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Iridium allylic oxidation

Bis-allylic oxidation of 23 and related cyclohexa-1,4-dienes provides a convenient and general preparation of cyclohexa-2,5-dien-l-ones (Scheme 7). These cross-conjugated die-nones are substrates for a variety of photochemical rearrangement and intramolecular cycloaddition reactions. Amide-directed hydrogenations of dienones 24a and 24b with the homogeneous iridium catalyst afford cyclohexanones 25a and 25b, containing three stereogenic centers on the six-... [Pg.3]

Iridium catalysts have not been widely developed for allylic oxidation however a small number of examples of such use have been reported.One example is given below (equation 45). [Pg.108]

Successive hydrogen transfers within 60, followed by coordination of olefin and then H2 (an unsaturate route), constitute the catalytic cycle, while isomerization is effected through HFe(CO)3(7r-allyl) formed from 59. Loss of H2 from 60 was also considered to be photoinduced, and several hydrides, including neutral and cationic dihydrides of iridium(III) (385, 450, 451), ruthenium(II) (452) and a bis(7j-cyclopentadienyltungsten) dihydride (453), have been shown to undergo such reductive elimination of hydrogen. Photoassisted oxidative addition of H2 has also been dem-... [Pg.378]

Scheme 11 Carbonyl tert-prenylation, crotylation, and allylation from the aldehyde or alcohol oxidation level under the conditions or iridium-catalyzed transfer hydrogenation... Scheme 11 Carbonyl tert-prenylation, crotylation, and allylation from the aldehyde or alcohol oxidation level under the conditions or iridium-catalyzed transfer hydrogenation...
More recently, using the cyclometallated iridium C,(7-benzoate derived from allyl acetate, 4-methoxy-3-nitrobenzoic acid and BIPHEP, catalytic carbonyl crotylation employing 1,3-butadiene from the aldehyde, or alcohol oxidation was achieved under transfer hydrogenation conditions [274]. Carbonyl addition occurs with roughly equal facility from the alcohol or aldehyde oxidation level. However, products are obtained as diastereomeric mixtures. Stereoselective variants of these processes are under development. It should be noted that under the conditions of ruthenium-catalyzed transfer hydrogenation, conjugated dienes, including butadiene, couple to alcohols or aldehydes to provide either products of carbonyl crotylation or p,y-enones (Scheme 16) [275, 276]. [Pg.122]

As demonstrated in recent work by Obora and Ishii, alkynes serve as allyl donors in carbonyl allylations from the alcohol oxidation level [277]. Specifically, upon exposure to an iridium catalyst generated in situ from [lr(OH)(cod)]2 and P( -Oct)3, l-aryl-2-methylalkynes couple to primary alcohols to furnish homoallylic alcohols with complete branched regioselectivity and excellent levels of diastereoselectivity (Scheme 17). [Pg.123]

Scheme 17 Carbonyl arylallylation from the alcohol oxidation level via iridium-catalyzed transfer hydrogenation employing alkynes as allyl donors... Scheme 17 Carbonyl arylallylation from the alcohol oxidation level via iridium-catalyzed transfer hydrogenation employing alkynes as allyl donors...
Scheme 19 Enantioselective carbonyl allylation from the alcohol or aldehyde oxidation level via iridium-catalyzed C-C bond-forming transfer hydrogenation... Scheme 19 Enantioselective carbonyl allylation from the alcohol or aldehyde oxidation level via iridium-catalyzed C-C bond-forming transfer hydrogenation...
Scheme 22 1, n-Glycols as dialdehyde equivalents in iridium-catalyzed enantioselective carbonyl allylation from the alcohol oxidation level... [Pg.127]

Abstract The purpose of this chapter is to present a survey of the organometallic chemistry and catalysis of rhodium and iridium related to the oxidation of organic substrates that has been developed over the last 5 years, placing special emphasis on reactions or processes involving environmentally friendly oxidants. Iridium-based catalysts appear to be promising candidates for the oxidation of alcohols to aldehydes/ketones as products or as intermediates for heterocyclic compounds or domino reactions. Rhodium complexes seem to be more appropriate for the oxygenation of alkenes. In addition to catalytic allylic and benzylic oxidation of alkenes, recent advances in vinylic oxygenations have been focused on stoichiometric reactions. This review offers an overview of these reactions... [Pg.217]

Rhodium complexes were generally found to be more effective than iridium, but on the whole they show moderate activity in alkene oxygenation reactions. Significantly, epoxides, a typical product of the oxidation of olefins catalyzed by the middle transition metals, have rarely been evoked as products [18-22]. Although allylic alcohols [23] or ethers [24] have sometimes been described as products, the above cited rhodium and iridiiun complexes are characterized by an excellent selectivity in the oxygenation of terminal alkenes to methyl ketones. [Pg.219]

Di(carbene)gold(I) salts, oxidation, 2, 293—294 Dicarbido clusters, with decarutheniums, 6, 1036 Dicarbollide amides, with tantalum, 5, 184 Dicarbollide thorium complexes, synthesis and characterization, 4, 224—225 Dicarbollyl ligands, in nickel complexes, 8, 185 Dicarbonyl complexes arylation with lead triacetates diastereoselectivity, 9, 389 enantioselectivity, 9, 391 mechanisms, 9, 387 reaction examples, 9, 382 indium-mediated allylation, 9, 675 with iridium, 7, 287 reductive cyclization, 10, 529 in Ru and Os half-sandwiches, 6, 508 with Zr—Hf(II), 4, 700... [Pg.94]

A related rhodium catalyzed enantioselective reductive coupling of acetylene to N arylsulfonyl imines leads to the formation of (Z) dienyl allylic amines (Scheme 1.28) [105]. The scope of the reaction is comparable to that demonstrated for the analogous iridium catalyzed process. The reaction between the acetylene and rhodium leads to the oxidative dimerization of acetylene to form a cationic rhoda cyclopentadiene that then reacts with the imine to generate the product after the protolytic cleavage and reductive elimination. [Pg.32]


See other pages where Iridium allylic oxidation is mentioned: [Pg.241]    [Pg.528]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.375]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.514]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.117]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.124]    [Pg.128]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.586]    [Pg.108]    [Pg.78]    [Pg.1102]    [Pg.1108]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.4091]    [Pg.1188]    [Pg.1105]    [Pg.1712]    [Pg.305]    [Pg.117]    [Pg.1654]    [Pg.309]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.152]   


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Allylic oxidation

Iridium allyl

Iridium oxides

Oxidation iridium

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