Big Chemical Encyclopedia

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

Articles Figures Tables About

Transition metal complexes with diazo compounds

With regard to the mechanism of these Pd°-catalyzed reactions, little is known in addition to what is shown in Scheme 10-62. In our opinion, the much higher yields with diazonium tetrafluoroborates compared with the chlorides and bromides, and the low yields and diazo tar formation in the one-pot method using arylamines and tert-butyl nitrites (Kikukawa et al., 1981 a) indicate a heterolytic mechanism for reactions under optimal conditions. The arylpalladium compound is probably a tetra-fluoroborate salt of the cation Ar-Pd+, which dissociates into Ar+ +Pd° before or after addition to the alkene. An aryldiazenido complex of Pd(PPh3)3 (10.25) was obtained together with its dediazoniation product, the corresponding arylpalladium complex 10.26, in the reaction of Scheme 10-64 by Yamashita et al. (1980). Aryldiazenido complexes with compounds of transition metals other than Pd are discussed in the context of metal complexes with diazo compounds (Zollinger, 1995, Sec. 10.1). [Pg.253]

An example of a serendipitous discovery in a field related to diazo chemistry is the first in vitro product of a reaction of molecular nitrogen with a transition metal complex (Allen and Senoff, 1965). As discussed in the context of diazo-metal complexes (Zollinger, 1995, Sec. 3.3), the metal —N2 bonds are similar to C —N2 bonds in organic diazo compounds. The paradigm that N2 is (almost) inert in chemical reactions probably explains why it took so long for N2 complexes to be discovered. ... [Pg.218]

Metal-Catalyzed. Cyclopropanation. Carbene addition reactions can be catalyzed by several transition metal complexes. Most of the synthetic work has been done using copper or rhodium complexes and we focus on these. The copper-catalyzed decomposition of diazo compounds is a useful reaction for formation of substituted cyclopropanes.188 The reaction has been carried out with several copper salts,189 and both Cu(I) and Cu(II) triflate are useful.190 Several Cu(II)salen complexes, such as the (V-f-butyl derivative, which is called Cu(TBS)2, have become popular catalysts.191... [Pg.921]

Despite the volume of work concerned with metal-catalyzed decomposition of diazo compounds and carbenoid reactions 28>, relatively little work has been reported on the metal-catalyzed decomposition of sulphonyl azides. Some metal-aryl nitrene complexes have recently been isolated 29 31>. Nitro compounds have also been reduced to nitrene metal complexes with transition metal oxalates 32K... [Pg.14]

Not included in the present review is the fascinating new chemistry which results from reaction between diazo compounds and low-valent transition-metal complexes bearing easily displaceable two-electron ligands as well as with metal-metal multiple bonds and metal hydrides whereby a variety of novel organometallic molecules could be obtained. This field has been covered, in accord with its rapid development, by successive reviews of Hermann 19 22) and Atbini23). [Pg.79]

It has been widely accepted that the carbene-transfer reaction using a diazo compound and a transition metal complex proceeds via the corresponding metal carbenoid species. Nishiyama et al. characterized spectroscopically the structure of the carbenoid intermediate that underwent the desired cyclopropanation with high enantio- and diastereoselectivity, derived from (91).254,255 They also isolated a stable dicarbonylcarbene complex and demonstrated by X-ray analysis that the carbene moiety of the complex was almost parallel in the Cl—Ru—Cl plane and perpendicular to the pybox plane (vide infra).255 These results suggest that the rate-determining step of metal-catalyzed cyclopropanation is not carbenoid formation, but the carbene-transfer reaction.254... [Pg.249]

Certain transition metal complexes catalyze the decomposition of diazo compounds. The metal-bonded carbene intermediates behave differently from the free species generated via photolysis or thermolysis of the corresponding carbene precursor. The first catalytic asymmetric cyclopropanation reaction was reported in 1966 when Nozaki et al.93 showed that the cyclopropane compound trans- 182 was obtained as the major product from the cyclopropanation of styrene with diazoacetate with an ee value of 6% (Scheme 5-56). This reaction was effected by a copper(II) complex 181 that bears a salicyladimine ligand. [Pg.314]

