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Maleic anhydride 3 + 2 cycloaddition reactions

Solvent effect on rate constants. In this section, the rate constant will be predicted qualitatively in CO2 for the Diels-Alder cycloaddition of isoprene and maleic anhydride, a reaction which has been well-characterized in the liquid state (23,24). In a previous paper, we used E data for phenol blue in ethylene to predict the rate constant of the Menschutkin reaction of tripropylamine and methyliodide (19). The reaction mechanisms are quite different, yet the solvent effect on the rate constant of both reactions can be correlated with E of phenol blue in liquid solvents. The dipole moment increases in the Menschutkin reaction going from the reactant state to the transition state and in phenol blue during electronic excitation, so that the two phenomena are correlated. In the above Diels-Alder reaction, the reaction coordinate is isopolar with a negative activation volume (8,23),... [Pg.47]

While the first adduct of the maleic anhydride-benzene reaction has not been isolated, an analogous monoadduct has been obtained, from benzene and acrylonitrile by irradiation at 0°C it is relatively stable and can give a thermal Diels-Alder reaction with acrylonitrile, yielding a 2 1 adduct. Photochemical 1,2-cycloaddition in this case is not quenched by air, a fact that supports the hypothesis of a singlet reactive species . [Pg.148]

In the presence of 1-5% of iron trichloride or TBPA under conventional conditions, 60-70% yields of the adduct are formed even at -50 C, in times as short as 15 min.43 Therefore, the conclusion is that, imder appropriate conditions, the anthracene radical cation is most probably on the reaction pathway, in contrast with the case of maleic anhydride cycloaddition. A coincidence seems then to exist between the possibility of a mechanism involving the diene radical cation and the presence of a sonochemical effect. [Pg.103]

Concerted Nonpolar Reactions. Maleic anhydride exemplifies the model dienophile for cycloaddition with dienes such as 1,3-butadiene... [Pg.450]

The success of the cycloaddition reaction of maleic anhydride varies gready depending on which heterocyclic diene is used. The cycloaddition of maleic anhydride to furan [110-00-9] occurs ia a few seconds under ambient conditions (42,43). Although the endo adduct (14) is favored kiaeticaHy, the exo adduct (13) is isolated. [Pg.450]

Endo adducts are usually favored by iateractions between the double bonds of the diene and the carbonyl groups of the dienophile. As was mentioned ia the section on alkylation, the reaction of pyrrole compounds and maleic anhydride results ia a substitution at the 2-position of the pyrrole ring (34,44). Thiophene [110-02-1] forms a cycloaddition adduct with maleic anhydride but only under severe pressures and around 100°C (45). Addition of electron-withdrawiag substituents about the double bond of maleic anhydride increases rates of cycloaddition. Both a-(carbomethoxy)maleic anhydride [69327-00-0] and a-(phenylsulfonyl) maleic anhydride [120789-76-6] react with 1,3-dienes, styrenes, and vinyl ethers much faster than tetracyanoethylene [670-54-2] (46). [Pg.450]

CycIoa.ddltlons. Cyclobutene adducts are formed from the reaction of acetylenic derivatives and maleic anhydride through a 2 + 2 cycloaddition (48). The reaction is photochemicaHy cataly2ed (see Photochemical technology). [Pg.451]

The reactions of pyrroles with dienophiles generally follow two different pathways involving either a [4 + 2] cycloaddition or a Michael-type addition to a free a-position of the pyrrole ring. Pyrrole itself gives a complex mixture of products with maleic anhydride or maleic acid and with benzyne reacts to give 2-phenylpyrrole rather than a product of cycloaddition (Scheme 47). [Pg.65]

Thiophene fails to undergo cycloaddition reactions with common dienophiles under normal conditions. However, when thiophene is heated under pressure with maleic anhydride, the exo adduct (136) is formed in moderate yield (78JOC1471). [Pg.66]

