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Palladium catalysis cyanation

In the last few years numerous reports have been published in the field of microwave-promoted aryl halide cyanation, utilizing nickel [71], palladium [72,73] and copper [74,75] catalysis. Even water [75] and ionic liquids [76] have proven useful as solvents in these processes. Srivastava and Collibee have exemplified a swift and dynamic procedure using polymer-supported triphenyl phosphine to enable easy subsequent removal through filtration [72]. As shown in Scheme 19, both bromides and iodides could be activated using palladium catalysis in DMF. Even without optimization of the individual reaction times, the overall process time involving simple filtration and extraction for compound isolation appears to be short. [Pg.115]

Scheme 20 Effective cyanation using aryl triflates and palladium catalysis... Scheme 20 Effective cyanation using aryl triflates and palladium catalysis...
The palladium-catalyzed reaction of aryl halides with cyanides to give cyanobenzenes takes place under relatively mild conditions compared to the conventional method using a stoichiometric amount of CuCN [74]. Thus, palladium catalysis has been often employed. Recently, a number of effective methods for the cyanation have been reported. The reaction of aryl iodides with NaCN under two-phase conditions [75] and those of aryl triflates [76, 77] and aryl chlorides [78] with Zn(CN)2 occur with good efficiency, while these are considered to proceed via mechanism B. [Pg.223]

Palladium catalyzed cyanation [71] has recently received a lot of attention in the literature as a cross-coupling which employs cheap, commercially available metal cyanides and incorporates the versatile and synthetically useful cyano group. The development of a domino ort/ o-functionalization/cyanation reaction represents an advance in palladium catalysis as there are very few, if any palladium-catalyzed domino cyanation reactions. The development of the domino ortfto-functionalization/ cyanation [72, 73] by Lautens has led to some of the most significant discoveries of highly functionalized alkyl halides as coupling partners, as well as further development in the selectivity and scope of o/t/to-arylation chemistry. [Pg.22]

Cyanation Large scale synthesis Palladium catalysis... [Pg.125]


See other pages where Palladium catalysis cyanation is mentioned: [Pg.708]    [Pg.185]    [Pg.8]    [Pg.215]    [Pg.237]    [Pg.280]    [Pg.564]    [Pg.332]    [Pg.98]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.257 , Pg.393 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.237 ]




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