A select number of transition metal compounds are effective as catalysts for carbenoid reactions of diazo compounds (1-3). Their catalytic activity depends on coordination unsaturation at their metal center which allows them to react as electrophiles with diazo compounds. Electrophilic addition to diazo compounds, which is the rate limiting step, causes the loss of dinitrogen and production of a metal stabilized carbene. Transfer of the electrophilic carbene to an electron rich substrate (S ) in a subsequent fast step completes the catalytic cycle (Scheme I). Lewis bases (B ) such as nitriles compete with the diazo compound for the coordinatively unsaturated metal center and are effective inhibitors of catalytic activity. Although carbene complexes with catalytically active transition metal compounds have not been observed as yet, sufficient indirect evidence from reactivity and selectivity correlations with stable metal carbenes (4,5) exist to justify their involvement in catalytic transformations. [Pg.45]

One of the most general approaches has already been mentioned and exemplified by equation 10.16. In this approach, diazoalkanes are used as free carbene precursors. These are photochemically or thermally decomposed to the free carbene, which reacts with a low-valent, mid- to late transition metal complex to give the alkylidene. Although general, this method suffers from the difficulty in handling often unstable diazo compounds. [Pg.431]

Similarly, the transition metal catalyzed cyclopropanation of alkenes or arenes with diazo compounds, in general, involves short-lived metal-carbene complexes which react with the alkene with concomitant reductive elimination of the metal fragment. Although not involving free carbenes, such reactions are covered fully in this section. [Pg.406]

The diazo reactions in this chapter are characterized by processes run either in the gas phase, in relatively inert matrices, or in — typically, but not exclusively — aprotic and comparatively apolar solvents, either thermally or photolytically or with transition metal catalysis of various types. The metastable intermediates are carbenes (RR C ), i. e., neutral, apparently divalent, carbon compounds, or their transition metal complexes (coined carbenoids, see later in this section). It is interesting to recall that the synthesis of a compound that we now call a carbene, namely methylene (H2C ), was already attempted in the early 19th century, i.e., before the tetravalency of carbon was established. Dumas (1835) and Regnault (1839) thought then that it should be possible to obtain a compound consisting of one carbon and two hydrogen atoms by dehydration of methanol (a compound of which only the atomic ratio 1C 4H lO was then known). ... [Pg.305]

The understanding of this catalysis started in 1952, shortly after the concept of carbenes was introduced (see Sect. 8.1). Yates postulated that transition-metal catalysts react with diazo compounds by formation of transient electrophilic metal carbenes, because that complex can be depicted as a metal-stabilized carbocation (8.104). Doyle (1986 a) proposed the catalytic cycle (8-46) for the formation of the carbenoid 8.104 and its reaction with an electron-rich substrate S . The reagent S is, first of all, an alkene in cyclopropanation, but can also belong to other groups of compounds, to be discussed later in this section. [Pg.358]

Tosylhydrazone salts could also be deconposed into the corresponding diazo compounds in the presence of a phase transfer catalyst. The addition of late transition metal complexes leads to the formation of metal carbenoid species which undergo various reactions such as cyclopropanation, aziridination, epoxidation, and C-H insertion. While both cyclopropanation and aziridination work equally well in the presence of the sodium and lithium tosylhydrazone salts, it was established that the sodium salt provided higher yields and selectivities in the reaction with aldehydes which led to the formation of epoxides (eq 28). ... [Pg.432]

Remarkably, mononitrosyl iron(—II) complexes displayed great potential in the activation of diazo compormds and carbene-transfer reactions [102]. Generally, the activation of diazo compound can be realized by electrophilic transition metal complexes. However, according to the concept of Umpoirmg [103], the electron-rich, nucleophilic iron(—II) compound 31 is expected to react with diazo compounds of electron-poor carbenes, such as ethyl diazoacetate (Scheme 42). At first the iron center would add the C=N bond of the diazo compound followed by release of N2 and formation of the electrophilic iron carbene moiety. The nitrosyl group in such transformations is assumed to support as an ancillary ligand the N2 release by pulling electron density to the iron center. [Pg.206]

