Big Chemical Encyclopedia

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

Articles Figures Tables About

Solid-phase catalysis allylic substitution

Allyl carbonates can be cleaved by nucleophiles under palladium(O) catalysis. Allyl carbonates have been proposed for side-chain protection of serine and threonine, and their stability under conditions of /VT moc or /V-Boc deprotection has been demonstrated [107]. Prolonged treatment with nucleophiles (e.g., 20% piperidine in DMF, 24 h) can, however, lead to deprotection of Alloc-protected phenols [108,109]. Carbohydrates [110], tyrosine derivatives [107], and other phenols have been protected as allyl ethers, and deprotection could be achieved by palladium-mediated allylic substitution (Entry 9, Table 7.8). 9-Fluorenyl carbonates have been used as protected intermediates for the solid-phase synthesis of oligosaccharides [111]. Deprotection was achieved by treatment with NEt3/DCM (8 2) at room temperature. [Pg.224]


See other pages where Solid-phase catalysis allylic substitution is mentioned: [Pg.265]    [Pg.423]    [Pg.446]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.437]    [Pg.16]    [Pg.488]   


SEARCH



Allylation catalysis

Allylic substitution

Catalysis substitution

Phase allylation

Solid catalysis

Solid substitutional

© 2024 chempedia.info