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Palladium chloride alkene dimerization

A typical reaction involving nickel(O) treats an allylic halide such as 3-chloro-2-methyl-l-propene with Ni(CO)4 to form 439,288 a nickel dimer analogous to the palladium chloride dimer discussed in the previous section. This complex reacts with an alkene to form a new complex (440), and subsequent reaction with a variety of electrophilic reagents removes nickel. In this example, the chlorine was converted to an acetate ligand (in 441) and reacted with methanolic carbon monoxide to give the ester (442).288... [Pg.1125]

Aromatic iodides, unsubstituted or bearing substituents in meta and/or para positions, readily react with aliphatic iodides and a terminal alkene in the presence of norbomene, a palladium species such as phenylnorbomylpaUadium chloride (PNP) dimer and K2CO3 in DMF at room temperature yielding alkenylarenes symmetrically alkylated at both ortho positions (Scheme lO). As shown in Table 1, selectivity always is very high except when secondary alkyl iodides are used. Yields can be improved by prolonging the reaction time. [Pg.1486]

It is reasonable to assume that the identical complex will be generated whether it be done stoichiometrically from an alkene, to give a chloride or carboxylate dimer followed by the addition of 2 equiv. of a phosphine per Pd, or by the addition of an allyl-X compound to give a phosphine-Pd0 complex. This assumption is supported by the fact that complexes generated in either manner have been found to exhibit identical reaction profiles.380 Furthermore, for the vast majority of allylpalladium reactions studied, it is most likely that the reactive species is a cationic bisphosphine-palladium complex (13).13 Calculations... [Pg.614]

Cyclopropanation reactions with these catalysts are typically carried out with 0.5-2 mol% (with respect to the diazo compound) of catalyst and a five- to tenfold excess of alkene. Under these conditions, the formation of formal carbene dimers [e.g. diethyl ( )-but-2-enedioate and (Z)-but-2-enedioate from ethyl diazoacetate], arising from the competition between alkene and the metal-carbene intermediate for the diazo compound, can be largely suppressed. It has been shown, however, that the control of the addition rate of the diazoacetic ester has no effect on the cyclopropane yield with (dibenzonitrile)palladium(II) chloride as catalyst, in contrast to tetraacetatodirhodium, Rhg(CO)ig, and CuCl P(OR)3. ... [Pg.449]

Photochemical decomposition of diazo(trimethylsilyl)methane (1) in the presence of alkenes has not been thoroughly investigated (see Houben-Weyl Vol. E19b, p 1415). The available experimental data [trimethylsilylcyclopropane (17% yield) and la,2a,3j8-2,3-dimethyl-l-trimethylsilylcyclopropane (23% yield)] indicate that cyclopropanation occurs only in low yield with ethene and ( )-but-2-ene. In both cases the formal carbene dimer is the main product. In reactions with other alkenes, such as 2,3-dimethylbut-2-ene, tetrafluoroethene or hexafluoro-propene, no cyclopropanes could be detected.The transition-metal-catalyzed decomposition of diazo(trimethylsilyl)methane (1) has been applied to the synthesis of many different silicon-substituted cyclopropanes (see Table 3 and Houben-Weyl Vol.E19b, p 1415) 3.20a,b,2i.25 ( iQp. per(I) chloride has been most commonly used for carbene transfer to ethyl-substituted alkenes, cycloalkenes, styrene, and related arylalkenes. For the cyclopropanation of acyl-substituted alkenes, palladium(II) chloride is the catalyst of choice, while palladium(II) acetate was less efficient, and copper(I) chloride, copper(II) sulfate and rhodium(II) acetate dimer were totally unproductive. The cyclopropanation of ( )-but-2-ene represents a unique... [Pg.821]

Solvent effects on, and products from, reaction of styrene with ethylene in the presence of di-)ti-chloro-dichlorobis(styrene)dipalladium(n), [Pd-(Ph CH—CH2)Cl2]2, indicate a mechanism similar to (i)->(iv) above, with the addition of a preliminary equilibrium between the dimer and solvated monomers. The mechanism of reaction of styrene with vinyl compounds, catalysed by the same chloride-bridged dipalladium complex, has been studied using isotopic tracer (H, D) experiments. Palladium-acetate-catalysed reaction of styrene with benzene, also investigated using deuterium tracer experiments, involves no hydride shift, in contrast to the rather closely related Wacker process. The importance of intermediates with palladium-carbon n-bonds in palladium(ii)-catalysed alkylation and arylation of alkenes has been demonstrated. [Pg.299]


See other pages where Palladium chloride alkene dimerization is mentioned: [Pg.316]    [Pg.171]    [Pg.482]    [Pg.170]    [Pg.422]    [Pg.958]    [Pg.399]    [Pg.588]    [Pg.158]    [Pg.479]    [Pg.180]    [Pg.64]    [Pg.675]    [Pg.120]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.3 , Pg.482 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.3 , Pg.482 ]




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Alkenes dimerization

Alkenes dimerizations

Chlorides alkenes

Dimeric Palladium dimer

Dimeric alkenes

Palladium alkenes

Palladium chloride

Palladium chloride dimer

Palladium dimer

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