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Lithium aluminum hydride- nickel

Hydrogenation catalysts Dichlorotris(triphenylphosphine)ruthenium. Iridium. Iridium tetrachloride-Triethyl phosphite. Iridium-BaSO, or CaC04. Lithium aluminum hydride. Nickel catalyst, Raney. Palladium hydroxide. Platinum catalysts. Potassium hydride. Trihydridobis(triphenyIphosphine)iridium (III). [Pg.514]

Related Reagents. Lithium Aluminum Hydride-(2,2 -Bipy-ridyl)(l,5-cyclooctadiene)nickel Lithium Aluminum Hydride-Bis(cyclopentadienyl)nickel Lithium Aluminum Hydride-Boron Trifluoride Etherate Lithium Aluminum Hydride-Cerium(III) Chloride Lithium Aluminum Hydride-2,2 -Dihydroxy-l, E-binaphthyl Lithium Aluminum Hydride-Chromium(III) Chloride Lithium Aluminum Hydride-Cobalt(II) Chloride Lithium Aluminum Hydride-Copper(I) Iodide Lithium Aluminum Hydride-Diphosphoms Tetraiodide Lithium Aluminum Hydride-Nickel(II) Chloride Lithium Aluminum Hydride-Titanium(IV) Chloride Titanium(III) Chloride-Lithium Aluminum Hydride. [Pg.215]

Common catalyst compositions contain oxides or ionic forms of platinum, nickel, copper, cobalt, or palladium which are often present as mixtures of more than one metal. Metal hydrides, such as lithium aluminum hydride [16853-85-3] or sodium borohydride [16940-66-2] can also be used to reduce aldehydes. Depending on additional functionahties that may be present in the aldehyde molecule, specialized reducing reagents such as trimethoxyalurninum hydride or alkylboranes (less reactive and more selective) may be used. Other less industrially significant reduction procedures such as the Clemmensen reduction or the modified Wolff-Kishner reduction exist as well. [Pg.470]

Cyclodecanediol has been prepared by the hydrogenation of sebacoin in the presence of Raney nickel or platinum, by the reduction of sebacoin with aluminum isopropoxide or lithium aluminum hydride, and by the oxidation of cyclodecene with osmium tetroxide and pyridine. ... [Pg.13]

The azidohydrins obtained by azide ion opening of epoxides, except for those possessing a tertiary hydroxy group, can be readily converted to azido mesylates on treatment with pyridine/methanesulfonyl chloride. Reduction and subsequent aziridine formation results upon reaction with hydrazine/ Raney nickel, lithium aluminum hydride, or sodium borohydride/cobalt(II)... [Pg.27]

The azido mesylate may also be reduced with lithium aluminum hydride in the same manner as previously described for iodo azide reductions. The sodium borohydride/cobalt(II)tris(a,a -dipyridyl)bromide reagent may be used, but it does not seem to offer any advantages over the more facile lithium aluminum hydride or hydrazine/Raney nickel procedures. [Pg.36]

Dibenz[/>,e]azepines, e.g. 15, are reduced readily to the 5,6-dihydro derivatives, e.g. 16, with hydrogen and palladium on charcoal, or Raney nickel, at room temperature,28,104 with sodium in ethanol,104 with sodium borohydride in methanol,104 and with lithium aluminum hydride in diethyl ether.115... [Pg.285]

Some bis(salicylaldehydo) complexes of cobalt(II), nickel(II), and cop-per(II), with or without lithium aluminum hydride, are said to catalyze hydrogenation of benzene and alkylbenzenes at 200°C, but the systems appear to be heterogeneous (447). [Pg.378]

