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Olefinic double bonds

The highly regio- and diastereoselective addition of an alkyl and an arylthio group to an olefinic double bond ( carbosulfenylation ) is achieved with arenesulfenyl chlorides and alkyl-chloro-titanium(IV) species (Reetz reagent, from R2Zn/TiCU 5 1 M. T. Reetz, 1987, 1989), Use of the more bulky 2,4,6-triisopropylbenzenesulfenyl chloride improves the yield of the highly versatile alkyl aryl sulfide products. [Pg.21]

The reaction conditions applied are usually heating the amine with a slight excess of aldehyde and a considerable.excess of 2d-30hydrochloric acid at 100 °C for a few hours, but much milder ( physiological ) conditions can be used with good success. Diols, olefinic double bonds, enol ethers, and glycosidic bonds survive a Pictet-Spengler reaction very well, since phenol and indole systems are much more reactive than any of these acid sensitive functional groups (W.M. Whaley, 1951 J.E.D. Barton, 1965 A.R. Battersby, 1969). [Pg.292]

Ozonation ofAlkenes. The most common ozone reaction involves the cleavage of olefinic carbon—carbon double bonds. Electrophilic attack by ozone on carbon—carbon double bonds is concerted and stereospecific (54). The modified three-step Criegee mechanism involves a 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition of ozone to an olefinic double bond via a transitory TT-complex (3) to form an initial unstable ozonide, a 1,2,3-trioxolane or molozonide (4), where R is hydrogen or alkyl. The molozonide rearranges via a 1,3-cycloreversion to a carbonyl fragment (5) and a peroxidic dipolar ion or zwitterion (6). [Pg.493]

Ozonation of Aromatics. Aromatic ring unsaturation is attacked much slower than olefinic double bonds, but behaves as if the double bonds in the classical Kekule stmctures really do exist. Thus, benzene yields three moles of glyoxal, which can be oxidized further to glyoxyUc acid and then to oxahc acid. Substituted aromatics give mixtures of aUphatic acids. Ring substituents such as amino, nitro, and sulfonate are cleaved during ozonation. [Pg.494]

There are a few economical routes that can be employed for production of the largest-volume phosphines as specialty chemicals. The preparation of alkyl phosphines, where R > C2H, employs the addition of lower phosphines across an olefinic double bond. The reaction may be either acid-, base-, or radical-catalyzed. The acid-catalyzed addition probably proceeds through the generation of a carbonium ion intermediate which is attacked by the unshared... [Pg.378]

Addition Reactions. The C=C double bond of aEyl alcohol undergoes addition reactions typical of olefinic double bonds. For example, when bromine is added, a good yield of 2,3-dibromopropanol is obtained although 1,2,3-tribromopropane is obtained as a by-product. [Pg.72]

Protonated /V-chloroalkyl amines under the influence of heat or uv light rearrange to piperidines or pyrroHdines (Hofmann-Lriffler reaction) (88). The free-radical addition of alkyl and dialkyl-/V-chloramines to olefins and acetylenes yields P-chloroalkji-, P-chloroalkenyl-, and 8-chloroalkenylamines (89). Various N-hiomo- and N-chloropolyfluoroaLkylarnines have been synthesized whose addition products to olefinic double bonds can be photolyzed to fluoroazaalkenes (90). [Pg.455]

When heated in the presence of a carboxyHc acid, cinnamyl alcohol is converted to the corresponding ester. Oxidation to cinnamaldehyde is readily accompHshed under Oppenauer conditions with furfural as a hydrogen acceptor in the presence of aluminum isopropoxide (44). Cinnamic acid is produced directly with strong oxidants such as chromic acid and nickel peroxide. The use of t-butyl hydroperoxide with vanadium pentoxide catalysis offers a selective method for epoxidation of the olefinic double bond of cinnamyl alcohol (45). [Pg.175]

Hydrogen cyanide adds to an olefinic double bond most readily when an adjacent activating group is present in the molecule, eg, carbonyl or cyano groups. In these cases, a Michael addition proceeds readily under basic catalysis, as with acrylonitrile (qv) to yield succinonitnle [110-61-2], C4H4N2, iu high yield (13). Formation of acrylonitrile by addition across the acetylenic bond can be accompHshed under catalytic conditions (see Acetylene-DERIVED chemicals). [Pg.376]

