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Imines, alkylation hydrolysis

Alkylation and hydrolysis of imines alkylation of aldehydes 10-107 Alkylation and hydrolysis of dithianes 10-108 Alkylation and hydrolysis of oxazines and similar compounds 10-109 Reaction of diazo aldehydes with boranes... [Pg.1644]

Titanium alkyls also react with aryl- or alkylnitriles to give imines after hydrolysis [16]. [Pg.385]

Hydrolysis of enol esters 0-83 Reduction of acyl halides 0-84 Reduction of carboxylic acids, esters, or anhydrides 0-85 Reduction of amides 0-95 Alkylation and hydrolysis of imines, alkylation of aldehydes 0-97 Alkylation and hydrolysis of dithi-anes... [Pg.1270]

Conversion of CHNH2 to, C=0.2 A convenient three-step conversion of alkyl 6-aminopenicillanates (1) into 6-oxopenicillanates (3) involves ditrifluorometha-nesullonation to give a ditriflamide (2), which in the presence of base eliminates trifluoromethanesulfinic acid to form an imine (a). Hydrolysis of a to the ketone 3 is effected with dilute HC1. [Pg.623]

One of the earliest preparations of this ring system starts with displacement of the hydroxyl of benzaldehyde cyanohydrin (125) by urea. Treatment of the product (126) with hydrochloric acid leads to addition of the remaining urea nitrogen to the nitrile. There is thus obtained, after hydrolysis of the imine (127), the hydantoin (128). Alkylation by means of ethyl iodide affords ethotoin (129)... [Pg.245]

A somewhat more complex side chain is incorporated by alkylation of the carbanion of the substituted cyanoacetate, 148, with 2-chloroethylmethyl sulfide. Condensation of the resulting cyanoester (149) with thiourea followed by hydrolysis of the resulting imine (150) affords methitural (151)... [Pg.275]

When enamines are treated with alkyl halides, an alkylation occurs that is analogous to the first step of 12-14. Hydrolysis of the imine salt gives a ketone. Since the enamine is normally formed from a ketone (16-12), the net result is alkylation of the ketone at the a position. The method, known as the Stork enamine reaction is an alternative to the ketone alkylation considered at 10-105. The Stork method has the advantage that it generally leads almost exclusively to monoalkylation of the ketone, while 10-105, when applied to ketones, is difficult to stop with the introduction of just one alkyl group. Alkylation usually takes place on the less substituted side of the original ketone. The most commonly used amines are the cyclic amines piperidine, morpholine, and pyrrolidine. [Pg.787]

Starting from the benzylidene diimine 24 (Scheme 15) and only one equivalent of TosMlC, the same reaction afforded the imidazole-imine derivative and then, after alkylation, the corresponding salt 25. After hydrolysis, an... [Pg.201]

One of the potentially most useful aspects of the imine anions is that they can be prepared from enantiomerically pure amines. When imines derived from chiral amines are alkylated, the new carbon-carbon bond is formed with a bias for one of the two possible stereochemical configurations. Hydrolysis of the imine then leads to enantiomerically enriched ketone. Table 1.4 lists some examples that have been reported.118... [Pg.51]

The groups of Loupy and Jun have presented a chelation-assisted rhodium(I)-cata-lyzed ortho-alkylation of aromatic imines with alkenes (Scheme 6.57) [119]. The use of 2 mol% of Wilkinson s catalyst, RhCl(PPh3)3, and 5 equivalents of the corresponding alkene under solvent-free conditions proved to be optimal, providing the desired ortho-alkylated ketones in high yields after acidic hydrolysis. Somewhat lower yields were obtained when the imine preparation and the ortho-alkylation were realized in a one-pot procedure. [Pg.147]

Rapid monoalkylations are achieved in good yield compared with classical methods. Of particular interest is the synthesis of ot-amino acids by alkylation of aldimines with microwave activation. Subsequent acidic hydrolysis of the alkylated imine provides leucine, serine, or phenylalanine in preparatively useful yields within 1-5 min [50], Alkylation of phenylacetonitrile was performed by solid-liquid PTC in 1-3 min under microwave irradiation (Eq. 36 and Tab. 5.14). The nitriles obtained can subsequently be quickly hydrolyzed in a microwave oven to yield the corresponding amides or acids [56]. [Pg.163]

The tetrachloroferrate or tetralluoroborate salts of alkylated alkyl- or aryl-nitriles (nitrilium ions) are reduced to imines with triethylsilane. Subsequent hydrolysis of the intermediate imines leads to aldehydes in good yields, thus providing an excellent overall route to aldehydes from nitriles (Eq. 338).28,562... [Pg.104]

The electron-deficient alkene (5.2 mmol) in MeCN (5 ml) is added to an intimate mixture of powdered K2C03 (1 g) and NaOH (0.2 g), the (S)-menthone-protected ethyl glycine (1.27 g, 5 mmol), and TBA-Br (0.16 g, 0.5 mmol) in MeCN (20 ml). The mixture is stirred for 1 h at 0°C and then filtered. The solid is washed with MeCN (10 ml) and the combined organic solutions are evaporated and the residue is taken up in Et20. The ethereal solution is washed well with H20, dried (MgS04), and evaporated to produce the alkylated imine, which can be converted into the amino acid upon hydrolysis with aqueous acid. [Pg.278]

Aryl alkyl amines gave hydroxylamine 0-arylsulfonates when reacted with arylsul-fonyl peroxide. The products were later decomposed to azomethine and further hydrolysis results in the corresponding amine with one less carbon atom. Thus when p-methoxy-benzylamine was treated with p-nitrophenylsulfonyl peroxide at —78 °C in ethyl acetate, p-methoxybenzaldehyde and p-methoxyaniline were obtained . Cyclic amines with p-nitrophenylsulfonyl peroxide were converted to the Al-(p-nitrophenylsulfonyloxy)amine derivatives, which further rearranged to ring-expanded cyclic imines in good yields (equation 9 f. ... [Pg.1007]


See other pages where Imines, alkylation hydrolysis is mentioned: [Pg.196]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.135]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.79]    [Pg.296]    [Pg.33]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.205]    [Pg.553]    [Pg.788]    [Pg.297]    [Pg.121]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.585]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.559]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.355]    [Pg.98]    [Pg.315]    [Pg.1381]    [Pg.1453]    [Pg.1553]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.72]    [Pg.171]    [Pg.448]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.594 , Pg.632 ]




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Alkyl imines

Hydrolysis imine

Imine alkylations

Imines alkylation

Imines, hydrolysis

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