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Protonation synthesis

Takano, S., Yamada, S.L, Numata, H., and Ogasawara, K., A new synthesis of a steroid side chain via stereocontrolled protonation. Synthesis of (-)-desmosterol, J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun., 760, 1983. [Pg.326]

The formation of the above anions ("enolate type) depend on equilibria between the carbon compounds, the base, and the solvent. To ensure a substantial concentration of the anionic synthons in solution the pA" of both the conjugated acid of the base and of the solvent must be higher than the pAT -value of the carbon compound. Alkali hydroxides in water (p/T, 16), alkoxides in the corresponding alcohols (pAT, 20), sodium amide in liquid ammonia (pATj 35), dimsyl sodium in dimethyl sulfoxide (pAT, = 35), sodium hydride, lithium amides, or lithium alkyls in ether or hydrocarbon solvents (pAT, > 40) are common combinations used in synthesis. Sometimes the bases (e.g. methoxides, amides, lithium alkyls) react as nucleophiles, in other words they do not abstract a proton, but their anion undergoes addition and substitution reactions with the carbon compound. If such is the case, sterically hindered bases are employed. A few examples are given below (H.O. House, 1972 I. Kuwajima, 1976). [Pg.10]

An interesting case are the a,/i-unsaturated ketones, which form carbanions, in which the negative charge is delocalized in a 5-centre-6-electron system. Alkylation, however, only occurs at the central, most nucleophilic position. This regioselectivity has been utilized by Woodward (R.B. Woodward, 1957 B.F. Mundy, 1972) in the synthesis of 4-dialkylated steroids. This reaction has been carried out at high temperature in a protic solvent. Therefore it yields the product, which is formed from the most stable anion (thermodynamic control). In conjugated enones a proton adjacent to the carbonyl group, however, is removed much faster than a y-proton. If the same alkylation, therefore, is carried out in an aprotic solvent, which does not catalyze tautomerizations, and if the temperature is kept low, the steroid is mono- or dimethylated at C-2 in comparable yield (L. Nedelec, 1974). [Pg.25]

The synthesis described met some difficulties. D-Valyl-L-prolyl resin was found to undergo intramolecular aminoiysis during the coupling step with DCC. 70< o of the dipeptide was cleaved from the polymer, and the diketopiperazine of D-valyl-L-proline was excreted into solution. The reaction was catalyzed by small amounts of acetic acid and inhibited by a higher concentration (protonation of amine). This side-reaction can be suppressed by adding the DCC prior to the carboxyl component. In this way, the carboxyl component is "consumed immediately to form the DCC adduct and cannot catalyze the cyclization. [Pg.237]

A mild procedure which does not involve strong adds, has to be used in the synthesis of pure isomers of unsymmetrically substituted porphyrins from dipyrromethanes. The best procedure having been applied, e.g. in unequivocal syntheses of uroporphyrins II, III, and IV (see p. 251f.), is the condensation of 5,5 -diformyldipyrromethanes with 5,5 -unsubstituted dipyrromethanes in a very dilute solution of hydriodic add in acetic acid (A.H. Jackson, 1973). The electron-withdrawing formyl groups disfavor protonation of the pyrrole and therefore isomerization. The porphodimethene that is formed during short reaction times isomerizes only very slowly, since the pyrrole units are part of a dipyrromethene chromophore (see below). Furthermore, it can be oxidized immediately after its synthesis to give stable porphyrins. [Pg.255]

This reaction sequence is much less prone to difficulties with isomerizations since the pyridine-like carbons of dipyrromethenes do not add protons. Yields are often low, however, since the intermediates do not survive the high temperatures. The more reactive, faster but less reliable system is certainly provided by the dipyrromethanes, in which the reactivity of the pyrrole units is comparable to activated benzene derivatives such as phenol or aniline. The situation is comparable with that found in peptide synthesis where the slow azide method gives cleaner products than the fast DCC-promoted condensations (see p. 234). [Pg.256]

The thioboration of terminal alkynes with 9-(alkylthio)-9-borabicyclo[3.3.1]-nonanes (9-RS-9-BBN) proceeds regio- and stereoselectively by catalysis of Pd(Ph,P)4 to produce the 9-[(Z)-2-(alkylthio)-l-alkeny)]-9-BBN derivative 667 in high yields. The protonation of the product 667 with MeOH affords the Markownikov adduct 668 of thiol to 1-alkyne. One-pot synthesis of alkenyl sulfide derivatives 669 via the Pd-catalyzed thioboration-cross-coupling sequence is also possible. Another preparative method for alkenyl sulfides is the Pd-catalyzed cross-coupling of 9-alkyl-9-BBN with l-bromo-l-phe-nylthioethene or 2-bromo-l-phenylthio-l-alkene[534]. [Pg.225]

Another category Ic indole synthesis involves cyclization of a-anilino aldehydes or ketones under the influence of protonic or Lewis acids. This corresponds to retro.synthetic path d in Scheme 4.1. Considerable work on such reactions was done in the early 1960s by Julia and co-workers. The most successful examples involved alkylation of anilines with y-haloacetoacetic esters or amides. For example, heating IV-substituted anilines with ethyl 4-bromoacetoacetate followed by cyclization w ith ZnClj gave indole-3-acetate esterfi]. Additional examples are given in Table 4.3. [Pg.41]