The following compounds have been obtained from thiete 1,1-dioxide Substituted cycloheptatrienes, benzyl o-toluenethiosulfinate, pyrazoles, - naphthothiete 1,1-dioxides, and 3-subst1tuted thietane 1,1-dioxides.It is a dienophile in Diels-Alder reactions and undergoes cycloadditions with enamines, dienamines, and ynamines. Thiete 1,1-dioxide is a source of the novel intermediate, vinylsulfene (CH2=CHCH=SQ2). which undergoes cyclo-additions to strained olefinic double bonds, reacts with phenol to give allyl sulfonate derivatives or cyclizes unimolecularly to give an unsaturated sultene. - Platinum and iron complexes of thiete 1,1-dioxide have been reported. [Pg.215]

Physieal properties are similar to alkanes and the ehemistry is dietated by the earbon triple bond. This bond is less reaetive than the olefin double bond towards eleetrophilie reagents, but more... [Pg.35]

Ozone cracking is a physicochemical phenomenon. Ozone attack on olefinic double bonds causes chain scission and the formation of decomposition products. The first step in the reaction is the formation of a relatively unstable primary ozonide, which cleaves to an aldehyde or ketone and a carbonyl. Subsequent recombination of the aldehyde and the carbonyl groups produces a second ozonide [58]. Cross-linking products may also be formed, especially with rubbers containing disubstituted carbon-carbon double bonds (e.g. butyl rubber, styrene-butadiene rubber), due to the attack of the carbonyl groups (produced by cleavage of primary ozonides) on the rubber carbon-carbon double bonds. [Pg.645]

In order to locate items of interest in the book, the subject index lists, in addition to chemical operations, types of compounds rather than specific compounds (with a few exceptions). If, for example, readers do not find what they are looking for under the entry fluoroolefins , they may try olefins , double bonds, additions of , etc. [Pg.1305]

Concerning nomenclature, fulvalene 2 and its related systems 1 and 3-6 are the parent structures of this class of heterocyclic cross-conjugated compounds. Both ring systems are numbered as shown in formula 9 (1,4,5,8-tetraazafulva-lene) beginning at the heteroatoms. Alternatively, as in the case of heptafulva-lene 10 (3,3 -diazaheptafulvalene), the numbers 1-7 and l -7 can be used.Tlie use of the name of the parent heterocycle connected by an olefinic double bond is often favored for the nomenclature of electron-rich olefines, for example, bis[3-(2,6-diisopropylphenyl)-4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-ylidene] for compound 51a (97LAR365). Similarly, azafulvalenes of type 11 and 12 can be re-... [Pg.117]

Using dioxolane as a substituent in the 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition of diazomethane with olefinic double bonds, it was found that the bulky dioxolane ring plays a major role in the diastereoselection [OOJOC388]. [Pg.24]

Treatment of an epimeric mixture of 4-substituted 2-(trimethylsilyloxy)-5-phenyl-3-phenylthio-l,4-oxazine 264 with ZnBr2 led to the stereoselective formation of perhydropyrido[2,l-c][l,4]oxazine 266 via the iminium ion 265 by the phenyl bearing stereocenter directed addition of the olefinic double bond from the /S-face of the cyclic moiety (97SL799, 98T10309). Similarly, an epimeric mixture of (45,9aS)-l-trimethylsilyloxy-4-phenyl-3,4,6,7-tetra-hydropyrido[2,l-c][l,4]oxazine was prepared by cyclization of (Z)-5(S)-phenyl-3-phenvlsulfanyl-2-trimethylsilyloxy-4-[4-(trimethylsilyl)but-3-enyll morpholine (OOSC2565). [Pg.280]

The coupling of bromo- or iodobenzene to styrene yields regioselectively a mixture of E- and Z-stilbenes 12 and 13. An electron-withdrawing substituent at the olefinic double bond often improves the regioselectivity, while an electron-donor-substituted alkene gives rise to the formation of regioisomers. [Pg.156]

