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Pyruvaldehyde reaction with ammonia

Komoto detected lactic acid in the mixture from reaction of D-glucose with ammonia,4 and presumed that it was produced from pyruvaldehyde formed by decomposition of D-glucose. Lactic acid has, indeed, been found as a product of the action of alkali (lime-water) on substituted D-glucose and substituted D-fructose,81,83,96 and the mechanism of its formation involves the reversible aldol reaction, followed by formation of pyruvaldehyde, and the benzilic acid rearrangement already described for saccharinic acid this is illustrated83,96 in Scheme 11. [Pg.345]

Many of the classical methods grew out of the earliest synthesis of imidazole, which was achieved in 1858 by Debus [1] when he allowed glyoxal, formaldehyde and ammonia to react together. Although the earliest modifications of this method used a-diketones or a-ketoaldehydes as substrates [2, by the 1930s it was well established that a-hydroxycarbonyl compounds could serve equally well, provided that a mild oxidizer (e.g. ammoniacal copper(ll) acetate, citrate or sulfate) was incorporated [3. A further improvement was to use ammonium acetate in acetic acid as the nitrogen source. All of these early methods have deficiencies. There are problems associated with the synthesis of a wide range of a-hydroxyketones or a-dicarbonyls, yields are invariably rather poor, and more often than not mixtures of products are formed. There are, nevertheless, still applications to the preparation of simple 4-alkyl-, 4,5-dialkyl(diaryl)- and 2,4,5-trialkyl(triaryl)imidazoles. For example, pymvaldehyde can be converted quite conveniently into 4-methylimidazole or 2,4-dimethylimidazole. However, reversed aldol reactions of pyruvaldehyde in ammoniacal solution lead to other imidazoles (e.g. 2-acetyl-4-methylimidazole) as minor products [4]. Such... [Pg.151]

In general, Radziszewski reaction is the synthesis of an imidazole derivative 4 by the condensation of an a-dicarbonyl compound 1 (e.g., glyoxal, pyruvaldehyde, porphyrin-2,3-diones, and benzil), an aldehyde 2, and two equivalents of dry ammonia in alcohol. Interestingly, the replacement of one equivalent of ammonia with a primary amine 3 results in the formation of 1-substituted imidazoles 4 (Scheme 12.1). [Pg.382]


See other pages where Pyruvaldehyde reaction with ammonia is mentioned: [Pg.340]    [Pg.346]    [Pg.347]    [Pg.279]    [Pg.213]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.127]    [Pg.175]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.2293]    [Pg.301]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.347 ]




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