When applied to the synthesis of ethers the reaction is effective only with primary alcohols Elimination to form alkenes predominates with secondary and tertiary alcohols Diethyl ether is prepared on an industrial scale by heating ethanol with sulfuric acid at 140°C At higher temperatures elimination predominates and ethylene is the major product A mechanism for the formation of diethyl ether is outlined m Figure 15 3 The individual steps of this mechanism are analogous to those seen earlier Nucleophilic attack on a protonated alcohol was encountered m the reaction of primary alcohols with hydrogen halides (Section 4 12) and the nucleophilic properties of alcohols were dis cussed m the context of solvolysis reactions (Section 8 7) Both the first and the last steps are proton transfer reactions between oxygens... [Pg.637]

Acidic Cation-Exchange Resins. Brmnsted acid catalytic activity is responsible for the successful use of acidic cation-exchange resins, which are also soHd acids. Cation-exchange catalysts are used in esterification, acetal synthesis, ester alcoholysis, acetal alcoholysis, alcohol dehydration, ester hydrolysis, and sucrose inversion. The soHd acid type permits simplified procedures when high boiling and viscous compounds are involved because the catalyst can be separated from the products by simple filtration. Unsaturated acids and alcohols that can polymerise in the presence of proton acids can thus be esterified directiy and without polymerisation. [Pg.564]

Acetates. Because of the significant interest in selective acetylation reactions of sucrose, the need for a convenient and unambiguous method of identification has been recognized (34,35). The position of an acetyl group in a partially acetylated sucrose derivative can be ascertained by comparison of its H-nmr acetyl methyl proton resonances after per-deuterioacetylation with those of the assigned octaacetate spectmm. The synthesis of partially acetylated sucroses has generally been achieved either by way of selectively protected derivatives such as trityl ethers and cychc acetals or by direct selective acetylation and deacetylation reactions. [Pg.33]

The poly(vinyl alcohol) made for commercial acetalization processes is atactic and a mixture of cis- and /n j -l,3-dioxane stereoisomers is formed during acetalization. The precise cis/trans ratio depends strongly on process kinetics (16,17) and small quantities of other system components (23). During formylation of poly(vinyl alcohol), for example, i j -acetalization is more rapid than /ra/ j -acetalization (24). In addition, the rate of hydrolysis of the trans-2iQ. -A is faster than for the <7 -acetal (25). Because hydrolysis competes with acetalization during acetal synthesis, a high cis/trans ratio is favored. The stereochemistry of PVF and PVB resins has been studied by proton and carbon nmr spectroscopy (26—29). [Pg.450]

In the section dealing with electrophilic attack at carbon some results on indazole homocyclic reactivity were presented nitration at position 5 (Section 4.04.2.1.4(ii)), sulfon-ation at position 7 (Section 4.04.2.1.4(iii)) and bromination at positions 5 and 7 (Section 4.04.2.1.4(v)). The orientation depends on the nature (cationic, neutral or anionic) of the indazole. Protonation, for instance, deactivates the heterocycle and directs the attack towards the fused benzene ring. A careful study of the nitration of indazoles at positions 2, 3, 5 or 7 has been published by Habraken (7UOC3084) who described the synthesis of several dinitroindazoles (5,7 5,6 3,5 3,6 3,4 3,7). The kinetics of the nitration of indazole to form the 5-nitro derivative have been determined (72JCS(P2)632). The rate profile at acidities below 90% sulfuric acid shows that the reaction involves the conjugate acid of indazole. [Pg.259]

Isoxazoles are susceptible to attack by nucleophiles, the reactions involving displacement of a substituent, addition to the ring, or proton abstraction with subsequent ring-opening. Isoxazolium salts are even more susceptible to attack by a variety of nucleophiles, providing useful applications of the isoxazole nucleus in organic synthesis. Especially useful is the reductive cleavage of isoxazoles, which may be considered as masked 1,3-dicarbonyl compounds or enaminoketones. [Pg.12]

The protonated azirine system has also been utilized for the synthesis of heterocyclic compounds (67JA44S6). Thus, treatment of (199) with anhydrous perchloric acid and acetone or acetonitrile gave the oxazolinium perchlorate (207) and the imidazolinium perchlorate (209), respectively. The mechanism of these reactions involves 1,3-bond cleavage of the protonated azirine and reaction with the carbonyl group (or nitrile) to produce a resonance-stabilized carbonium-oxonium ion (or carbonium-nitrilium ion), followed by attack of the nitrogen unshared pair jf electrons to complete the cyclization. [Pg.69]


See other pages where Protonation synthesis is mentioned: [Pg.517]    [Pg.542]    [Pg.3324]    [Pg.3323]    [Pg.321]    [Pg.517]    [Pg.542]    [Pg.3324]    [Pg.3323]    [Pg.321]    [Pg.709]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.150]    [Pg.222]    [Pg.282]    [Pg.300]    [Pg.466]    [Pg.489]    [Pg.40]    [Pg.594]    [Pg.226]    [Pg.227]    [Pg.561]    [Pg.40]    [Pg.345]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.192]    [Pg.245]    [Pg.258]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.223]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.103]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.287]    [Pg.290]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.354 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.5 , Pg.354 ]




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