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Sodium borohydride-metal salts alkenes

A number of metals salts can be used as the source of electrophiles in reactions with alkenes. One of the most interesting of these involves the attack of mercury(II) acetate in acetic acid. Reductive cleavage of the organomercury compound with sodium borohydride leads to the overall hydration of the alkene in a Markownikoff sense. There are a number of preparative advantages, such as a reduced tendency to rearrange, associated with this and similar relatively mild procedures when compared to the direct protonation of a double bond (Scheme 3.14)... [Pg.70]

Sodium borohydride, a representative borohydride reagent, behaves as an effective source of nucleophilic hydride in an aprotic polar solvent, such as DMSO, sulfolane, HMPA, DMF or diglyme, and is used for the reduction of alkyl halides. As shown in Table 3, primary and secondary iodides, bromides and chlorides are converted to hydrocarbons at temperatures between 25 and 100 C using sodium borohydride. Vicinal dihalides, such as 1,2-dibromooctane, are smoothly converted to the corresponding saturated hydrocarbons, in contrast to the reductions using LiAlH4 or low-valent metal salts, which predominantly afford alkenes. [Pg.803]


See other pages where Sodium borohydride-metal salts alkenes is mentioned: [Pg.97]    [Pg.72]    [Pg.12]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.273]    [Pg.559]    [Pg.170]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.1070 ]




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