To a stirred solution of 45g 3,5-dimethoxybenzoyl chloride and 17.4g thiophen in 300 ml benzene at 0° C, add dropwise 10.5g freshly distilled stannic chloride. Stir one hour at room temperature and add 200 ml 3% aqueous HC1. Separate the benzene layer and wash the aqueous layer with benzene. Dry and evaporate in vacuum the combined benzene layers and distill the red residue (250° C bath/4.5) to get 45g 2-(3,5-dimethoxybenzoyl) thiophen(I). Recrystallize from petroleum ether. Add a solution of 21 g AICI3 in 160 ml ether to a stirred suspension of 6.1 g lithium aluminum hydride in 140 ml ether. After 5 minutes add a solution of 39g(I) in 300 ml ether at a rate giving a gentle reflux. Reflux and stir 1 hour cool in an ice bath and treat dropwise with 50 ml water, then 50 ml 6N aqueous sulfuric acid. Separate the layers, extract the aqueous layer with 3X100 ml ether and dry, evaporate in vacuum the combined ether layers. Can distill the residue (230° C bath/5mm) to get 27g oily 2-(3,5-dimethoxybenzyl) thiophen (II). Recrystallize from petroleum ether. Reflux a solution of 5g (II) in 700 ml ethanol with W-7 Raney Nickel prepared from Ni-Al alloy (see Org. Synthesis Coll. Vol 111,176(1955)) for 6 hours. Filter, evaporate in vacuum and can distill (140/0.01) to get about 2.2g oily olivetol dimethyl ether which can be reduced to olivetol as described elsewhere here. -... [Pg.45]

Prins64 has recently discovered that lithium aluminum hydride hydrogenates 1,2-epoxides smoothly in high yield this single-step reaction would appear to outmode the Raney nickel desulfurization process for this purpose. [Pg.35]

Alkyl chlorides are with a few exceptions not reduced by mild catalytic hydrogenation over platinum [502], rhodium [40] and nickel [63], even in the presence of alkali. Metal hydrides and complex hydrides are used more successfully various lithium aluminum hydrides [506, 507], lithium copper hydrides [501], sodium borohydride [504, 505], and especially different tin hydrides (stannanes) [503,508,509,510] are the reagents of choice for selective replacement of halogen in the presence of other functional groups. In some cases the reduction is stereoselective. Both cis- and rrunj-9-chlorodecaIin, on reductions with triphenylstannane or dibutylstannane, gave predominantly trani-decalin [509]. [Pg.63]

Alkyl bromides and especially alkyl iodides are reduced faster than chlorides. Catalytic hydrogenation was accomplished in good yields using Raney nickel in the presence of potassium hydroxide [63] Procedure 5, p. 205). More frequently, bromides and iodides are reduced by hydrides [505] and complex hydrides in good to excellent yields [501, 504]. Most powerful are lithium triethylborohydride and lithium aluminum hydride [506]. Sodium borohydride reacts much more slowly. Since the complex hydrides are believed to react by an S 2 mechanism [505, 511], it is not surprising that secondary bromides and iodides react more slowly than the primary ones [506]. The reagent prepared from trimethoxylithium aluminum deuteride and cuprous iodide... [Pg.63]

Geminal dihalides undergo partial or total reduction. The latter can be achieved by catalytic hydrogenation over platinum oxide [512], palladium [512] or Raney nickel [63, 512], Both partial and total reduction can be accomplished with lithium aluminum hydride [513], with sodium bis(2-meth-oxyethoxy)aluminum hydride [514], with tributylstannane [503, 514], electro-lytically [515], with sodium in alcohol [516] and with chromous sulfate [193, 197]. For partial reduction only, sodium arsenite [220] or sodium sulfite [254] are used. [Pg.64]

Aliphatic and aromatic sulfides undergo desulfurization with Raney nickel [673], with nickel boride [673], with lithium aluminum hydride in the presence of cupric chloride [675], with titanium dichloride [676], and with triethyl phosphite [677]. In saccharides benzylthioethers were not desulfurized but reduced to toluene and mercaptodeoxysugars using sodium in liquid ammonia [678]. This reduction has general application and replaces catalytic hydrogenolysis, which cannot be used [637]. [Pg.86]

Aldoximes yielded primary amines by catalytic hydrogenation benzaldehyde gave benzylamine in 77% yield over nickel at 100° and 100 atm [803, with lithium aluminum hydride (yields 47-79%) [809, with sodium in refluxing ethanol (yields 60-73%) [810] and with other reagents. Hydrazones of aldehydes are intermediates in the Wolff-Kizhner reduction of the aldehyde group to a methyl group (p. 97) but are hardly ever reduced to amines. [Pg.106]

