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Rhodium compounds, catalysis insertion reactions

Diazo compounds, with or without metal catalysis, are well-known sources of carbenes. For synthetic purposes a metal catalyst is used. The diazo compounds employed are usually a- to an electron-withdrawing group, such as an ester or a ketone, for stability. In the early days, copper powder was the catalyst of choice, but now salts of rhodium are favoured. The chemistry that results looks very like the chemistry of free carbenes, involving cyclopropanation of alkenes, cyclopropenation of alkynes, C-H insertion reactions and nucleophilic trapping. As with other reactions in this chapter, free carbenes are not involved. Rhodium-carbene complexes are responsible for the chemistry. This has enormous consequences for the synthetic applications of the carbenes - not only does the metal tame the ferocity of the carbene, but it also allows control of the chemo-, regio- and stereoselectivity of the reaction by the choice of ligands. [Pg.312]

Lactams, and /S-lactams in particular, are interesting owing to their occurrence in biologically active compounds such as antibiotics related to penicillines. Insertion reactions of carbenes offer useful access to poly heterocyclic systems contain a -lactam nucleus, particularly when using rhodium and copper catalysis. Moreover, palladium catalyzed carbonyla-tion of azirines affords )S-lactam derivatives [93] in one step. [Pg.132]


See other pages where Rhodium compounds, catalysis insertion reactions is mentioned: [Pg.151]    [Pg.330]    [Pg.398]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.40]    [Pg.379]    [Pg.131]    [Pg.339]    [Pg.684]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.934 , Pg.935 , Pg.936 , Pg.937 , Pg.938 , Pg.939 ]




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Insertion catalysis

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Rhodium compounds

Rhodium compounds, catalysis

Rhodium insertion

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