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Radical intermediates direct trifluoromethylation

This reaction was initially reported by Finkelstein in 1910. It is a preparation of alkyl iodide from alkyl bromide or chloride with potassium or sodium iodide in acetone. Therefore, this reaction is generally known as the Finkelstein reaction. Occasionally, it is also referred to as the Finkelstein halide exchange, Finkelstein displacement, or Conant-Finkelstein reaction. Mechanistically, this reaction is a simple nucleophilic substitution (often via Sn2), as iodide is a stronger nucleophile than bromide or chloride. The yield of this reaction is very high and can be quantitative if occurs in DMF. It was found that the trifluoromethyl group retards the displacement of bromide when it presents as an a- or /3-substituent but accelerates the reaction as a substituent in an allylic chloride. Under normal conditions, this type of halide displacement does not occur for aryl halides. For dihalides, unsaturated or cyclic compounds may form via carbocation intermediates, which form transient covalent iodides or are reduced directly by iodide to free radicals. However, the aromatic halide exchange reacts smoothly when 10% Cul is present in the reaction... [Pg.1060]

Free radicals generated under photochemical conditions from thiohydroxamates add readily to the NN double bond of diaziridines and in particular to the 3-bromo or 3-trifluoromethyl-3-phenyldiazirine to produce diaziridinyl radicals (Scheme 25) these intermediates undergo dimerization and fragmentation to yield the corresponding imines, which can be hydrolyzed to the corresponding amines. Barton esters can also be used for the direct preparation of nitroso compounds. From a synthetic standpoint, the yields are moderate and the method is limited to primary and secondary carboxylic acids, which form dimers as an end product. Tertiary nitroso compounds do not dimerize and further react with the radical present under the reaction conditions. [Pg.1345]


See other pages where Radical intermediates direct trifluoromethylation is mentioned: [Pg.43]    [Pg.745]    [Pg.745]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.745]    [Pg.291]    [Pg.190]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.234]    [Pg.855]    [Pg.243]    [Pg.385]    [Pg.387]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.780 ]




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Radical intermediates

Trifluoromethyl radical

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