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Potassium silyl

The ketone is added to a large excess of a strong base at low temperature, usually LDA in THF at -78 °C. The more acidic and less sterically hindered proton is removed in a kineti-cally controlled reaction. The equilibrium with a thermodynamically more stable enolate (generally the one which is more stabilized by substituents) is only reached very slowly (H.O. House, 1977), and the kinetic enolates may be trapped and isolated as silyl enol ethers (J.K. Rasmussen, 1977 H.O. House, 1969). If, on the other hand, a weak acid is added to the solution, e.g. an excess of the non-ionized ketone or a non-nucleophilic alcohol such as cert-butanol, then the tautomeric enolate is preferentially formed (stabilized mostly by hyperconjugation effects). The rate of approach to equilibrium is particularly slow with lithium as the counterion and much faster with potassium or sodium. [Pg.11]

Metals and Metal Derivatives, Silane reacts with alkah metals dissolved in various solvents, forming as the chief product the silyl derivative of the metal, potassium being the most commonly studied, eg, KSiH [13812-63-OJ (27—30). When 1,2-dimethoxyethane or bis(2-methoxyethyl)ether are used as solvents, two competing reactions occur, where M is an alkah metal. [Pg.22]

This is followed by hydrolysi.s of the ester moieties with potassium carbonate and reesterification of the carboxy moiety with diazomethane to produce intermediate 65. The solitary free alcoholic hydroxyl at C-9 is oxidized with Collins reagent and the silyl ether groups are removed with acetic acid to give enprostil (63) [15]. [Pg.10]

Nitradon of the potassium enolates of cycloalkanones with pentyl n silyl enol ethers with nitroniiim tetraflnoroborate " provides a method for the preparadon of cydic ct-nitro ketones. Tnflnoroacetyl nitrate generated from tnflnoroacedc anhydnde and ammonium nitrate is a mild and effecdve nitradug reagent for enol acetates fEq. 2.411. ... [Pg.16]

All of the ethynylated cyclobutadienes are completely stable and can be easily manipulated under ambient conditions, as long as the alkyne arms carry substituents other than H. For the deprotected alkynylated cyclobutadiene complexes, obtainable by treatment of the silylated precursors with potassium carbonate in methanol or tetrabutylammonium fluoride in THF, the stability is strongly dependent upon the number of alkyne substitutents on the cyclobutadiene core and the nature of the stabilizing fragment. In the tricarbonyUron series, 27b, 27c, 29 b, and 28b are isolable at ambient temperature and can be purified by sublimation or distillation under reduced pressure. The corresponding tetraethynylated complex 63 e, however, is not stable under ambient conditions as a pure substance but can be stored as a dilute solution in dichloro-methane. It can be isolated at 0°C and kept for short periods of time with only... [Pg.151]

In this section primarily reductions of aldehydes, ketones, and esters with sodium, lithium, and potassium in the presence of TCS 14 are discussed closely related reductions with metals such as Zn, Mg, Mn, Sm, Ti, etc., in the presence of TCS 14 are described in Section 13.2. Treatment of ethyl isobutyrate with sodium in the presence of TCS 14 in toluene affords the O-silylated Riihlmann-acyloin-condensation product 1915, which can be readily desilylated to the free acyloin 1916 [119]. Further reactions of methyl or ethyl 1,2- or 1,4-dicarboxylates are discussed elsewhere [120-122]. The same reaction with trimethylsilyl isobutyrate affords the C,0-silylated alcohol 1917, in 72% yield, which is desilylated to 1918 [123] (Scheme 12.34). Likewise, reduction of the diesters 1919 affords the cyclized O-silylated acyloin products 1920 in high yields, which give on saponification the acyloins 1921 [119]. Whereas electroreduction on a Mg-electrode in the presence of MesSiCl 14 converts esters such as ethyl cyclohexane-carboxylate via 1922 and subsequent saponification into acyloins such as 1923 [124], electroreduction of esters such as ethyl cyclohexylcarboxylate using a Mg-electrode without Me3SiCl 14 yields 1,2-ketones such as 1924 [125] (Scheme 12.34). [Pg.281]

