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Alkenes metal hydrides

A number of less hindered monoalkylboranes is available by indirect methods, eg, by treatment of a thexylborane—amine complex with an olefin (69), the reduction of monohalogenoboranes or esters of boronic acids with metal hydrides (70—72), the redistribution of dialkylboranes with borane (64) or the displacement of an alkene from a dialkylborane by the addition of a tertiary amine (73). To avoid redistribution, monoalkylboranes are best used /V situ or freshly prepared. However, they can be stored as monoalkylborohydrides or complexes with tertiary amines. The free monoalkylboranes can be hberated from these derivatives when required (69,74—76). Methylborane, a remarkably unhindered monoalkylborane, exhibits extraordinary hydroboration characteristics. It hydroborates hindered and even unhindered olefins to give sequentially alkylmethyl- and dialkylmethylboranes (77—80). [Pg.310]

Primary dialkylboranes react readily with most alkenes at ambient temperatures and dihydroborate terminal acetylenes. However, these unhindered dialkylboranes exist in equiUbtium with mono- and ttialkylboranes and cannot be prepared in a state of high purity by the reaction of two equivalents of an alkene with borane (35—38). Nevertheless, such mixtures can be used for hydroboration if the products are acceptable for further transformations or can be separated (90). When pure primary dialkylboranes are required they are best prepared by the reduction of dialkylhalogenoboranes with metal hydrides (91—93). To avoid redistribution they must be used immediately or be stabilized as amine complexes or converted into dialkylborohydtides. [Pg.310]

There is no clear reason to prefer either of these mechanisms, since stereochemical and kinetic data are lacking. Solvent effects also give no suggestion about the problem. It is possible that the carbon-carbon bond is weakened by an increasing number of phenyl substituents, resulting in more carbon-carbon bond cleavage products, as is indeed found experimentally. All these reductive reactions of thiirane dioxides with metal hydrides are accompanied by the formation of the corresponding alkenes via the usual elimination of sulfur dioxide. [Pg.421]

The mechanism of homogeneous hydrogenation catalyzed by RhCl(Ph3P)3 ° involves reaction of the catalyst with hydrogen to form a metal hydride (PPh3)2RhH2Cl (43), which rapidly transfers two hydrogen atoms to the alkene. [Pg.1006]

The proposed mechanism for the metallocene complexes of Group 5 metals and lanthanides involves the coordination of alkene to the metal hydride (51), followed... [Pg.15]

More recently homogeneous hydrogenation catalysts, such as RhCl(Ph3P)3, have been developed which are soluble in the reaction medium. These are believed to transfer H to an alkene via a metal hydride intermediate they, too, lead to a considerable degree of SYN stereoselectivity in hydrogen addition. [Pg.192]

The addition of an R-M moiety to the triple bond gives the corresponding vinylmetal intermediate 241, which is activated enough to react with the alkene moiety. Depending upon the nature of the R1 group, several options are open. In the case of an initial hydridometallation by a metal hydride, which is most often formed in situ through the oxidative addition to acetic acid (R-R1 = H-OAc), the resulting cyclization product 243 will liberate its metal component by... [Pg.329]

Another approach is based on the palladium-catalyzed intramolecular carbocyclization of the allylic acetate moiety with the alkene moiety (Scheme 96). After the formation of a 7t-allylpalladium complex, with the first double bond the intramolecular carbometallation of the second double bond occurs to form a new C-C bond. The fate of the resulting alkylpalladium complex 393 depends on the possiblity of /3-elimination. If /3-elimination is possible, it generates a metallated hydride and furnishes the cycloadduct 394. This cyclization could be viewed as a pallada-ene reaction, in which palladium replaces the hydrogen atom of the allylic moiety.231... [Pg.348]

Recently, another type of catalytic cycle for the hydrosilylation has been reported, which does not involve the oxidative addition of a hydrosilane to a low-valent metal. Instead, it involves bond metathesis step to release the hydrosilylation product from the catalyst (Scheme 2). In the cycle C, alkylmetal intermediate generated by hydrometallation of alkene undergoes the metathesis with hydrosilane to give the hydrosilylation product and to regenerate the metal hydride. This catalytic cycle is proposed for the reaction catalyzed by lanthanide or a group 3 metal.20 In the hydrosilylation with a trialkylsilane and a cationic palladium complex, the catalytic cycle involves silylmetallation of an alkene and metathesis between the resulting /3-silylalkyl intermediate and hydrosilane (cycle D).21... [Pg.816]

The formation of vinylboranes and vinylboronate esters during some metal-promoted hydroboration of alkenes has led to the suggestion of an alternative mechanistic pathway. Insertion of the alkene into the metal-boron bond occurs in preference to insertion into the metal-hydride bond.44,51,52 In a competing side-reaction to reductive elimination, f3-H elimination from the resulting borylalkyl intermediate furnishes the vinylborane byproduct.52 There remains however a substantial body of evidence, both experimental53 and theoretical,54 that supports the idea that transfer of hydride to the coordinated alkene precedes transfer of the boryl fragment. [Pg.842]

Many of these catalysts are derived from metal complexes which, initially, do not contain metal hydride bonds, but can give rise to intermediate MH2 (al-kene) species. These species, after migratory insertion of the hydride to the coordinated alkene and subsequent hydrogenolysis of the metal alkyl species, yield the saturated alkane. At first glance there are two possibilities to reach MH2 (alkene) intermediates which are related to the order of entry of the two reaction partners in the coordination sphere of the metal (Scheme 1.2). [Pg.8]

Stoichiometric Ionic Hydrogenation of Alkenes with Metal Hydrides as the Hydride Donor... [Pg.165]

Pettit and coworkers—metal hydride intermediates by weak base attack over Fe carbonyl catalysts. Pettit et al.ls approached the use of metal carbonyl catalysts for the homogeneous water-gas shift reaction from the standpoint of hydroformyla-tion by the Reppe modification.7 In the typical hydroformylation reaction, an alkene is converted to the next higher aldehyde or alcohol through reaction of CO and H2 with the use of a cobalt or rhodium carbonyl catalyst. However, in the Reppe modification, the reduction is carried out with CO and H20 in lieu of H2 (Scheme 6) ... [Pg.125]


See other pages where Alkenes metal hydrides is mentioned: [Pg.369]    [Pg.1313]    [Pg.130]    [Pg.3152]    [Pg.369]    [Pg.1313]    [Pg.130]    [Pg.3152]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.366]    [Pg.368]    [Pg.333]    [Pg.526]    [Pg.225]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.69]    [Pg.300]    [Pg.384]    [Pg.44]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.280]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.500]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.115]    [Pg.117]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.165]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.167]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.139]    [Pg.221]    [Pg.391]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.735 , Pg.736 , Pg.737 , Pg.738 , Pg.739 , Pg.740 , Pg.741 ]




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Addition of metal hydrides to alkenes and alkynes

Alkenes metallation

Alkenes with metal hydrides

Hydrides alkenes

Metal alkenes

Metal hydrides, addition alkenes

Metal hydrides, reaction with alkenes

Transition-metal-coordinated alkenes complex hydrides

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