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Lithium higher substituted

Monosubstituted epoxides are normally opened by sodium azide at the unsubstituted carbon atom but in the presence of a Lewis acid this preference can be overridden. Thus styrene oxide 64 is opened predominantly at the higher substituted position by sodium azide in the presence of lithium tetrafluoroborate. Diethylaluminium azide has been used for the opening of trisubstituted epoxides and the predominant products are those derived from attack on the tertiary carbon atom. For epoxyalcohols the reagent Ti(OtPr)2(N3)2 has been used to achieve regioselective ring opening. An example of its use is the conversion of epoxyalcohol 65 into azidoalcohols 66 and 67 (Scheme 6.28). ° ... [Pg.182]

The formation of the above anions ("enolate type) depend on equilibria between the carbon compounds, the base, and the solvent. To ensure a substantial concentration of the anionic synthons in solution the pA" of both the conjugated acid of the base and of the solvent must be higher than the pAT -value of the carbon compound. Alkali hydroxides in water (p/T, 16), alkoxides in the corresponding alcohols (pAT, 20), sodium amide in liquid ammonia (pATj 35), dimsyl sodium in dimethyl sulfoxide (pAT, = 35), sodium hydride, lithium amides, or lithium alkyls in ether or hydrocarbon solvents (pAT, > 40) are common combinations used in synthesis. Sometimes the bases (e.g. methoxides, amides, lithium alkyls) react as nucleophiles, in other words they do not abstract a proton, but their anion undergoes addition and substitution reactions with the carbon compound. If such is the case, sterically hindered bases are employed. A few examples are given below (H.O. House, 1972 I. Kuwajima, 1976). [Pg.10]

Some instances of incomplete debromination of 5,6-dibromo compounds may be due to the presence of 5j5,6a-isomer of wrong stereochemistry for anti-coplanar elimination. The higher temperature afforded by replacing acetone with refluxing cyclohexanone has proved advantageous in some cases. There is evidence that both the zinc and lithium aluminum hydride reductions of vicinal dihalides also proceed faster with diaxial isomers (ref. 266, cf. ref. 215, p. 136, ref. 265). The chromous reduction of vicinal dihalides appears to involve free radical intermediates produced by one electron transfer, and is not stereospecific but favors tra 5-elimination in the case of vic-di-bromides. Chromous ion complexed with ethylene diamine is more reactive than the uncomplexed ion in reduction of -substituted halides and epoxides to olefins. ... [Pg.340]

The addition of the lithium enolates of methyl acetate and methyl (trimelhylsilyl)acetate to ( + )-(S)-2-(4-methylphenylsulfinyl)-2-cycloalkenones gives, after desulfurization, (/ -substituted cycloalkenones. A higher level of selectivity is observed with the a-silyl ester enolate and in the cyclohexenone series13. The stereochemical outcome is rationalized by assuming attack on a ground-state conformation analogous to that in Section 1.5.3.2.1. [Pg.1046]

In substitutional metallic solid solutions and in liquid alloys the experimental data have been described by Epstein and Paskin (1967) in terms of a predominant frictional force which leads to the accumulation of one species towards the anode. The relative movement of metallic ion cores in an alloy phase is related to the scattering cross-section for the conduction electrons, which in turn can be correlated with the relative resistance of the pure metals. Thus iron, which has a higher specific resistance than copper, will accumulate towards the anode in a Cu-Fe alloy. Similarly in a germanium-lithium alloy, the solute lithium atoms accumulate towards the cathode. In liquid alloys the same qualitative effect is observed, thus magnesium accumulates near the cathode in solution in bismuth, while uranium, which is in a higher Group of the Periodic Table than bismuth, accumulated near the anode in the same solvent. [Pg.154]

When the chiral molybdenum Ti-allyl-substituted enone 147 was treated with lithium dimethylcuprate, formation of adduct 148 with fair selectivity was observed (Scheme 6.29) [69]. Interestingly, higher selectivities were obtained in the presence of boron trifluoride etherate. It is assumed that Lewis acid coordination induces the s-trans reactive conformation 149 [64]. Consequently, nucleophile attack anti to the molybdenum fragment should afford the major diastereomer 148. [Pg.209]

When the non-coordinating mesitoate system 156 was treated with lithium di-methylcuprate, formation of the anti-S 2 substitution product 157 was observed. Notably, the exclusive formation of the y-substitution product is the result of severe steric hindrance at the a-position, originating from the adjacent isopropyl group [78]. Conversely, the corresponding carbamate 158 was reported, on treatment with a higher order cuprate, to form the syn-SN2 product 159 exclusively [74]. The lithi-ated carbamate is assumed to coordinate the cuprate reagent (see 160), which forces the syn attack and gives trans-menthene (159). [Pg.211]

Finally, Al (/= 5/2) and Co NMR spectroscopy have been used to probe AP+ in Al-doped lithium cobalt oxides and lithium nickel oxides. A Al chemical shift of 62.5 ppm was observed for the environment Al(OCo)e for an AP+ ion in the transition-metal layers, surrounded by six Co + ions. Somewhat surprisingly, this is in the typical chemical shift range expected for tetrahedral environments (ca. 60—80 ppm), but no evidence for occupancy of the tetrahedral site was obtained from X-ray diffraction and IR studies on the same materials. Substitution of the Co + by AF+ in the first cation coordination shell leads to an additive chemical shift decrease of ca. 7 ppm, and the shift of the environment A1(0A1)6 (20 ppm) seen in spectra of materials with higher A1 content is closer to that expected for octahedral Al. The spectra are consistent with a continuous solid solution involving octahedral sites randomly occupied by Al and Co. It is possible that the unusual Al shifts seen for this compound are related to the Van-Vleck susceptibility of this compound. [Pg.267]


See other pages where Lithium higher substituted is mentioned: [Pg.129]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.448]    [Pg.389]    [Pg.818]    [Pg.60]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.221]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.178]    [Pg.197]    [Pg.222]    [Pg.405]    [Pg.516]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.123]    [Pg.602]    [Pg.877]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.1027]    [Pg.21]    [Pg.16]    [Pg.982]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.63]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.241]    [Pg.99]    [Pg.585]    [Pg.661]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.108]    [Pg.124]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.52]    [Pg.139]    [Pg.127]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.108]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.18 , Pg.19 , Pg.61 ]




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Lithium substitution

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