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Oppenauer oxidation Subject

Meerwein-Pondorf-Verley reduction, discovered in the 1920s, is the transfer hydrogenation of carbonyl compounds by alcohols, catalyzed by basic metal compounds (e.g., alkoxides) [56-58]. The same reaction viewed as oxidation of alcohols [59] is called Oppenauer oxidation. Suitable catalysts include homogeneous as well as heterogeneous systems, containing a wide variety of metals like Li, Mg, Ca, Al, Ti, 2r and lanthanides. The subject has been reviewed recently [22]. In this review we will concentrate on homogeneous catalysis by aluminium. Most aluminium alkoxides will catalyze MPV reduction. [Pg.158]

Pyrrolizidine alcohols are readily oxidized. Stereoisomeric 1-hydroxymethylpyrrolizidines when oxidized with chromic acid afford stereoisomeric pyrrolizidine-1-carboxylic acids (see Section III, C).81,90 Secondary alcohols, when subjected to Oppenauer oxidation or chromic acid treatment, yield amino-ketones (cf. refs. 72, 77, and 81). [Pg.356]

One of the chemoselective and mild reactions for the reduction of aldehydes and ketones to primary and secondary alcohols, respectively, is the Meerwein-Ponndorf-Verley (MPV) reduction. The lifeblood reagent in this reaction is aluminum isopropoxide in isopropyl alcohol. In MPV reaction mechanism, after coordination of carbonyl oxygen to the aluminum center, the critical step is the hydride transfer from the a-position of the isopropoxide ligand to the carbonyl carbon atom through a six-mem-bered ring transition state, 37. Then in the next step, an aluminum adduct is formed by the coordination of reduced carbonyl and oxidized alcohol (supplied from the reaction solvent) to aluminum atom. The last step is the exchange of produced alcohol with solvent and detachment of oxidized alcohol which is drastically slow. This requires nearly stoichiometric quantities of aluminum alkoxide as catalyst to prevent reverse Oppenauer oxidation reaction and also to increase the time of reaction to reach complete conversion. Therefore, accelerating this reaction with the use of similar catalysts is always the subject of interest for some researchers. [Pg.251]

The lithium aluminum hydride reduction of deacetyldeformopicraline (picrinine, VI) affords deformopicralinol (XXI R = H), whose structural relationship with picralinol (XXI R = CH20H) was confirmed by comparison of their mass spectra. When subjected to a modified Oppenauer oxidation deformopicralinol yielded two products. One was the indole-... [Pg.508]

Metal-catalyzed oxidation of alcohols to aldehydes and ketones is a subject that has received significant recent attention [21,56,57]. One such method that utilizes NHC ligands is an Oppenauer-type oxidation with an Ir or Ru catalyst [58-62]. These alcohol oxidation reactions consist of an equilibrium process involving hydrogen transfer from the alcohol substrate to a ketone, such as acetone (Eq. 5), or an alkene. Because these reactions avoid the use of a strong oxidant, the potential oxidative instability of NHC ligands is less problematic. Consequently, these reactions represent an important target for future research into the utility of NHCs. [Pg.32]


See other pages where Oppenauer oxidation Subject is mentioned: [Pg.179]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.178]    [Pg.181]    [Pg.181]    [Pg.228]    [Pg.158]    [Pg.60]    [Pg.276]    [Pg.34]   


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