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O-bond cleavage

Mild base does not effect isoxazolidine ring cleavage by fission of the N—O bond rather, C—O bond cleavage takes place <77AHC(2l)207). The reaction of iV-trimethyl-silylisoxazolidine (185) with KOH produced a /3-hydroxyketone oxime (Scheme 59) (74DOK109). [Pg.47]

Direct proof of an oxaziridine intermediate was achieved in photolysis experiments in an organic glass at 77 K (80JA5643). Oxaziridine (75), formed by photolysis of A/-oxide (74) and evidenced by UV spectroscopy under the above conditions, decomposed at higher temperature to form the imino ether (76) by N—O bond cleavage and C -> O migration of an aryl group. [Pg.206]

According to a kinetic study which included (56), (56a) and some oxaziridines derived from aliphatic aldehydes, hydrolysis follows exactly first order kinetics in 4M HCIO4. Proton catalysis was observed, and there is a linear correlation with Hammett s Ho function. Since only protonated molecules are hydrolyzed, basicities of oxaziridines ranging from pii A = +0.13 to -1.81 were found from the acidity rate profile. Hydrolysis rates were 1.49X 10 min for (56) and 43.4x 10 min for (56a) (7UCS(B)778). O-Protonation is assumed to occur, followed by polar C—O bond cleavage. The question of the place of protonation is independent of the predominant IV-protonation observed spectroscopically under equilibrium conditions all protonated species are thermodynamically equivalent. [Pg.207]

Other examples of the successful displacement of tosylates are the preparation of 31 -, 16a-,16j - and27- labeled steroids. This displacement reaction fails, however, with certain C-18 and C-19 alcohol derivatives which give mainly O—S instead of C—O bond cleavage. Unsatisfactory results were also obtained with sterically hindered tosylate esters at C-11, C-12 and C-20, which give considerable amounts of olefinic products in addition to O—S bond cleavage. ... [Pg.197]

Reductive N-O bond cleavage of perhydropyrido[l,2-6][l,2]oxazine 10 with Zn dust furnished 2-(3-hydroxypentyl)piperidine 11 (96JCS(P1)1113). Similarly, 2/S,4u S,5Q ,7/0,8yS-H-5-benzyloxy-7-(tert-butyldiphenylsilyloxy)-2-[2-(methoxymethoxy)ethyl]-8-methylperhydropyrido[l,2-6][l,2]oxazine gave the respective ring-opened piperidine (OOOL2955, 01JOC3338). [Pg.226]

Asymmetric hydrogenolysis of epoxides has received relatively little attention despite the utility such processes might hold for the preparation of chiral secondary alcohol products. Chan et al. showed that epoxysuccinate disodium salt was reduced by use of a rhodium norbornadiene catalyst in methanol/water at room temperature to give the corresponding secondary alcohol in 62% ee (Scheme 7.31) [58]. Reduction with D2 afforded a labeled product consistent with direct epoxide C-O bond cleavage and no isomerization to the ketone or enol before reduction. [Pg.249]

A number of other chemistries which involve C-O bond cleavage have been reported.226 22 Druliner226 has reported on systems where NCO, 112, 113 or related species is the persistent radical. Homolysis rates for these systems were stated to he suitable for MMA polymerization at ambient temperature. The use of NCO has also been studied by Grande et al. z most recently for AA polymerization.2 0 Although control during AA homopolymerization was poor the process yielded NCO- terminated PAA that could be used to make PAA-block-PMMA.230... [Pg.483]

According to the H-NMR spectra in DMSO - de, benzodiazepine 69 exists as a 4 1 mixture of tautomers A and A. Benzodiazepin-2-one 69 is formed due to the substitution of the hydroxyl group of coiunarin 67 by one of the amino groups of o-phenylenediamine and the C - O bond cleavage in the py-rone ring upon reaction with the second amino group. [Pg.149]

There are also examples in which phosphate esters of saturated alcohols are reductively deoxygenated.229 Mechanistic studies of the cleavage of aryl dialkyl phosphates have indicated that the crucial C-O bond cleavage occurs after transfer of two electrons.230... [Pg.440]

Although C—O bond cleavage is of little importance for transformations of protoberberines to other types of alkaloids, the selective C—O bond cleavage reaction provides access to naturally unabundant or nonnatural protoberberines from naturally abundant protoberberines such as berberine. [Pg.153]

A kinetic isotope effect 160/180 of 2% in the spontaneous hydrolysis of the 2,4-dinitrophenyl phosphate dianion, whose ester oxygen is labeled, suggests a P/O bond cleavage in the transition state of the reaction, and thus also constitutes compelling evidence for formation of the metaphosphate 66,67). The hydrolysis behavior of some phosphoro-thioates (110) is entirely analogous 68). [Pg.96]

As for the acetyl phosphate monoanion, a metaphosphate mechanism has also been proposed 78) for the carbamoyl phosphate monoanion 119. Once again, an intramolecular proton transfer to the carbonyl group is feasible. The dianion likewise decomposes in a unimolecular reaction but not with spontaneous formation of POf as does the acetyl phosphate dianion, but to HPOj and cyanic acid. Support for this mechanism comes from isotopic labeling proof of C—O bond cleavage and from the formation of carbamoyl azide in the presence of azide ions. [Pg.100]

It should be mentioned, however, that the phosphoramidothioate 202 can undergo hydrolysis by another mechanism which becomes operative above all in polar solvents (e.g. aqueous KOH, and less so in methanol or acetone). P—O bond cleavage occurs, presumably via an addition/elimination mechanism, while the metaphosphorimidate pathway is characterized by P—S bond cleavage. [Pg.119]

The bonds between an oxygen and an sp3 carbon atom in alcohols, ethers, or esters are quite resistant to hydrogenolysis. Elevated temperatures and pressures are required to induce C-O bond cleavage and the high temperature can cause the cleavage of the C—C bonds, too. [Pg.123]


See other pages where O-bond cleavage is mentioned: [Pg.133]    [Pg.453]    [Pg.454]    [Pg.455]    [Pg.632]    [Pg.515]    [Pg.519]    [Pg.777]    [Pg.730]    [Pg.176]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.719]    [Pg.878]    [Pg.44]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.81]    [Pg.719]    [Pg.878]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.143]    [Pg.160]    [Pg.203]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.153]    [Pg.42]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.89]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.111]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.65]    [Pg.65]   


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Allylic C-O bond cleavage

Cleavage of P-O-bonds

O-cleavage

O—H bond, cleavage

Reductive Cleavage of an N-O Bond

Si—O bonds cleavage

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