Benzo[Z)]furans and indoles do not take part in Diels-Alder reactions but 2-vinyl-benzo[Z)]furan and 2- and 3-vinylindoles give adducts involving the exocyclic double bond. In contrast, the benzo[c]-fused heterocycles function as highly reactive dienes in [4 + 2] cycloaddition reactions. Thus benzo[c]furan, isoindole (benzo[c]pyrrole) and benzo[c]thiophene all yield Diels-Alder adducts (137) with maleic anhydride. Adducts of this type are used to characterize these unstable molecules and in a similar way benzo[c]selenophene, which polymerizes on attempted isolation, was characterized by formation of an adduct with tetracyanoethylene (76JA867). [Pg.67]

The addition of maleic anhydride can occur by excitation of either dienone or the anhydride. It is tempting to ascribe the 4,5-adduct (264) to a reaction between the excited dienone (260) and unexcited maleic anhydride by analogy with the observed major products of ethylene addition [cf. (261), (262)]. The 6,7-adducts (265) and (266) would then imply that these cycloadditions proceed by way of excited maleic anhydride which adds preferentially to the more electron-rich y,5-double bond of the groundstate dienone. [Pg.347]

The Diels-Alder reaction,is a cycloaddition reaction of a conjugated diene with a double or triple bond (the dienophile) it is one of the most important reactions in organic chemistry. For instance an electron-rich diene 1 reacts with an electron-poor dienophile 2 (e.g. an alkene bearing an electron-withdrawing substituent Z) to yield the unsaturated six-membered ring product 3. An illustrative example is the reaction of butadiene 1 with maleic anhydride 4 ... [Pg.89]

We have also used poly(propynoic acid) in our studies of the photochemical interaction of PCSs with dienophiles, such as maleic anhydride, tetracyanoethylene, and styrene. This photochemical reaction of Diels-Alder type is accompanied by the breakdown of the conjugation system and the formation of slightly colored adducts266. Together with the cycloaddition reaction, photodegradation of PPA and its adducts takes place. A cycloaddition reaction is always preceded by the formation of a donor-acceptor complex of a PCS with a dienophile. [Pg.31]

The comparison of rates of cycloaddition of maleic anhydride, tetracyanoethylene, and styrene to PPA shows that the latter, irrespective of the presence of electronegative groups, behaves in these reactions not as an electron-poor diene system. This fact, together with the composition of side products (giving evidence of PPA decarboxylation), allows the assumption to be made that the cycloaddition of dienophiles involves mainly decarboxylated polyene sections of cis-transoid structure213, 266. This is in agreement with the fact that PPA with predominant trans-transoid configuration interacts with these dienophiles at a substantially lower rate. The ultimate amounts of the dienophile combined with PPA of this structure is also considerably smaller. [Pg.31]

The cycloaddition between norbornadiene (23 in Scheme 1.12) and maleic anhydride was the first example of a /mmo-Diels-Alder reaction [55]. Other venerable examples are reported in Scheme 1.12 [56]. Under thermal conditions, the reaction is generally poorly diastereoselective and occurs in low yield, and therefore several research groups have studied the utility of transition metal catalysts [57]. Tautens and coworkers [57c] investigated the cycloaddition of norbornadiene and some of its monosubstituted derivatives with electron-deficient dienophiles in the presence of nickel-cyclo-octadiene Ni(COD)2 and PPhs. Some results are illustrated in Tables 1.4 and 1.5. [Pg.18]

Tetraene 141 has been converted into various complex polycondensed adducts by reacting with a variety of dienophiles such as maleic anhydride, N-phenylmaleimide, N-phenyltriazolinedione,p-benzoquinone and tetracyano-ethylene carried out under thermal conditions. All cycloadditions occurred facial-diastereoselectively from an outside attack and provided monocycloadducts which had an exceptionally close relationship between diene and dieno-phile and then underwent intramolecular cycloaddition [125]. The reaction between 141 and p-benzoquinone is illustrated in Scheme 2.53. [Pg.80]

The discovery that Lewis acids can promote Diels-Alder reactions has become a powerful tool in synthetic organic chemistry. Yates and Eaton [4] first reported the remarkable acceleration of the reactions of anthracene with maleic anhydride, 1,4-benzoquinone and dimethyl fumarate catalyzed by aluminum chloride. The presence of the Lewis-acid catalyst allows the cycloadditions to be carried out under mild conditions, reactions with low reactive dienes and dienophiles are made possible, and the stereoselectivity, regioselectivity and site selectivity of the cycloaddition reaction can be modified [5]. Consequently, increasing attention has been given to these catalysts in order to develop new regio- and stereoselective synthetic routes based on the Diels-Alder reaction. [Pg.99]

