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Nicholas cobalt-stabilized propargyl cation

The chemistry and synthetic utility of cobalt complexed propargyl cations have been demonstrated by Nicholas in an impressive series of papers, and the area was reviewed in 1987.72 More recently, reviews of cluster-stabilized cations73 and propargylium complexes74 have appeared. Two general routes for the synthesis of dicobalt-propargylium complexes have been developed. The most commonly used method is the treatment of an alkynic ether or alkynic alcohol-hexacarbonyldicobalt complex with a Lewis or Bronsted acid [Eq. (7)]. [Pg.93]

Cobalt-Complexed Propargyl Cations and Their Reactions. The stability and synthetic utility of hexacarbonyldicobalt complexed cations was first reported in 1971. They are readily formed by protonation of propargyl alcohol complexes or addition of electrophiles (protons, or alkyl or acyl cations) to vinylacetylene complexes. They can be isolated in pure form, usually by precipitation as hexafluorophosphates or tetrafluoroborates, but are more commonly generated in situ and used directly. Most of the early work is due to Nicholas, who has comprehensively reviewed the work up to 1986. A detailed description of the procedure for generating the l-methyl-2-propynyl complex and for its reaction with trimethylsilyloxycyclohexene (eq 51) has been given. ... [Pg.303]

An underused property of cobalt-coordinated alkynes is the stabilization of propargyllic cations. The Nicholas reaction is a propargylic substitution reaction facilitated by the ability of the adjacent cobalt complex to stabilize the propargylic cation, 67 to 68. Both carbon and heteroatom nucleophiles have been used to effect this transformation. " This transformation has been been used as a strategy to introduce the alkene component for an intramolecular PKR. Shea has probed the use of an... [Pg.166]


See other pages where Nicholas cobalt-stabilized propargyl cation is mentioned: [Pg.164]    [Pg.1055]    [Pg.778]    [Pg.314]    [Pg.1055]    [Pg.3302]    [Pg.3301]    [Pg.469]    [Pg.2049]    [Pg.244]   


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Cation stability

Cation stabilization

Cationic stability

Cationic stabilization

Nicholas cation

Nicholas propargylation

Propargyl cations

Propargylic cations

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