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Trifluoroacetic acid hydrides

Trifluoroethanol was first prepared by the catalytic reduction of trifluoroacetic anhydride [407-25-0] (58). Other methods iaclude the catalytic hydrogeaatioa of trifluoroacetamide [354-38-1] (59), the lithium aluminum hydride reductioa of trifluoroacetyl chloride [354-32-5] (60) or of trifluoroacetic acid or its esters (61,62), and the acetolysis of 2-chloro-l,l,l-trifluoroethane [75-88-7] followed by hydrolysis (60). More recently, the hydrogenation of... [Pg.293]

An alternative view of these addition reactions is that the rate-determining step is halide-assisted proton transfer, followed by capture of the carbocation, with or without rearrangement Bromide ion accelerates addition of HBr to 1-, 2-, and 4-octene in 20% trifluoroacetic acid in CH2CI2. In the same system, 3,3-dimethyl-1-butene shows substantial rearrangement Even 1- and 2-octene show some evidence of rearrangement, as detected by hydride shifts. These results can all be accoimted for by a halide-assisted protonation. The key intermediate in this mechanism is an ion sandwich. An estimation of the fate of the 2-octyl cation under these conditions has been made ... [Pg.356]

Because of Us high polarity and low nucleophilicity, a trifluoroacetic acid medium is usually used for the investigation of such carbocationic processes as solvolysis, protonation of alkenes, skeletal rearrangements, and hydride shifts [22-24] It also has been used for several synthetically useful reachons, such as electrophilic aromatic substitution [25], reductions [26, 27], and oxidations [28] Trifluoroacetic acid is a good medium for the nitration of aromatic compounds Nitration of benzene or toluene with sodium nitrate in trifluoroacetic acid is almost quantitative after 4 h at room temperature [25] Under these conditions, toluene gives the usual mixture of mononitrotoluenes in an o m p ratio of 61 6 2 6 35 8 A trifluoroacetic acid medium can be used for the reduction of acids, ketones, and alcohols with sodium borohydnde [26] or triethylsilane [27] Diary Iketones are smoothly reduced by sodium borohydnde in trifluoroacetic acid to diarylmethanes (equation 13)... [Pg.946]

Sodium hydride Dimethyl sulfate Trifluoroacetic acid... [Pg.269]

Pyrrolo[l,2-a]azepin-5-one (11), prepared by cyclization of methyl 5-(pyrrol-2-yl)penta-2,4-dienoate (10) with sodium hydride in toluene, in trifluoroacetic acid solution forms the diatropic 5-hydroxypyrrolo[1,2-a]azepinium ion 12.216 6-Methyl-5//-pyrrolo[l,2-tf]azepin-5-one(mp41 -43 C), formed in low yield (20%) by the action of [(ethoxycarbonyl)methylene]triphenylphos-phorane on 4-(pyrrol-2-yl)but-3-en-2-one, behaves similarly. [Pg.161]

Although catalytic hydrogenation is the method most often used, double bonds can be reduced by other reagents, as well. Among these are sodium in ethanol, sodium and rerr-butyl alcohol in HMPA, lithium and aliphatic amines (see also 15-14), " zinc and acids, sodium hypophosphate and Pd-C, (EtO)3SiH—Pd(OAc)2, trifluoroacetic acid and triethylsilane (EtsSiH), and hydroxylamine and ethyl acetate.However, metallic hydrides, such as lithium aluminum hydride and sodium borohydride, do not in general reduce carbon-carbon double bonds, although this can be done in special cases where the double bond is polar, as in 1,1-diarylethenes and in enamines. " °... [Pg.1007]

Benzylic or allylic oxygen functions react with Lewis acids such as trifluoroacetic acid to generate allyl or benzylic cations which abstract a hydride from silanes such as triethylsilane 84 b to result in the removal of the oxygen function in a process which has been called ionic hydrogenation and which has been reviewed [34-38]. [Pg.267]

Both Si-H and C—H compounds can function as hydride donors under certain circumstances. The silicon-hydrogen bond is capable of transferring a hydride to carbo-cations. Alcohols that can be ionized in trifluoroacetic acid are reduced to hydrocarbons in the presence of a silane. [Pg.425]