The radical mechanism is supported by a number of findings for instance, when the electrolysis is carried out in the presence of an olefin, the radicals add to the olefinic double bond styrene does polymerize under those conditions. Side products can be formed by further oxidation of the alkyl radical 2 to an intermediate carbenium ion 5, which then can react with water to yield an alcohol 6, or with an alcohol to yield an ether 7 ... [Pg.183]

Through the 19.30s, Ipatieff led UOP in its effort to develop two catalytic processes for the production of high-octane fuel alkylation and polymerization— the first, a reaction of a hydrocarbon with an olefin (double-bonded compound) the second, the formation of long molecules from smaller ones. Both processes produce high-octane blending compounds that increase the quality of cracked gasoline. [Pg.680]

Formation of C-C Bonds by Reactions Involving Olefinic Double Bonds... [Pg.861]

Formation of C-C Bonds by Addition to Olefinic Double Bonds Enimines, Nitroalkenes, 4,5-Dihydrooxazoles, a,/MJnsaturated Sulfones, Sulfoxides and Sulfoximines... [Pg.1007]

Another version of the double [2,3]-sigmatropic rearrangement, involving the sequence sulfenate - sulfoxide - sulfenate, has also been observed. For example, an effective one-pot epimerization procedure of 17a-vinyl-l 7/i-hydroxysteroids to the rather inaccessible 17-epimers has been achieved by the use of such a rearrangement (equation 35)137. Thus treatment of alcohol 76a with benzenesulfenyl chloride afforded the sulfoxide 77 as a single isomer and E-geometry of the olefinic double bond. Exposure of 77 to trimethyl phosphite in refluxing methanol produced a mixture of 76b and 76a in a 73 27 ratio. [Pg.735]

It seems to the author that another possible pathway can coexist with the above-mentioned reversible addition of sulfinyl radicals to olefinic double bonds, that is, the reversible addition by the sulfinyl oxygen, since a substantial amount of the unpaired electron spin-density resides on the oxygen atom. [Pg.1086]

In 1950 the Fischer-Tropsch synthesis was banned in Germany by the allied forces. Sinarol, a high paraffinic kerosene fraction sold by Shell, was used as a substitute. This ban coincided with the rapid development of the European petrochemical industry, and in due time Fischer-Tropsch synthesis applied to the production of paraffins became uneconomic anyway. After the war there was a steady worldwide increase in the demand for surfactants. In order to continually meet the demand for synthetic detergents, the industry was compelled to find a substitute for /z-paraffin. This was achieved by the oligomerization of the propene part of raffinate gases with phosphoric acid catalyst at 200°C and about 20 bars pressure to produce tetrapropene. Tetrapropene was inexpensive, comprising a defined C cut and an olefinic double bond. Instead of the Lewis acid, aluminum chloride, hydrofluoric acid could now be used as a considerably milder, more economical, and easier-to-handle alkylation catalyst [4],... [Pg.42]

Styrenes may act as 2n and 4n components of the Diels-Alder reaction depending on the substitution site and the electronic effects of the substituent. Electron-donating groups at the a-carbon of the olefinic double bond enhance the dienic reactivity of styrenes [30]. [Pg.49]

Cycloaddition reactions of (E)-l-acetoxybutadiene (18a) and (E)-l-methoxy-butadiene (18b) with the acrylic and crotonic dienophiles 19 were studied under high pressure conditions [9] (Table 5.1). Whereas the reactions of 18a with acrylic dienophiles regioselectively and stereoselectively afforded only ortho-enJo-adducts 20 in fair to good yields, those with crotonic dienophiles did not work. Similar results were obtained in the reactions with diene 18b. The loss of reactivity of the crotonic dienophiles has been ascribed to the combination of steric and electronic effects due to the methyl group at the )S-carbon of the olefinic double bond. [Pg.208]

Recently, Meier et al. synthesized the most extended OP Vs (81) known to date [104]. Four different synthetic pathways were used for the generation of these OP Vs the final step involves the formation of one or two olefinic double bonds via a Wittig-Horner-type, a Siegrist-type or a McMurry-type condensation. [Pg.202]

