Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Iodides, from alcohols, methyl iodide

Indole, sodium salt, preparation of, 54, 60 Indole, 1-benzyl, 54, 50, 58 Indoles, iV-alkyl-, 54, 58, 60 Iodides, from alcohols, methyl iodide, and triphenyl phosphite, 51, 47 ... [Pg.60]

Xenylenemethylstibine, (C6H4)2Sb.CH3, is prepared by treating the preceding iodide with magnesium methyl iodide. It crystallises from petroleum as pale yellowish-white leaflets, M.pt. 57° C. It yields a dibromide as a pale yellow microcrystallme powder, M.pt. 207° C., slightly soluble in acetone or alcohol but not appreciably soluble in other organic solvents. [Pg.258]

N-Methyl-N,N -dicyclohexylcarbodiimidium iodide Iodides from alcohols Inversion of configuration... [Pg.444]

Allow a mixture of 0-5 g. of the tertiary amine and 0-5 ml. of colourless methyl iodide to stand for 5 minutes. If reaction has not occurred, warm under reflux for 5 minutes on a water bath and then cool in ice water. The mixture will generally set solid if it does not, scratch the sides of the tube with a glass rod. RecrystaUise the solid product from absolute alcohol, ethyl acetate, acetone, glacial acetic acid or alcohol-ether. [Pg.660]

Ammodendrine, C jH oONj, HjO (No. 1, table, p. 116). The base has m.p. 73 °, becomes anhydrous at 70-80°, and then melts at 50-60°, Wd i 0°. The salts are amorphous and deliquescent except the hydriodide B. HI, which forms a crystalline precipitate, m.p. 218-20°, from alcohol, and the perchlorate, m.p. 199-200°. An amorphous A-benzoyl derivative was obtained. With methyl iodide ammodendrine behaves as a secondary base, yielding first A-methylammodendrine hydriodide (a crystalline precipitate, m.p. 183-5°, from a mixture of alcohol and acetone), and at the second stage iV-methylammodendrine methiodide, m.p. 163-5°. On hydrogenation ammodendrine furnishes a dihydro-base, which is hydrolysed into acetic acid and 2 3 -dipiperidyl, C oHjoNj, and must be dZ-A-acetyl-3-a-piperidylpiperidine. Ammodendrine should therefore be acetyltetrahydroanabasine and is of biological interest as the first recorded occurrence of this type of alkaloid in the Leguminoss. ... [Pg.139]

Worenine. This alkaloid, also obtained by Kitasato from Coptis japonica was isolated as the tetrahydro-base, C,oHjg04N, which crystallises from alcohol in colourless prisms, m.p. 212-3°, and is oxidised by iodine in alcohol to worenine iodide, yellow crystals from which worenine chloride, thin orange-yellow prisms, m.p. 295° (dec.), can be obtained. Tetrahydro-worenine behaves as a tertiary base, contains methylenedioxy- but no methoxyl groups, and its absorption spectrum closely resembles that of tetrahydrocoptisine from which it differs in empirical composition by. CHj. Worenine is, therefore, represented by (XXX), the alternative position (a) for the methyl group being untenable, since a-methyltetra-hydrocoptisine obtained by Freund s method is not identical with... [Pg.344]

Ewins has synthesised both substances from m-methoxybenzoic acid, which on nitration gave 2-nitro-3-methoxybenzoic acid, and this, on reduction and treatment with methyl iodide, yielded damasceninic acid, which, by esterification with methyl alcohol, furnished damascenine. Kaufmann and Rothlen found that the additive product of 8-methoxy-quinoline and methyl sulphate, on oxidation with permanganate, yields formyldamasceninic acid, MeO. CgH3(NMe. CHO). COOH, which can be transformed into damasceninic acid by warming with dilute hydrochloric acid. ... [Pg.633]

Veratramine, C27H3g02N, occurs naturally in V. viride and V. grandi-florum and is also formed by the hydrolysis of veratrosine. It has m.p. 209-210-5°, fa] — 68° (MeOH), and yields a dihydro-derivative, m.p. 198-200°, and a triacetyl-derivative, m.p. 204-6°, which on controlled hydrolysis leaves a. V-acetyl derivative, m.p. 177-180°. Aceording to Saito, veratramine on treatment with methyl iodide in methyl alcohol in presence of sodium carbonate, yields A-methylveratramine methiodide, m.p. 268° (dec.), from whieh the methoehloride, m.p. 277°, ean be prepared. [Pg.707]


See other pages where Iodides, from alcohols, methyl iodide is mentioned: [Pg.140]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.258]    [Pg.219]    [Pg.40]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.319]    [Pg.366]    [Pg.62]    [Pg.65]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.76]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.90]    [Pg.93]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.147]    [Pg.155]    [Pg.189]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.231]    [Pg.365]    [Pg.374]    [Pg.386]    [Pg.416]    [Pg.462]    [Pg.464]    [Pg.488]    [Pg.547]    [Pg.586]    [Pg.591]    [Pg.648]    [Pg.679]    [Pg.762]    [Pg.68]   


SEARCH



Alcohol Methylic

Alcohols methylation

Methyl alcohol—

Methyl iodide

© 2024 chempedia.info