The Meerwein-Ponndorf-Verley (MPV) reduction is generally mediated by aluminum triiso-propoxide, Al(01Pr)3. In MPV reduction, reversible hydride transfer occurs via a six-membered transition state (Scheme 67). By removing acetone from the reaction system, the reversible reaction proceeds smoothly. The advantages of the reduction are the mildness of the reaction conditions, chemoselectivity, safety, operational simplicity, and its applicability to large-scale synthesis. It is reported that the addition of trifluoroacetic acid, significantly accelerates the reduction (Scheme 68) 304,305 in which case a catalytic amount of Al(0 Pr)3 is enough to complete the reaction. [Pg.429]

Aluminum chloride, used either as a stoichiometric reagent or as a catalyst with gaseous hydrogen chloride, may be used to promote silane reductions of secondary alkyl alcohols that otherwise resist reduction by the action of weaker acids.136 For example, cyclohexanol is not reduced by organosilicon hydrides in the presence of trifluoroacetic acid in dichloromethane, presumably because of the relative instability and difficult formation of the secondary cyclohexyl carbocation. By contrast, treatment of cyclohexanol with an excess of hydrogen chloride gas in the presence of a three-to-four-fold excess of triethylsilane and 1.5 equivalents of aluminum chloride in anhydrous dichloromethane produces 70% of cyclohexane and 7% of methylcyclopentane after a reaction time of 3.5 hours at... [Pg.14]

Cyclopropylcarbinols. Treatment of cyclopropylcarbinols 15 (R = Ph, C-C3H5) with trifluoroacetic acid in dichloromethane leads to the rapid formation of ring-opened 4-substituted 3-butenyl-l-trifluoroacetate esters 16 (Eq. 20).130 Cyclopropylcarbinyl trifluoroacetates are not formed. Ring opening is facilitated by phenyl substituents. Addition of organosilicon hydrides to the reaction mixture favors the formation of cyclopropylmethanes 17 and suppresses the formation of the ring-opened esters.130... [Pg.17]

Benzyl Alcohols. Benzyl alcohols of nearly all kinds undergo reduction when treated with acid in the presence of organosilicon hydrides. The most obvious exception to this is the behavior of benzyl alcohol itself. It resists reduction by the action of trifluoroacetic acid and triethylsilane, even after extended reaction times.26 Reducing systems consisting of triethylsilane and sulfuric acid/acetic acid or p-toluenesullonic acid/acetic acid mixtures also fail to reduce benzyl alcohol to toluene.134 As previously mentioned, substitution of boron trifluoride for trifluoroacetic acid results in the formation of modest yields of toluene, but only when a very large excess of the silane is used in order to capture the benzyl cation intermediate and suppress Friedel-Crafts oligomerization processes.129,143... [Pg.18]

Treatment of either the cis or trans isomer of 4-/m-bu(yl-1 -phenylcyclohexanol with trifluoroacetic acid and one of a variety of organosilicon hydrides in dichloromethane yields a mixture of cis- and trans-4-tert-butyl-l-phenyl-cyclohexane and the elimination product, 4-/er/-butyl -1 -phenylcyclohexene... [Pg.18]

Reduction of either the exo or endo isomer of 2-phenyl-2-norbornanol with trifluoroacetic acid and triethylsilane, triphenylsilane, or phenylsilane in dichloro-methane gives endo-2-phenylnorbomane quantitatively (Eq. 24).164 The stereospecific formation of only the endo-hydrocarbon can be understood on the basis that only exo approach by organosilicon hydride toward the 2-phenylnorbornyl cation intermediate is kinetically competitive for product formation.164... [Pg.19]

Intramolecular Friedel-Crafts reactions can sometimes compete with organosil-icon hydride reductions of benzylic-type alcohols to cause formation of undesired products. An example is the attempted reduction of alcohol 26 to the corresponding hydrocarbon. When 26 is treated with triethylsilane in trifluoroacetic acid at room temperature for 15 hours, a mixture of the two fluorene isomers 27 and 28 is obtained in a combined yield of 45%. None of the hydrocarbon structurally related to the substrate alcohol 26 is obtained.171 Whether this problem could be circumvented by running the reduction at a lower temperature or with a different acid remains subject to experimentation. [Pg.23]