The tricyclic core of spirotryprostatin B can be formed via formation of the dihydropyrrole 325 <2000AGE4596>. Removal of the silyl protecting group of 322, followed by Dess-Martin oxidation, and reaction of the resultant aldehyde with the potassium salt of the diketopiperazine phosphonate 323 led to formation of the enamide 324. [Pg.747]

Ultrasound also promotes the reaction of potassium hydride with some silicon hydrides to give silyl anions in excellent yields and... [Pg.222]

After extensive experimentation, it was discovered that exposure of silyl ether (+)-97 to potassium trithiocarbonate and trifluoroacetic acid in dichloromethane affords a 25 7 1 mixture of endolendo endo/exo exo/exo bisdithiepanethione products, reflecting a ca. 5 1 preference for nucleophilic approach from the endo-face of each diketopiperazine moiety. Resubjection of the isolated bisdithiepanethione diastereomers to the original reaction conditions did not result in their equilibration, indicating that the products were a result of kinetic trapping. [Pg.228]

Our first experiments were performed with benzene as solvent, which generally provides very good yields.3 Use of the less hazardous solvent ethyl acetate gives inferior yields if the silyl enol ether contains triethyiamine. Ethyl acetate was distilled from potassium carbonate. [Pg.97]

Evidently, an increase in steric hindrance around the reduced fragment requires the presence of ammonium fluoride in the reaction mixture. It should be noted that potassium fluoride has no effect. It is highly probable that ammonium fluoride is required for slow elimination of HF, which gradually desilylates the nitroso acetal fragment thus facilitating its reduction. As can be seen from Scheme 3.284, many reduction products are derivatives of unnatural amino acids. Since the initial nitroso acetals can be prepared by silylation of simple acyclic AN, possibilities have been opened for the synthesis of unnatural amino acids from available AN. [Pg.725]

The first reported synthesis of hydroxyurea (24) consists of the condensation of hy-droxylamine with potassium cyanate (Scheme 7.14) [87]. Condensation of hydroxy-lamine with ethyl carbamate also gives pure hydroxyurea in good yield after recrystallization (Scheme 7.14) [88]. Nitrogen-15 labeled hydroxyurea provides a useful tool for studying the NO-producing reactions of hydroxyurea and can be prepared by the condensation of N-15 labeled hydroxylamine with either potassium cyanate or trimethylsilyl isocyanate followed by silyl group removal (Scheme 7.14) [89, 90]. Addition of hydroxylamine to alkyl or aryl isocyanates yields alkyl or aryl N-hydroxyureas (Scheme 7.14) [91, 92]. The condensation of amines with aromatic N-hydroxy carbamates also produces N-substituted N-hydroxyureas (Scheme 7.14) [93]. [Pg.189]

Peroxides. See also Inorganic peroxides Organic peroxides acid hydrolysis of, 23 459 diacyl, 24 282-284 explosive, 20 569-573 formation of, 20 577 as free-radical initiators, 24 279-293 organomercury-containing, 23 445 potassium salts of, 18 478 silylation and, 22 703 stereoisomers of, 28 459 as vulcanizing agents, 22 795 ... [Pg.684]


See other pages where Potassium silyl is mentioned: [Pg.2072]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.290]    [Pg.171]    [Pg.2072]    [Pg.2072]    [Pg.54]    [Pg.290]    [Pg.171]    [Pg.2072]    [Pg.139]    [Pg.399]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.216]    [Pg.270]    [Pg.538]    [Pg.548]    [Pg.777]    [Pg.33]    [Pg.626]    [Pg.39]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.30]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.16]    [Pg.159]    [Pg.291]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.28]    [Pg.60]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.203]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.139]    [Pg.422]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.339 , Pg.340 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.339 , Pg.340 ]




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