The investigation on the use of K-10 montmorillonite under free solvent conditions was then extended to inner ring dienes such as furan and its 2,5-dimethyl derivative [9] (Table 4.3). The cycloadditions generally proceed slowly, and Zn(II)-doped clay and microwave irradiation were used to accelerate the reactions. The reaction with maleic anhydride preferentially affords the thermodynamically favored exo adduct. [Pg.145]

Luche and coworkers [34] investigated the mechanistic aspects of Diels-Alder reactions of anthracene with either 1,4-benzoquinone or maleic anhydride. The cycloaddition of anthracene with maleic anhydride in DCM is slow under US irradiation in the presence or absence of 5% tris (p-bromophenyl) aminium hexachloroantimonate (the classical Bauld monoelectronic oxidant, TBPA), whereas the Diels Alder reaction of 1,4-benzoquinone with anthracene in DCM under US irradiation at 80 °C is slow in the absence of 5 % TBPA but proceeds very quickly and with high yield at 25 °C in the presence of TBPA. This last cycloaddition is also strongly accelerated when carried out under stirring solely at 0°C with 1% FeCh. The US-promoted Diels Alder reaction in the presence of TBPA has been justified by hypothesizing a mechanism via radical-cation of diene, which is operative if the electronic affinity of dienophile is not too weak. [Pg.157]

The mechanism of cycloaddition reaction of maleic anhydride with anthracene promoted by US irradiation has been the subject of many controversies [32, 37]. Recent work of Da Cunha and Garrigues [35] shows that the reaction proceeds in toluene solution in the 60 85 °C temperature range in 6 3 h. [Pg.157]

The single-electron transfer from one excited component to the other component acceptor, as the critical step prior to cycloaddition of photo-induced Diels Alder reactions, has been demonstrated [43] for the reaction of anthracene with maleic anhydride and various maleimides carried out in chloroform under irradiation by a medium-pressure mercury lamp (500 W). The (singlet) excited anthracene ( AN ), generated by the actinic light, is quenched by dienophile... [Pg.163]

The study of high pressure cycloaddition reactions of tropone (125) with maleic anhydride and norbornene allowed the reaction activation volumes to be measured and showed that they are large, negative and solvent-dependent (Scheme 5.17) [43a]. [Pg.226]

The more reactive furan (139a) undergoes thermal Diels-Alder reaction [52] with reactive dienophiles such as maleic anhydride and maleimide (Scheme 5.21). Whereas the cycloaddition with the maleic anhydride afforded the exoadduct at room temperature, the stereochemistry of the reaction of maleimide depends on the reaction temperature. [Pg.230]

The cycloaddition between furan and maleic anhydride was the first uncatalyzed aqueous Diels-Alder reaction reported in the literature and was studied by Diels and Alder themselves [11]. This cycloaddition was successfully revised by Woodward and Baer [12] and some years later by De Koning and coworkers [13]. The aqueous medium was also used in the cycloaddition of aromatic diazonium salts with methylsubstituted 1,3-butadienes [14]. [Pg.252]

Diels-Alder cycloadditions are sensitive to steric effects of two major types in the diene. Bulky substituents on the termini of the diene hinder approach of the two components to each other and decrease the rate of reaction. This effect can be seen in the relative reactivity of 1-substituted butadienes toward maleic anhydride.19... [Pg.480]

The Lewis acid-catalyzed 1,3-migration of divinyl esters allows the formation of 1,3-butadienes, which can undergo cycloaddition. In this respect, Dai and coworkers described a rearrangement of the divinyl alkoxyacetate 1-203 followed by a Diels-Alder reaction with a dienophile such as maleic anhydride 1-204 in the presence of catalytic amounts of Ln(fod)3 to produce 1-205 in up to 61 % yield (Scheme 1.47) [53],... [Pg.41]