Monosubstituted Alkenes. Simple unbranched terminal alkenes that have only alkyl substituents, such as 1-hexene,2031-octene,209 or ally Icy clohexane230 do not undergo reduction in the presence of organosilicon hydrides and strong acids, even under extreme conditions.1,2 For example, when 1-hexene is heated in a sealed ampoule at 140° for 10 hours with triethylsilane and excess trifluoroacetic acid, only a trace of hexane is detected.203 A somewhat surprising exception to this pattern is the formation of ethylcyclohexane in 20% yield upon treatment of vinylcyclohexane with trifluoroacetic acid and triethylsilane.230 Protonation of the terminal carbon is thought to initiate a 1,2-hydride shift that leads to the formation of the tertiary 1-ethyl-1-cyclohexyl cation.230... [Pg.34]

Examples of the behavior of other substituted vinyl substrates upon exposure to the action of trifluoroacetic acid and triethylsilane are known. For example, -butyl vinyl ether, when reacted at 50° for 10 hours, gives -butyl ethyl ether in 80% yield (Eq. 65).234 In contrast, -butyl vinyl thioether gives only a 5% yield of n-butyl ethyl sulfide product after 2 hours and 15% after 20 horns of reaction.234 It is suggested that this low reactvity is the result of the formation of a very stable sulfur-bridged carbocation intermediate that resists attack by the organosilicon hydride (Eq. 66). [Pg.35]

The cis-to-trans ratios of the isomeric 4-tert-butyl-l-methylcyclohexanes derived from treatment of 4- < r(-butyl-l -methylenecyclohcxanc with trifluoroacetic acid vary with the steric features of the organosilicon hydrides that are used (Eq. 76).204 The ratio is 0.04 with n-butylsilane, 0.09 with diethylsi-lane, 0.11 with triethylsilane, 0.10 with triisopentylsilane, and 0.19 with either tri-.s< c-butylsilanc or di-tert-butylsilane. [Pg.38]

Trisubstituted Alkenes. With very few exceptions, trisubstituted alkenes that are exposed to Brpnsted acids and organosilicon hydrides rapidly undergo ionic hydrogenations to give reduced products in high yields. This is best illustrated by the broad variety of reaction conditions under which the benchmark compound 1-methylcyclohexene is reduced to methylcyclohexane.134 146,192 202 203 207-210 214 234 When 1-methylcyclohexene is reduced with one equivalent of deuterated triethylsilane and two equivalents of trifluoroacetic acid at 50°, methylcyclohexane-... [Pg.38]

The formation of cationic nickel hydride complexes by the oxidative addition of Brdnsted acids (HY) to zero-valent nickel phosphine or phosphite complexes (method C,) has already been discussed in Section II. Interesting in this connection is a recent H NMR study of the reaction of bis[tri(o-tolyl)phosphite]nickelethylene and trifluoroacetic acid which leads to the formation of a square-planar bis[tri(o-tolyl)phosphite] hydridonickel trifluoroacetate (30) (see below) having a cis arrangement of the phosphite ligands (82). [Pg.118]

GABA HMG-CoA HMPA HT LDA LHMDS LTMP NADH NBH NBS NCS NIS NK NMP PMB PPA RaNi Red-Al RNA SEM SnAt TBAF TBDMS TBS Tf TFA TFP THF TIPS TMEDA TMG TMP TMS Tol-BINAP TTF y-aminobutyric acid hydroxymethylglutaryl coenzyme A hexamethylphosphoric triamide hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) lithium diisopropylamide lithium hexamethyldisilazane lithium 2,2,6,6-tetramethylpiperidine reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide l,3-dibromo-5,5-dimethylhydantoin A-bromosuccinimide A-chlorosuccinimide A-iodosuccinimide neurokinin 1 -methyl-2-pyrrolidinone para-methoxybenzyl polyphosphoric acid Raney Nickel sodium bis(2-methoxyethoxy)aluminum hydride ribonucleic acid 2-(trimethylsilyl)ethoxymethyl nucleophilic substitution on an aromatic ring tetrabutylammonium fluoride tert-butyldimcthyisilyl fert-butyldimethylsilyl trifluoromethanesulfonyl (triflyl) trifluoroacetic acid tri-o-furylphosphine tetrahydrofuran triisopropylsilyl A, N,N ,N -tetramethy lethylenediamine tetramethyl guanidine tetramethylpiperidine trimethylsilyl 2,2 -bis(di-p-tolylphosphino)-l,r-binaphthyl tetrathiafulvalene... [Pg.419]

