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Ketones, conjugated dissolving metal reduction

DISSOLVING METAL REDUCTION AND RELATED REACTIONS OF NONCONJUGATED AND CONJUGATED ALDEHYDES AND KETONES... [Pg.308]

Although Smh is more chemoselective than traditional dissolving metal reagents, it does react with sulfoxides, epoxides, the conjugated double bonds of unsaturated ketones, aldehydes and esters, alkyl bromides, iodides and p-toluenesulfonates. It does not, however, reduce carboxylic acids, esters, phosphine oxides or alkyl chlorides. In common with most dissolving metal systems, ketones with an a-hetero substituent suffer loss of the substituent rather than reduction of the carbonyl group. ... [Pg.115]

Isolated carbon-carbon double bonds are not normally reduced by dissolving metal reducing agents. Reduction is possible when the double bond is conjugated, because the intermediate anion can be stabilized by electron delocalization. The best reagent is a solution of an alkali metal in liquid ammonia, with or without addition of an alcohol - the so-called Birch reduction conditions. Under these conditions conjugated alkenes, a,p-unsaturated ketones and even aromatic rings can be reduced to dihydro derivatives. [Pg.427]

As was mentioned in section 2.3.3, ytterbium metal dissolves in liquid ammonia to yield ammoniated electrons and Yb " ions. This solution was used by White et al. (1978) to perform reductions of various aromatic systems, similar to the Birch reactions which use lithium or sodium as the metal. The addition of benzoic acid or anisole dissolved in a 10 1 mixture of THF-tert-butyl alcohol, to an ytterbium-ammonia solution gives 1,4-dihydrobenzoic acid (56% yield). Triple bonds are cleanly reduced to trans olefins (i.e. PhC CPh traK5-PhCH=CHPh 75%). The C=C double bonds of conjugated ketones are also reduced by this system. Since the reaction medium initially contains both solvated electrons and Yb + ions it is likely that the above reactions are not directly connected with the presence of divalent ytterbium species. [Pg.563]


See other pages where Ketones, conjugated dissolving metal reduction is mentioned: [Pg.113]    [Pg.481]    [Pg.397]    [Pg.43]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.245]    [Pg.1]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.108]    [Pg.272]    [Pg.254]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.255]    [Pg.242]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.397 ]




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Conjugate ketones

Conjugate reduction

Conjugated ketones

Dissolved metal

Dissolving metal conjugate reduction a-alkylated ketones

Dissolving metals

Dissolving metals reduction

Ketones conjugate reduction

Ketones dissolving metal reductions

Ketones metalation

Ketones, conjugated reduction

Metals dissolving metal reductions

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