596]

The silyl radicals formed in the initial scission appear to undergo further reactions, which may be complex. A possible secondary reaction is hydrogen transfer from an alpha carbon atom to give Si-H and a silicon carbon double bond (21)... [Pg.10]

The hydrogen atoms are as a whole antibonding with the remaining part in LU MO, so that the charge-transfer to LU from the base easily comes to release these hydrogens. Similar double-bond shift reactions have also been treated 133>. [Pg.63]

A wide variety of iridium-based hydrogenation catalysts are currently under development, notably for organic syntheses including enantioselective synthesis. Hydrogenation by hydrogen transfer is well known [15], and the reduction of C=0 and C=N double bonds is also possible [16, 17]. [Pg.39]

The scope of hydrogen transfer reactions is not limited to ketones. Imines, carbon-carbon double and triple bonds have also been reduced in this way, although homogeneous and heterogeneous catalyzed reductions using molecular hydrogen are generally preferred for the latter compounds. [Pg.586]

Hydrogen transfer reactions are highly selective and usually no side products are formed. However, a major problem is that such reactions are in redox equilibrium and high TOFs can often only be reached when the equilibria involved are shifted towards the product side. As stated above, this can be achieved by adding an excess of the hydrogen donor. (For a comparison, see Table 20.2, entry 8 and Table 20.7, entry 3, in which a 10-fold increase in TOF, from 6 to 60, can be observed for the reaction catalyzed by neodymium isopropoxide upon changing the amount of hydrogen donor from an equimolar amount to a solvent. Removal of the oxidation product by distillation also increases the reaction rate. When formic acid (49) is employed, the reduction is a truly irreversible reaction [82]. This acid is mainly used for the reduction of C-C double bonds. As the proton and the hydride are removed from the acid, carbon dioxide is formed, which leaves the reaction mixture. Typically, the reaction is performed in an azeotropic mixture of formic acid and triethylamine in the molar ratio 5 2 [83],... [Pg.600]

BINAP has been extensively used for the asymmetric hydrogenation, transfer hydrogenation and isomerisation of double bonds using both ruthenium and rhodium complexes. [Pg.103]

McLafferty Rearrangement with Double Hydrogen Transfer... [Pg.272]

Alkene loss via McLafferty rearrangement at the alkoxy group of aliphatic and aromatic carboxylic acid esters competes with yet another reaction path, where two hydrogens instead of one as in the normal McLafferty product are transferred to the charge site. This second pathway leading to alkenyl loss has early been noticed [94] and became known as McLafferty rearrangement with double hydrogen transfer (r2H) ... [Pg.272]

Studying the competition of McLafferty rearrangement either with charge retention or charge migration and double hydrogen transfer has revealed that ion-neutral complex intermediates (Chap. 6.12) can also play a role for the latter two processes. [102]... [Pg.273]


See other pages where Hydrogen transfer double is mentioned: [Pg.192]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.311]    [Pg.876]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.454]    [Pg.876]    [Pg.226]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.175]    [Pg.394]    [Pg.881]    [Pg.312]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.266]    [Pg.346]    [Pg.351]    [Pg.479]    [Pg.171]    [Pg.142]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.701]    [Pg.272]    [Pg.275]    [Pg.275]    [Pg.212]    [Pg.21]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.223 , Pg.224 , Pg.231 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.223 , Pg.224 , Pg.231 ]




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Double bonds asymmetric transfer hydrogenation

Double hydrogen atom transfer process

Double hydrogenation

Hydrogen-transfer processes double bond hydrogenation

McL with Double Hydrogen Transfer

McLafferty rearrangement with double hydrogen transfer

Single and Stepwise Double Hydrogen Transfer in H-bonds of Medium Strength

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