As expected, under a hydrogen atmosphere in the presence of Pd/C in ethanol, the benzannulated pyrrolizine 48 leads to the dihydropyrrolizine derivative 49. However, semireduction of the pyrrole ring could be performed via the tricarbonyl chromium complex of 49 with various hydrides. Use of cyanoborohydride in trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) gave the best results for compound 50, both in terms of chemical yield (92%) and diastereoselectivity (90% of the trans-isomer) <2000TL1123>. [Pg.8]

Among the rare reports of chemical transformation of substituents attached to the ring, the total reduction of an aromatic ketone linked at C-l (lithium aluminium hydride (LAH)), then Et3SiH/trifluoroacetic acid (TFA), overall yield 20%) is of interest <1998H(48)1015>. One example related to Wittig olefination of the 1-formyl derivative of the parent heterocyle was reported to occur in low yield <2001CPB799>. [Pg.438]

Thus, the unsubstituted starting compound 69 was treated with resorcinol in the presence of trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) to yield 70. Then, reaction of 69 with the cyclic a,/3-unsaturated ketone in the presence of lithium hydride gave the 7-substituted heteroaromatic compound 71, and ethyl cyanoacetate afforded the cross-conjugated product 72, whereas reaction with pyrimidine-2,4,6-trione in the presence of triethylamine yielded the addition product 73. Indole also been reacted with 69, and heating of the dichloromethane solution for 90 min in the presence of TFA yielded the addition product 74 in excellent yield (95%) <1998ZOR450> (Scheme 12). [Pg.854]

Ethyl levulinate, diisopropyl ether, and trifluoroacetic acid were purchased from Wako Pure Chemical Industries, Ltd., or Aldrich Chemical Company, Inc., and distilled before use. The checkers distilled diisopropyl ether from calcium hydride. [Pg.214]

Acid-catalyzed dealkoxylation is particularly suitable for the preparation of highly reactive, cationic iron(IV) carbene complexes, which can be used for the cyclopropanation of alkenes [438] (Figure 3.11). Several reagents can be used to catalyze alkoxide abstraction these include tetrafluoroboric acid [457-459], trifluoroacetic acid [443,460], gaseous hydrogen chloride [452,461], trityl salts [434], or trimethylsilyl triflate [24,104,434,441,442,460], In the case of oxidizing acids (e.g. trityl salts) hydride abstraction can compete efficiently with alkoxide abstraction and lead to the formation of alkoxycarbene complexes [178,462] (see Section 2.1.7). [Pg.85]

Many hydroxy compounds would not survive such harsh treatment therefore other methods must be used. Some alcohols were hydrogenolyzed with chloroalanes generated in situ from lithium aluminum hydride and aluminum chloride, but the reaction gave alkenes as by-products [605], Tertiary alcohols were converted to hydrocarbon on treatment at room temperature with triethyl- or triphenylsilane and trifluoroacetic acid in methylene chloride (yields 41-92%). Rearrangements due to carbonium ion formation occur [343]. [Pg.77]

Reduction of carbonyl to methylene in aromatic ketones was also achieved by (dane prepared from lithium aluminum hydride and aluminum chloride [770], by soditim borohydride in triiluoroacetic acid [841 with triethylsilane in trifluoroacetic acid [555, 777], with sodium in refluxing ethanol [842], with zinc in hydrochloric acid [843] and with hydrogen iodide and phosphorus [227], geiibrally in good to high yields. [Pg.113]


See other pages where Trifluoroacetic acid hydrides is mentioned: [Pg.308]    [Pg.61]    [Pg.325]    [Pg.175]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.1018]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.270]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.19]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.57]    [Pg.70]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.272]    [Pg.1003]    [Pg.246]    [Pg.149]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.217 ]




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