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Insertion, migratory multiple

Oxidative addition, coordination, and reductive elimination are well-known elementary steps of metal-mediated transformations [14—16]. However, insertion of multiple bonds (or migratory insertion) appears to be comparably less studied stage... [Pg.3]

Preparation of palladium enolates and their reactions (/3-hydride elimination to enones, migratory insertion to C-C multiple bonds, reductive coupling with allyl or aryl groups, etc.) have been reported. However, the nucleophilic addition of palladium enolates to C=0 and C=N bonds has been little investigated.463... [Pg.466]

Figure 12. Scheme of stereospecific 1-olefins polymerization with generic C2 and Cs symmetric metallocenes. In the framework of a regular chain migratory mechanism, the C2 and Cs symmetric catalysts lead to iso- and syndiotactic polymers, respectively. In fact, multiple insertions of the same enantioface occur with C2 symmetric metallocenes, while multiple insertions of alternating enantiofaces occur with Cs metallocenes. [Pg.48]

In the process of olefin insertion, also known as carbometalation, the 1,2 migratory insertion of the coordinated carbon-carbon multiple bond into the metal-carbon bond results in the formation of a metal-alkyl or metal-alkenyl complex. The reaction, in which the bond order of the inserted C-C bond is decreased by one unit, proceeds stereoselectively ( -addition) and usually also regioselectively (the more bulky metal is preferentially attached to the less substituted carbon atom. The willingness of alkenes and alkynes to undergo carbometalation is usually in correlation with the ease of their coordination to the metal centre. In the process of insertion a vacant coordination site is also produced on the metal, where further reagents might be attached. Of the metals covered in this book palladium is by far the most frequently utilized in such transformations. [Pg.11]

Fig. 8.3 Warren R. Roper (born in 1938) studied chemistry at the University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand, and completed his Ph.D. in 1963 under the supervision of Cuthbert J. Wilkins. He then undertook postdoctoral research with James P. Collman at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in the US, and returned to New Zealand as Lecturer in Chemistry at the University of Auckland in 1966. In 1984, he was appointed Professor of Chemistry at the University of Auckland and became Research Professor of Chemistry at the same institution in 1999. His research interests are widespread with the emphasis on synthetic and structural inorganic and organometallic chemistry. Special topics have been low oxidation state platinum group metal complexes, oxidative addition reactions, migratory insertion reactions, metal-carbon multiple bonds, metallabenzenoids and more recently compounds with bonds between platinum group metals and the main group elements boron, silicon, and tin. His achievements were recognized by the Royal Society of Chemistry through the Organometallic Chemistry Award and the Centenary Lectureship. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand and of the Royal Society London, and was awarded the degree Doctor of Science (honoris causa) by the University of Canterbury in 1999 (photo by courtesy from W. R. R.)... Fig. 8.3 Warren R. Roper (born in 1938) studied chemistry at the University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand, and completed his Ph.D. in 1963 under the supervision of Cuthbert J. Wilkins. He then undertook postdoctoral research with James P. Collman at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in the US, and returned to New Zealand as Lecturer in Chemistry at the University of Auckland in 1966. In 1984, he was appointed Professor of Chemistry at the University of Auckland and became Research Professor of Chemistry at the same institution in 1999. His research interests are widespread with the emphasis on synthetic and structural inorganic and organometallic chemistry. Special topics have been low oxidation state platinum group metal complexes, oxidative addition reactions, migratory insertion reactions, metal-carbon multiple bonds, metallabenzenoids and more recently compounds with bonds between platinum group metals and the main group elements boron, silicon, and tin. His achievements were recognized by the Royal Society of Chemistry through the Organometallic Chemistry Award and the Centenary Lectureship. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand and of the Royal Society London, and was awarded the degree Doctor of Science (honoris causa) by the University of Canterbury in 1999 (photo by courtesy from W. R. R.)...
Our laboratory has also taken advantage of multiple insertion processes to access the scopadulan diterpenes (Scheme 6-24) [52]. An early example was the economical conversion of aryl iodide 136 to tetracycle 137, an intermediate which was subsequently converted to ( )-scopadulcic acid B (138). In this conversion, migratory insertion of the neighboring exocyclic alkene provided a tricyclic intermediate having no /5-hydrogens, which subsequently underwent a transannular 5-exo Heck reaction with the trisubstituted... [Pg.137]

Migratory insertion does not lead to a change in formal oxidation state, unless the inserting ligand Y is an alkylidene, alkylidyne, or isoelectronic ligand bound by a metal-ligand multiple bond. [Pg.350]

The insertions of alk5mes into metal-carbon o-bonds are less common than either the insertions of olefins into metal-carbon bonds or the insertions of alkynes into metal-hydride bonds. Nevertheless, several examples of this reaction have been studied, and many examples are part of catalytic processes. Most of the insertions of alkynes into metal-carbon bonds occur by concerted migratory insertion pathivays and provide products from cis addition of the metal and hydrocarbyl group across the carbon-carbon multiple bond, as predicted on theoretical groimds by Thom and Hoffmann. In some cases, the products from trans addition are observed, but these kinetic products are thought to result from isomerization of the vinyl group in reaction intermediates formed by cis addition. [Pg.379]

A few final comments should be made on the insertions of substrates containing C-C multiple bonds into the bonds between a transition metal and an electronegative heteroatom. First, insertions of olefins into related thiolate and phosphide complexes are as rare as insertions into alkoxo and amido complexes. Reactions of acrylonitrile into the metal-phosphorus bonds of palladium- and platinum-phosphido complexes to give products from formal insertions have been observed, and one example is showm in Equation 9.90. However, these reactions are more likely to occur by direct attack of the phosphorus on the electrophilic carbon of acrylonitrile than by migratory insertion. Second, the insertions of alkynes into metal-oxygen or metal-nitrogen covalent bonds are rare, even though the C-C ir-bond in an alkyne is weaker than the ir-bond in an alkene. [Pg.388]

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]


See other pages where Insertion, migratory multiple is mentioned: [Pg.41]    [Pg.405]    [Pg.160]    [Pg.368]    [Pg.699]    [Pg.153]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.280]    [Pg.555]    [Pg.523]    [Pg.360]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.435]    [Pg.1152]    [Pg.902]    [Pg.204]    [Pg.662]    [Pg.91]    [Pg.240]    [Pg.104]    [Pg.291]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.2]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.165 ]




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Migratory insertion

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