Stimulated by extensive research activities on donor/acceptor substituted stilbenes, Mullen and Klarner have reported a donor/acceptor substituted poly(4,4 -biphenyl-diylvinylene) derivative (85) in which the NR2 donor and CN acceptor substituents are located on the vinylene unit [111]. The synthesis is based on a C-C-coupling reaction of in situ generated carbanion functions with a (pseudo)cation function, followed by a subsequent elimination of MeSH with formation of the olefinic double bond. [Pg.204]

The quantum yields, the number of olefinic double bonds consumed to form cyclobutane per absorbed quantum, of the oligomerization and polymerization of 2,5-DSP, P2VB and 3 OMe have been measured by using monochromatic light. The quantum yield ( ) is defined by the equation... [Pg.135]

I> = (dc/df)//abs where dc/dr is the rate of disappearance of the olefinic double bonds per unit volume and /abs the rate at which the incident light is absorbed per unit volume of the KBr pellet containing the sample. The rates of disappearance of the olefinic double bonds during oligomerization and polymerization were monitored by infrared (IR) spectroscopy. [Pg.136]

Ferrocen-l,l -diylbismetallacycles are conceptually attractive for the development of bimetal-catalyzed processes for one particular reason the distance between the reactive centers in a coordinated electrophile and a coordinated nucleophile is self-adjustable for specific tasks, because the activation energy for Cp ligand rotation is very low. In 2008, Peters and Jautze reported the application of the bis-palladacycle complex 56a to the enantioselective conjugate addition of a-cyanoacetates to enones (Fig. 31) [74—76] based on the idea that a soft bimetallic complex capable of simultaneously activating both Michael donor and acceptor would not only lead to superior catalytic activity, but also to an enhanced level of stereocontrol due to a highly organized transition state [77]. An a-cyanoacetate should be activated by enolization promoted by coordination of the nitrile moiety to one Pd(II)-center, while the enone should be activated as an electrophile by coordination of the olefinic double bond to the carbophilic Lewis acid [78],... [Pg.159]

Laboratory experiments on the ozonization of the dibenzoazepine drug carbamazepine (McDowell et al. 2005) showed the occurrence of a number of transformation products that were initiated by reaction at the olefinic double bond between the rings (Figure 1.29). [Pg.30]

Sulfur dioxide (see above) as well as S02, SO , and SOj have been used as building blocks in three-component sulfone syntheses. It has long been known that aromatic sulfinic acids are easily available from diazonium salts and sulfur dioxide under copper catalysis . Mechanistically, aryl radicals as reactive intermediates add to sulfur dioxide generating arenesulfonyl radicals, which either take up an electron (or hydrogen) yielding a sulfinic acid or add to an olefinic double bond yielding final y -halogenated alkyl aryl sulfones (equation 78). [Pg.215]

Early investigations have indicated that sulHnyl radicals apparently do not add, at least in the usual way, to olefinic double bonds. However, some recent results by lino and Matsuda obtained by studying the thermal decomposition of benzhydryl p-tolyl and benzhydryl methyl sulfoxides in the presence of cis- -deuteriostyrene lead one to believe that sulfinyl radicals add reversibly to CH2=CHPh. The molar ratio of trans to cis -deuteriostyrene that they observed at nearly 50% conversion was explained by addition-elimination reaction of sulfinyl radicals. [Pg.1085]


See other pages where Olefinic double bonds is mentioned: [Pg.258]    [Pg.564]    [Pg.51]    [Pg.73]    [Pg.236]    [Pg.690]    [Pg.150]    [Pg.259]    [Pg.607]    [Pg.215]    [Pg.431]    [Pg.56]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.875]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.207]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.344 ]




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Bond olefinic

Dihydroxylation of olefinic double bonds

Double bond isomerization, olefins

Hydrogenation of olefinic double bonds

Olefin double

Olefin double bonds

Olefin double bonds

Olefin double-bond type

Olefinic double bond, radical added

Olefins double-bonded diene conjugation

Olefins terminal double bond

Olefins trans double bond

Reduction of olefinic double bonds

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