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Lewis acids Houben-Hoesch pyrrole acylation

Friedel-Crafts acylation with nitriles and HC1 is called the Hoesch or the Houben-Hoesch reaction,354 In most cases, a Lewis acid is necessary zinc chloride is the most common. The reaction is generally useful only with phenols, phenolic ethers, and some reactive heterocyclic compounds, e.g., pyrrole, but it can be extended to aromatic amines by the use of BCly.355 Acylation in the case of amines is regioselectively ortho. Monohydric phenols, however, generally do not give ketones354 but are attacked at the oxygen to produce imino esters. [Pg.552]

Alkylation of pyrroles proves to be problematic because the usual Lewis acid catalysts initiate polymerization. The Vilsmeier-Haack formylation, however, leads to the formation of pyrrole-2-carbaldehyde in good yield. The Houben-Hoesch acylation (reaction with nitriles in the presence of hydrogen chloride) provides 2-acylpyrroles ... [Pg.89]

The Houben-Hoesch acylation of pyrroles describes the electrophilic substitution of an activated nitrile onto an electron-rich pyrrole ring. Typically requiring either a Lewis acid or protic acid, the resulting imine is immediately hydrolyzed to yield the corresponding ketone. [Pg.53]


See other pages where Lewis acids Houben-Hoesch pyrrole acylation is mentioned: [Pg.216]    [Pg.53]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.53 , Pg.54 , Pg.55 , Pg.56 , Pg.57 ]




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Acylation Hoesch

HOUBEN-HOESCH

Hoesch

Houben

Houben-Hoesch pyrrole acylation

Pyrrole acidity

Pyrrole, 3- acylation

Pyrrole, 3-acyl

Pyrroles Houben-Hoesch acylation

Pyrrolic acids

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