Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Rhodium catalysts aromatic rearrangements

SO the Sgl mechanism and not the usual arenium ion mechanism is operating. Aromatic rings can also be deuterated by treatment with D2O and a rhodium(III) chloride or platinum catalyst or with CeDs and an alkylaluminum dichloride catalyst," though rearrangements may take place during the latter procedure. Tritium ( H, abbreviated T) can be introduced by treatment with T2O and an alkylaluminum dichloride catalyst. " Tritiation at specific sites (e.g., >90% para in... [Pg.696]

Rhodium(II) acetate catalyzes C—H insertion, olefin addition, heteroatom-H insertion, and ylide formation of a-diazocarbonyls via a rhodium carbenoid species (144—147). Intramolecular cyclopentane formation via C—H insertion occurs with retention of stereochemistry (143). Chiral rhodium (TT) carboxamides catalyze enantioselective cyclopropanation and intramolecular C—N insertions of CC-diazoketones (148). Other reactions catalyzed by rhodium complexes include double-bond migration (140), hydrogenation of aromatic aldehydes and ketones to hydrocarbons (150), homologation of esters (151), carbonylation of formaldehyde (152) and amines (140), reductive carbonylation of dimethyl ether or methyl acetate to 1,1-diacetoxy ethane (153), decarbonylation of aldehydes (140), water gas shift reaction (69,154), C—C skeletal rearrangements (132,140), oxidation of olefins to ketones (155) and aldehydes (156), and oxidation of substituted anthracenes to anthraquinones (157). Rhodium-catalyzed hydrosilation of olefins, alkynes, carbonyls, alcohols, and imines is facile and may also be accomplished enantioselectively (140). Rhodium complexes are moderately active alkene and alkyne polymerization catalysts (140). In some cases polymer-supported versions of homogeneous rhodium catalysts have improved activity, compared to their homogenous counterparts. This is the case for the conversion of alkenes direcdy to alcohols under oxo conditions by rhodium—amine polymer catalysts... [Pg.181]

Wolff rearrangement of a-diazoketones to give ketenes or subsequent products is an often used synthetic procedure the scope and limitations of which are well established 13 390), so that only a few new features of this reaction need to be considered here. Concerning its catalytic version, one knows that copper, rhodium and palladium catalysts tend to suppress the rearrangement390). A recent case to the contrary is provided by the Rh2(OAc)4-catalyzed decomposition of ethyl -2-diazo-3-oxopent-4-enoates 404 from which the p,y-unsaturated esters 405 are ultimately obtained via a Wolff rearrangement 236). The Z-5-aryl-2-diazo-3-oxopent-4-enoates undergo intramolecular insertion into an aromatic C—H bond instead (see Sect. 4.1). [Pg.232]


See other pages where Rhodium catalysts aromatic rearrangements is mentioned: [Pg.181]    [Pg.685]    [Pg.483]    [Pg.426]    [Pg.522]    [Pg.784]    [Pg.784]    [Pg.118]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.230]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.431]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.37 ]




SEARCH



Aromatics rearrangements

Catalysts aromatization

Rearrangement aromatic

Rhodium aromatics

Rhodium catalysts catalyst

Rhodium catalysts rearrangement

Rhodium rearrangements

© 2024 chempedia.info