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Pericyclic reactions conrotatory process

We may further extend the analysis of pericyclic reactions by considering that a single p orbital, denoted by the symbol m, can be a participant in a pericyclic reaction. In this analysis, one lobe of the p orbital makes up the top face of a one-atom n system, while the other lobe makes up the bottom face. The participation of a single p orbital is suprafacial if both cycloaddition processes involve only one of the two lobes of the p orbital, and it is antarafacial if the cycloaddition involves both. We may thus predict that the conrotatory opening of the cyclopropyl anion to an allyl anion (Figure 11.72) should take place via an -F 2 ] pathway. Conversely, the opening of the cation would be a -F 2 ] process, giving the opposite stereochemistry in the product." ... [Pg.743]

For the protic acid catalyzed reaction, the cyclization commences with protonation of the divinyl ketone 9 and formation of a pentadienyl cation 10. An analogous process is operational in the case of Lewis acid-catalyzed reactions. The pentadienyl cation 10 then undergoes a 47t electrocyclic closure to give a cyclopentenylic cation 11. This cyclization is a pericyclic reaction and is governed by the rules for conservation of orbital symmetry. Namely, this means the cyclization occurs stereospecifically in a conrotatory fashion, with predictable relative configurations of the substituents (i.e., the R groups in 11 are anti). Elimination of a proton, followed by tautomerization gives product 13. ... [Pg.123]

Figure 15.18 shows several examples of electrocyclic processes. Since the reactions are always allowed in either a conrotatory or disrotatory manner, the key issue is the control of stereochemistry. Electrocyclic reactions provide a good example of the power of pericyclic reactions in this regard. In all cases, the reaction proceeds as predicted from the various theoretical approaches. The restrictions placed by the orbital analysis on the reaction pathway are nicely demonstrated by examples D and E in Figure 15.18 only the stereochemistry given is found. An instructive example of the fact that it is the number of electrons that controls the process, not the number of atoms or orbitals, is the conrotatory ring closure of the four-electron pentadienyl cation prepared by protonation of a divinyl ketone (example G). [Pg.906]

Vitamin D2 is produced by two pericyclic reactions. One of them is photochemicaUy initiated the second thermally initiated. The first step is a photochemical electrocyclic reaction in which a cyclohexadiene of the B ring is isomerized to a triene. The reaction involves six k electrons and is the reverse of the photochemical cyclization reaction discussed in Section 28.4. Thus, by the principle of microscopic reversibility, this photochemicaUy allowed ring opening involving a 4 +2 71 system must occur by a conrotatory process. [Pg.894]


See other pages where Pericyclic reactions conrotatory process is mentioned: [Pg.700]    [Pg.156]    [Pg.108]    [Pg.215]    [Pg.519]    [Pg.834]    [Pg.241]    [Pg.403]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.347 , Pg.397 , Pg.398 , Pg.405 , Pg.414 ]




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