Reduction of unsaturated ketones to saturated alcohols is achieved by catalytic hydrogenation using a nickel catalyst [49], a copper chromite catalyst [50, 887] or by treatment with a nickel-aluminum alloy in sodium hydroxide [555]. If the double bond is conjugated, complete reduction can also be obtained with some hydrides. 2-Cyclopentenone was reduced to cyclopentanol in 83.5% yield with lithium aluminum hydride in tetrahydrofuran [764], with lithium tris tert-butoxy)aluminium hydride (88.8% yield) [764], and with sodium borohydride in ethanol at 78° (yield 100%) [764], Most frequently, however, only the carbonyl is reduced, especially with application of the inverse technique (p. 21). [Pg.121]

Phthalimide was hydrogenated catalytically at 60-80° over palladium on barium sulfate in acetic acid containing an equimolar quantity of sulfuric or perchloric acid to phthalimidine [7729]. The same compound was produced in 76-80% yield by hydrogenation over nickel at 200° and 200-250 atm [43 and in 75% yield over copper chromite at 250° and 190 atm [7730]. Reduction with lithium aluminum hydride, on the other hand, reduced both carbonyls and gave isoindoline (yield 5%) [7730], also obtained by electroreduction on a lead cathode in sulfuric acid (yield 72%) [7730]. [Pg.169]

Thioamides were converted to aldehydes by cautious desulfurization with Raney nickel [1137, 1138] or by treatment with iron and acetic acid [172]. More intensive desulfurization with Raney nickel [1139], electroreduction [172], and reduction with lithium aluminum hydride [1138], with sodium borohydride [1140] or with sodium cyanoborohydride [1140] gave amines in good to excellent yields. [Pg.171]

A number of organic species, including amides, oximes, and nitriles, undergo reductive amination, a variety of reduction reactions that produce cimines. In general, these processes involve imines, R=N-R, or related species. Reduction processes include hydrogenation using Raney nickel as the catalyst (for nitriles), the reaction with sodium/EtOH (for oximes), and the use of lithium aluminum hydride, LiAlH (for amides or nitriles). Figure 13-16 illustrates the preparation of amphetamine by reductive amination. [Pg.230]

General Comments. The formation of deoxy sugars by hydrogenation over Raney nickel often leads to the abnormal isomer (namely, that formed by diequatorial opening of the oxirane ring) as the major product, in contrast to the product afforded by lithium aluminum hydride this suggests that a different mechanism is involved in the nickel-catalyzed reaction. [Pg.125]

Numerous methods for the synthesis of salicyl alcohol exist. These involve the reduction of salicylaldehyde or of salicylic acid and its derivatives. The alcohol can be prepared in almost theoretical yield by the reduction of salicylaldehyde with sodium amalgam, sodium borohydride, or lithium aluminum hydride by catalytic hydrogenation over platinum black or Raney nickel or by hydrogenation over platinum and ferrous chloride in alcohol. The electrolytic reduction of salicylaldehyde in sodium bicarbonate solution at a mercury cathode with carbon dioxide passed into the mixture also yields saligenin. It is formed by the electrolytic reduction at lead electrodes of salicylic acids in aqueous alcoholic solution or sodium salicylate in the presence of boric acid and sodium sulfate. Salicylamide in aqueous alcohol solution acidified with acetic acid is reduced to salicyl alcohol by sodium amalgam in 63% yield. Salicyl alcohol forms along with -hydroxybenzyl alcohol by the action of formaldehyde on phenol in the presence of sodium hydroxide or calcium oxide. High yields of salicyl alcohol from phenol and formaldehyde in the presence of a molar equivalent of ether additives have been reported (60). Phenyl metaborate prepared from phenol and boric acid yields salicyl alcohol after treatment with formaldehyde and hydrolysis (61). [Pg.293]


See other pages where Lithium aluminum hydride- nickel is mentioned: [Pg.581]    [Pg.289]    [Pg.581]    [Pg.289]    [Pg.329]    [Pg.293]    [Pg.60]    [Pg.887]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.99]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.434]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.96]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.593]    [Pg.382]    [Pg.243]    [Pg.362]    [Pg.362]    [Pg.300]    [Pg.121]    [Pg.104]    [Pg.617]   


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