Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Phase transfer catalysis esters from halides

Sodium salts of carboxylic acids, including hindered acids such as mesitoic, rapidly react with primary and secondary bromides and iodides at room temperature in dipolar aprotic solvents, especially HMPA, to give high yields of carboxylic esters.679 The mechanism is Sn2. Another method uses phase transfer catalysis.680 With this method good yields of esters have been obtained from primary, secondary, benzylic, allylic, and phenacyl halides.681 In another procedure, which is applicable to long-chain primary halides, the dry carboxylate salt and the halide, impregnated on alumina as a solid support, are subjected to irradiation by microwaves in a commercial microwave oven.682 In still another method, carboxylic acids... [Pg.398]

Polymeric phosphonium salt-bound carboxylate, benzenesulphinate and phenoxide anions have been used in nucleophilic substitution reactions for the synthesis of carboxylic acid esters, sulphones and C/O alkylation of phenols from alkyl halides. The polymeric reagent seems to increase the nucleophilicity of the anions376 and the yields are higher than those for corresponding polymer phase-transfer catalysis (reaction 273). [Pg.162]

Alkylation and deprotection of N-protected aminomethylphosphonate esters 6 are shown in Scheme 6. The nitrogen is protected as the imine derived from benzophenone or a benz-aldehyde, and a variety of conditions are used for deprotonation and alkylation (Table 2). The benzaldehyde imine of aminomethylphosphonate can be deprotonated with LDA and alkylated with electrophilic halides (entries 1 and 2). For the best yields, saturated alkyl bromides require an equivalent of HMPA as an additive. 36 Allylic esters can be added to the carbanion with palladium catalysis (entries 3-7). 37,38 For large-scale production, phase-transfer catalysis appears to be effective and inexpensive (entries 8-12). 39,40 ... [Pg.496]

Potassium chloride Aliquat 336 Halides from methanesulfonic add esters Optically-active sec. halides Inversion of configuration Phase transfer catalysis... [Pg.143]

Potassium carbonate I tetra-n-butylammonium bromide Thiolphosphinic acid esters from thionophosphinic acids and halides Solid-liq. phase transfer catalysis... [Pg.109]

Tertiary amines are also known to effect the phase transfer addition of cyanide ion to primary, allylic, and benzylic halides [9]. The reported effect of amine structure on catalytic efficiency closely parallels that reported by Hennis for ester formation in a two-phase system (see Sect. 1.7). Both the nitrogen of the amine and the carbon bearing halide of the alkyl bromide must be sterically accessible for the reaction to succeed. Thus, -hexylamine is effective in concert with -butyl bromide but the combinations of either 5-butyl bromide and -hexylamine or -butyl bromide and cyclohexylamine are not. Tertiary amines are generally more effective than secondary or primary amines. In addition, the yields of primary nitriles decrease dramatically with the size of the primary alkyl bromide from quantitative with n-butyl to only 6% with -decyl bromide when -hexylamine is used as phase transfer catalyst. On the other hand, tributylamine was equally useful as a catalyst for the quantitative conversion of either 1-bromohexane or 1-bromodecane to the corresponding nitriles [9]. In general, these observations accord with those of Hennis and coworkers indicating that this reaction is an example of in situ formation of and catalysis by quaternary ammonium salts [10]. [Pg.98]


See other pages where Phase transfer catalysis esters from halides is mentioned: [Pg.488]    [Pg.221]    [Pg.540]    [Pg.180]    [Pg.258]    [Pg.57]    [Pg.131]    [Pg.28]    [Pg.1404]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.140]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.43 ]




SEARCH



Esters catalysis

Halide transfer

Halides esters

Transfer from

© 2024 chempedia.info