The formation of 9-104 proceeds through several equilibrium steps, but the process has been shown to be highly efficient when dienophiles such as maleimides 9-103, acetylene dicarboxylates 9-105, maleic anhydride (9-107) or acrylonitrile (9-108) are present in the reaction mixture. Thus, the formed butadienes 9-104 are trapped in a [4+2] cycloaddition and thereby the equilibria are shifted to the product side. The cycloadducts 9-102, 9-106, 9-109 and 9-110 are formed in good to excellent yields with high diastereoselectivity. [Pg.557]

Cycloadducts have been successively obtained by reaction of MCP with maleic anhydride (116) and a number of related electron-deficient alkenes (137,486,487) under photolytic conditions in the presence of a sensitizer (Table 38, entries 5-8) [132b]. Analogous cycloadditions in mild conditions with high yields have also been performed with electron-donor substituted alkenes, such as vinylene carbonates 483 and 484 and the imidazolinone 485 (entries 2-4) [132], In the case of the unsymmetrical anhydride 137 (entry 6), an almost equimolar mixture of both the possible regioisomers has been obtained [132b]. In all these cases the reaction has also been proposed to occur via diradical intermediates formed from the reaction of 1 with the alkene in its excited triplet state [132]. [Pg.79]

The allene 149 gave by reaction with maleic anhydride (entry 1) and N-phenylmaleimide (entry 2) the [2 + 2] adducts 155a, b as mixtures of two diastereoisomers [36], Nevertheless, their chemical yield was very low and competitive reactions, mostly [4 + 2] cycloadditions on a rearranged al-lylidenecyclopropane and on a primary 1 1 adduct derived from an ene reaction (see Sect. 2.1.2), prevailed. Allenes 149 and 563 cycloadded to tetracyano- and l,l-bistrifluoromethyl-2,2-dicyanoethylene (Table 45, entries 3-6) also selectively at the cyclopropyl substituted double bond in order to remove most of the ring strain [149a],... [Pg.88]

Microwave heating has also been employed for performing retro-Diels-Alder cycloaddition reactions, as exemplified in Scheme 6.94. In the context of preparing optically pure cross-conjugated cydopentadienones as precursors to arachidonic acid derivatives, Evans, Eddolls, and coworkers performed microwave-mediated Lewis acid-catalyzed retro-Diels-Alder reactions of suitable exo-cyclic enone building blocks [193, 194], The microwave-mediated transformations were performed in dichloromethane at 60-100 °C with 0.5 equivalents of methylaluminum dichloride as catalyst and 5 equivalents of maleic anhydride as cyclopentadiene trap. In most cases, the reaction was stopped after 30 min since continued irradiation eroded the product yields. The use of short bursts of microwave irradiation minimized doublebond isomerization. [Pg.172]

Das has described the cycloaddition of camptothecin (92), an alkaloid with potent antitumor activity, with maleic anhydride under the action of microwave irradiation in a commercial microwave oven for 9 min [78]. Two unprecedented adducts, 93 and 94, were produced. The first was formed by involvement of the B-ring in a hetero Diels-Alder reaction whereas the second was formed by involvement of the C-ring, probably through Diels-Alder reaction of intermediate 95 (Scheme 9.28). [Pg.313]

The thermal Diels-Alder reactions of anthracene with electron-poor olefinic acceptors such as tetracyanoethylene, maleic anhydride, maleimides, etc. have been studied extensively. It is noteworthy that these reactions are often accelerated in the presence of light. Since photoinduced [4 + 2] cycloadditions are symmetry-forbidden according to the Woodward-Hoffman rules, an electron-transfer mechanism has been suggested to reconcile experiment and theory.212 For example, photocycloaddition of anthracene to maleic anhydride and various maleimides occurs in high yield (> 90%) under conditions in which the thermal reaction is completely suppressed (equation 75). [Pg.268]


See other pages where Maleic anhydride 3 + 2 cycloaddition reactions is mentioned: [Pg.27]    [Pg.70]    [Pg.64]    [Pg.891]    [Pg.271]    [Pg.155]    [Pg.801]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.160]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.195]    [Pg.216]    [Pg.801]    [Pg.188]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.88]    [Pg.148]   


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Anhydrides maleic anhydride

Anhydrides reactions

Maleic anhydride

Maleic anhydride, Diels-Alder cycloaddition reaction

Reaction maleic anhydride

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