Arenes suffer dearomatization via cyclopropanation upon reaction with a-diazocarbonyl compounds (Btlchner reaction) [76]. Initially formed norcaradiene products are usually present in equilibrium with cycloheptatrienes formed via electrocyclic cyclopropane ring opening. The reaction is dramatically promoted by transition metal catalysts (usually Cu(I) or Rh(II) complexes) that give metal-stabilized carbenoids upon reaction with diazo compounds. Inter- and intramolecular manifolds are known, and asymmetric variants employing substrate control and chiral transition metal catalysts have been developed [77]. Effective chiral catalysts for intramolecular Buchner reactions include Rh Cmandelate), rhodium carboxamidates, and Cu(I)-bis(oxazolines). While enantioselectivities as high as 95% have been reported, more modest levels of asymmetric induction are typically observed. [Pg.413]

Abstract A number of transition metal complexes are capable of catalyzing selective olefination of carbonyl compounds, including aldehydes, activated and unactivated ketones, with diazo reagents in the presence of triphenylphosphine or related tertiary phosphines. These catalytic olefination reactions can be carried out in a one-pot fashion under neutral conditions with the use of different diazo reagents as carbene sources, typically affording olefins in high yields and high stereoselectivity. [Pg.147]

The detailed mechanism of transition metal-catalyzed cyclopropanation using diazo compounds as a carbene source is still covered by clouds of controversy, but it is generally accepted that the reaction proceeds through metal-carbenoid complexes,17-21 and the valency of the metal ions (M) changes with carbenoid formation (Scheme 85). [Pg.255]

The normal byproducts formed during the transition metal-catalyzed decomposition of diazoalkanes are carbene dimers and azines [496,1023,1329], These products result from the reaction of carbene complexes with the carbene precursor. Their formation can be suppressed by slow addition (e.g. with a syringe motor) of a dilute solution of the diazo compound to the mixture of substrate and catalyst. Carbene dimerization can, however, also be a synthetically useful process. If, e.g., diazoacetone is treated with 0.1% RuClCpIPPhjij at 65 °C in toluene, cw-3-hexene-2,5-dione is obtained in 81% yield with high stereoselectivity [1038]. [Pg.232]

Sulfonium ylides generated through base-promoted deprotonation of sulfonium salt have been extensively studied. The reaction of sulfides with a diazo carbonyl compound in the presence of a transition metal catalyst is an alternative approach to obtain sulfonium ylides. Sulfonium ylides are more stable than the corresponding oxonium ylides. Stable sulfonium ylides generated by the reaction of an Rh(ii) carbene complex with thiophene have been reported (Figure 5). ... [Pg.164]


See other pages where Transition metal complexes with diazo compounds is mentioned: [Pg.148]    [Pg.459]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.439]    [Pg.528]    [Pg.121]    [Pg.238]    [Pg.33]    [Pg.154]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.795]    [Pg.68]    [Pg.494]    [Pg.236]    [Pg.318]    [Pg.257]    [Pg.59]    [Pg.173]    [Pg.96]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.161]    [Pg.121]    [Pg.209]    [Pg.210]    [Pg.91]    [Pg.411]    [Pg.359]    [Pg.167]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.71 , Pg.72 , Pg.73 , Pg.74 , Pg.75 , Pg.76 , Pg.77 , Pg.78 , Pg.79 , Pg.532 , Pg.533 ]




SEARCH



Complexes, with transition-metals

Compounds with Transition Metals

Diazo compounds

Diazo-metal complexes

Metal diazo compounds

Transition compounds

Transition-metal compounds

With Metal Compounds

With Transition Metals

With diazo compounds

© 2024 chempedia.info