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Pyrroles 2-hydroxy-, tautomerism

N-alkylation, 4, 236 Pyrrole, 2-formyl-3,4-diiodo-synthesis, 4, 216 Pyrrole, 2-formyl-1-methyl-conformation, 4, 193 Pyrrole, 2-formyl-5-nitro-conformation, 4, 193 Pyrrole, furyl-rotamers, 4, 546 Pyrrole, 2-(2-furyl)-conformation, 4, 32 Pyrrole, 2-halo-reactions, 4, 78 Pyrrole, 3-halo-reactions, 4, 78 Pyrrole, 2-halomethyl-nucleophilic substitution, 4, 274 reactions, 4, 275 Pyrrole, hydroxy-synthesis, 4, 97 Pyrrole, 1-hydroxy-cycloaddition reactions, 4, 303 deoxygenation, 4, 304 synthesis, 4, 126, 363 tautomerism, 4, 35, 197 Pyrrole, 2-hydroxy-reactions, 4, 76 tautomerism, 4, 36, 198... [Pg.815]

In many cases, substituents linked to a pyrrole, furan or thiophene ring show similar reactivity to those linked to a benzenoid nucleus. This generalization is not true for amino or hydroxyl groups. Hydroxy compounds exist largely, or entirely, in an alternative nonaromatic tautomeric form. Derivatives of this type show little resemblance in their reactions to anilines or phenols. Thienyl- and especially pyrryl- and furyl-methyl halides show enhanced reactivity compared with benzyl halides because the halogen is made more labile by electron release of the type shown below. Hydroxymethyl and aminomethyl groups on heteroaromatic nuclei are activated to nucleophilic attack by a similar effect. [Pg.69]

The 4- and 5-hydroxy-imidazoles, -oxazoles and -thiazoles (499, 501) and 4-hydroxy-pyrazoles, -isoxazoles and -isothiazoles (503) cannot tautomerize to an aromatic carbonyl form. However, tautomerism similar to that which occurs in hydroxy-furans, -thiophenes and -pyrroles is possible (499 500 503 504 501 502), as well as a zwitterionic... [Pg.101]

Pyrrole, 3-hydroxy-geometry, 4, 158 synthesis, 4, 343 tautomerism, 4, 36, 198 Pyrrole, 3-([Pg.816]

The importance of ring size holds also for tautomerism of -pyrrol-5-ones and. d -dihydro-6-pyridones. While the former compounds behave as cyclic 1-methyl-2-alkyl-2-hydroxy-5-pyrrolidones 179) (76) [or, on distillation, as the dehydrated l-methyl-2-alkyl-J -pyrrolones (77)], the latter compounds exist as acyclic N-methylamides of 8-oxo-acids (78) [as shown by infrared spectroscopy (/80)j. The dehydration of 78 during distillation to form l-methyl-2-alkyl-. -dihydro-6-pyridones (79) is achieved only with difficulty. [Pg.272]

The methods outlined, of course, are readily applicable to a wide variety of substituted heterocycles like the carboxyl, hydroxy and mercapto derivatives of pyridines, pyridine 1-oxides, pyrroles, etc. The application to amines and to diaza compounds such as pyrimidine, where the two centers are basic, is obvious except that now 23 takes the role of the neutral compound, 21 and 22 the roles of the tautomeric first conjugate bases, and 20 the role of the second conjugate base. Extensions to molecules with more than two acidic or basic centers, such as aminonicotinic acid, pyrimidinecarboxylic acids, etc., are obvious although they tend to become algebraically cumbersome, involving (for three centers) three measurable Kg s, four Ay s, and fifteen ideal dissociation constants (A ), a total of twenty-two constants of which seven are independent. [Pg.258]

Equilibrium and rate constants for the keto-enol tautomerization of 3-hydroxy-indoles and -pyrroles are collected in Table 32 (86TL3275). The pyrroles ketonize substantially (103-104 times) faster than their sulfur or oxygen analogues, and faster still than the benzo-fused systems, indole, benzofuran, and benzothiophene. The rate of ketonization of the hydroxy-thiophenes and -benzothiophenes in acetonitrile-water (9 1) is as follows 2-hydroxybenzo[b]thiophene > 2,5-dihydroxythiophene > 2-hydroxythiophene > 3-hydroxybenzo[/ Jthiophene > 3-hydroxythiophene. 3-Hydroxythiophene does not ketonize readily in the above solvent system, but in 1 1 acetonitrile-water, it ketonizes 6.5 times slower than 2-hydroxythiophene (87PAC1577). [Pg.88]

Hydroxy derivatives of thiophene, pyrrole and furan (240 and 243) are tautomeric with alternative non-aromatic carbonyl forms (241, 242 and 244), as discussed in Section 2.3.5.2. [Pg.338]

In contrast with the hydroxy compounds, comparatively little is known of the tautomeric preferences of pyrrole- and indole-thiols. The compounds are readily oxidized to form the bis-heteroaryldisulfides and the available spectral data for the monomeric systems suggest that, in contrast with the oxygen analogues, the 2-pyrrole- and 3-indole-thiols exist predominantly as such, whereas the sulfur analogue of oxindole is the predominant tautomer for the 2-indolyl system <63AHC(2)1,76AHC(SuppI. 1)214). [Pg.305]

The C-2 and C-3 hydroxy derivatives of pyrrole are special in the sense that the tautomeric equilibria favor the pyrrolinone structures (see Section 3.04.6.2). Furthermore, the general synthetic methods are not usually applicable so that we will call attention in this section not only to the methods of directly introducing these substituents, which are rare, but also to those ring construction processes which specifically give the pyrrolinones and indolinones. The indole derivatives have widely used trivial names, oxindole (5) for indolin-2-one and indoxyl (6) for indolin-3-one, Carbocyclic hydroxy substituents in indole and carbazole, on the other hand, for the most part act as normal aromatic phenolic groups. These compounds are usually prepared by application of the standard ring syntheses. [Pg.363]

Three l-hydroxy-3-phenylpyrroles (46) were formed (72JOC1561) in 26-44% yields, instead of the anticipated 6//-oxazines, when the corresponding E-oximes (44) were treated successively with one equivalent of sodium hydride in dimethylformamide (DMF) followed by triphenylvinylphosphonium bromide Z-benzil oxime gave no pyrrole. The cyclization probably proceeds via cyclization to the N-oxide 45 and tautomerism to the 1-hydroxypyrrole. [Pg.115]

The substitution reaction may occur on a prototropic nonaromatic form. Both types of tautomerism, i.e., that prevailing in the parent heterocycles (pyrrole-pyrrolenine, indole-indolenine) and that typical of the hydroxy and amino derivatives, must be considered. [Pg.244]


See other pages where Pyrroles 2-hydroxy-, tautomerism is mentioned: [Pg.814]    [Pg.814]    [Pg.815]    [Pg.814]    [Pg.815]    [Pg.814]    [Pg.815]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.814]    [Pg.892]    [Pg.601]    [Pg.963]    [Pg.963]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.199]    [Pg.281]    [Pg.301]    [Pg.814]    [Pg.892]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.35]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.199]    [Pg.281]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.11 , Pg.12 , Pg.13 , Pg.20 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.11 , Pg.12 , Pg.13 , Pg.20 ]




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