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Water-modified titanium complex

Water-modified titanium complex, 160 Wichterle reagent, 336 Wieland-Miescher ketone, chromatography, 286... [Pg.198]

The Orsay group found serendipitously that methyl p-tolyl sulfide was oxidized to methyl p-toly 1 sulfoxide with high enantiomeric purity (80-90% ee) when the Sharpless reagent was modified by addition of 1 mole equiv. of water [16,17]. The story of this discovery was described in a review [19], Sharpless conditions gave racemic sulfoxide and sulfone. Careful optimization of the stoichiometry of the titanium complex in the oxidation of p-tolyl sulfide led to the selection of Ti(0iPr)4/(7 ,7 )-DET/H20 (1 2 1) combination as the standard system [ 17]. In the beginning of their investigations, the standard conditions implied a stoichiometric amount of the chiral titanium complex with respect to the prochiral sulfide [16,17,20-23]. Later, proper conditions were found, which decreased the amount of the titanium complex without too much alteration of the enantioselectivity [24,25],... [Pg.328]

Uemura et al. [49] found that (R)-1,1 -binaphthol could replace (7 ,7 )-diethyl tartrate in the water-modified catalyst, giving good results (up to 73% ee) in the oxidation of methyl p-tolyl sulfoxide with f-BuOOH (at -20°C in toluene). The chemical yield was close to 90% with the use of a catalytic amount (10 mol %) of the titanium complex (Ti(0-i-Pr)4/(/ )-binaphthol/H20 = 1 2 20). They studied the effect of added water and found that high enantioselectivity was obtained when using 0.5-3.0 equivalents of water with respect to the sulfide. In the absence of water, enantioselectivity was very low. The beneficial effect of water is clearly established here, but the amount of water needed is much higher than that in the case of the catalyst with diethyl tartrate. They assumed that a mononuclear titanium complex with two binaphthol ligands was involved, in which water affects the structure of the titanium complex and its rate of formation. [Pg.336]

In 1967, White and Weingarten64 presented a new enamine synthesis. In their method, titanium tetrachloride was used as a catalyst and also as a water scavenger. This made it possible to synthetize enamines from acyclic ketones, such as methyl ketones65-73, which had previously been difficult to make by conventional methods. This method fails in the case of several branched acyclic ketones. An optimization of this procedure has been reported74. In this modified procedure the ketone is added to a preformed complex between the amine and titanium tetrachloride. The method permits the synthesis of enamines from sterically congested ketones, for which the original procedure has failed. [Pg.470]


See other pages where Water-modified titanium complex is mentioned: [Pg.350]    [Pg.350]    [Pg.350]    [Pg.350]    [Pg.337]    [Pg.337]    [Pg.723]    [Pg.242]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.111]    [Pg.336]    [Pg.88]    [Pg.218]    [Pg.4502]    [Pg.716]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.381]    [Pg.32]    [Pg.221]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.234]    [Pg.189]    [Pg.373]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.160 ]




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