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Ylide bromides

Such ylides are unstable and react with carbonyl compounds to give both the Wittig product (p. 545) as well as AsPh3 and an epoxide. However, this very reactivity is sometimes an advantage since As ylides often react with carbonyl compounds that are unresponsive to P ylides. Substituted quaternary arsonium compounds are also a useful source of heterocyclic organoarsanes, e.g. thermolysis of 4-(1,7-dibromoheptyl)trimethylarsonium bromide to l-arsabicyclo[3.3.0]octane ... [Pg.594]

Since cbiral sulfur ylides racemize rapidly, they are generally prepared in situ from chiral sulfides and halides. The first example of asymmetric epoxidation was reported in 1989, using camphor-derived chiral sulfonium ylides with moderate yields and ee (< 41%) Since then, much effort has been made in tbe asymmetric epoxidation using sucb a strategy without a significant breakthrough. In one example, the reaction between benzaldehyde and benzyl bromide in the presence of one equivalent of camphor-derived sulfide 47 furnished epoxide 48 in high diastereoselectivity (trans cis = 96 4) with moderate enantioselectivity in the case of the trans isomer (56% ee). ... [Pg.6]

Triphenylmethylphosphonium bromide A pressure bottle is charged with a solution of 55 g (0.21 mole) of triphenylphosphine in 45 ml of dry benzene and cooled in an ice-salt bath. A commercially available ampoule of methyl bromide is cooled below 0° (ice-salt bath), opened, and 28 g (0.29 mole, approx. 16.2 ml) is added to the bottle in one portion. The pressure bottle is tightly stoppered, brought to room temperature, and allowed to stand for 2 days. After this time, the bottle is opened and the product is collected by suction filtration, the transfer being effected with hot benzene as needed. The yield of triphenylphosphonium bromide is about 74 g (99%), mp 232-233°. This material should be thoroughly dried (vacuum oven at 100°) before use in preparing the ylide. [Pg.105]

It would be expected that a few straightforward steps could accomplish the transformation of alkyl bromide 14 into phosphorus ylide 12 (Scheme 2b). On the other hand, the evolution of 14 from substituted aromatic furan ring 15 may not be obvious. It is, in fact, conceivable that the action of ethylene glycol on substituted furan... [Pg.87]

The Aggarwal group has used chiral sulfide 7, derived from camphorsulfonyl chloride, in asymmetric epoxidation [4]. Firstly, they prefonned the salt 8 from either the bromide or the alcohol, and then formed the ylide in the presence of a range of carbonyl compounds. This process proved effective for the synthesis of aryl-aryl, aryl-heteroaryl, aryl-alkyl, and aryl-vinyl epoxides (Table 1.2, Entries 1-5). [Pg.4]

Stockman has reported the preparation of alkyl-, aryl-, and vinyl-disubstituted aziridines with good diastereoselectivities and in good yields through treatment of tert-butylsulfmylimines with the ylide 119, derived from S-allyl tetrahydrothio-phenium bromide (Scheme 1.39) [64]. A range of substrates were tolerated, including heterocyclic, aromatic, and aliphatic substrates (Table 1.16). [Pg.32]

It is well known that aziridination with allylic ylides is difficult, due to the low reactivity of imines - relative to carbonyl compounds - towards ylide attack, although imines do react with highly reactive sulfur ylides such as Me2S+-CH2-. Dai and coworkers found aziridination with allylic ylides to be possible when the activated imines 22 were treated with allylic sulfonium salts 23 under phase-transfer conditions (Scheme 2.8) [15]. Although the stereoselectivities of the reaction were low, this was the first example of efficient preparation of vinylaziridines by an ylide route. Similar results were obtained with use of arsonium or telluronium salts [16]. The stereoselectivity of aziridination was improved by use of imines activated by a phosphinoyl group [17]. The same group also reported a catalytic sulfonium ylide-mediated aziridination to produce (2-phenylvinyl)aziridines, by treatment of arylsulfonylimines with cinnamyl bromide in the presence of solid K2C03 and catalytic dimethyl sulfide in MeCN [18]. Recently, the synthesis of 3-alkyl-2-vinyl-aziridines by extension of Dai s work was reported [19]. [Pg.41]

Whereas the nucleophilic addition of vinylmagnesium bromide to a-alkoxy aldehydes (12, 16) proceeds with a low to moderate chelation-controlled diastereoselectivity, a remarkably high preference for the opposite stereochemical behavior is found with the jS-silyl phosphorus ylide 1477. Due to the electron-donating 4-methoxyphenyl substituents at the phosphorus atom, as well as the /i-methyldiphenylsilyl group, 14 is an excellent vinylation reagent which does not lead to any Wittig olefination products. [Pg.64]

The addition of bromine to the ylide (69) gave a bromophosphonium salt which could be isolated. Dehydrohalogenation with dimethyl-formamide and lithium bromide afforded 1-phenylvinyltriphenylphos-phonium bromide (70). [Pg.16]

The basic hydrolysis of A - and A -phospholenium bromides gives mixtures of (96) and (97), the ratio depending upon the conditions used. Ylide (98) formation can compete with phosphorane generation, particularly in media where anions are stabilized by solvation. Under these... [Pg.22]

Salt-free ylides have been prepared from phosphonium chlorides and bromides by treatment with sodamide in refluxing THF. The sodium halide precipitates and is removed by filtration. Allylidene- and benzylidene-trimethylphosphoranes have been obtained as low melting distillable solids from the phosphonium chlorides and butyl-lithium in ether. The allylidenephosphorane on standing at room temperature slowly decomposed to give methylenetrimethylphosphorane. [Pg.150]

The 1,5-diene (19) was obtained from the salt (18) by alkylation of the ylide with allyl bromide and reduction of the resulting salt with lithium in ethylamine. [Pg.153]

Dimethylsulfonium methylide reacts with reactive alkylating reagents such as allylic and benzylic bromides to give terminal alkenes. A similar reaction occurs with primary alkyl bromides in the presence of Lil. The reaction probably involves alkylation of the ylide, followed by elimination.289... [Pg.181]

In contrast to ethyl diazoacetate, diethyl diazomalonate reacts with allyl bromide in the presence of Rh2(OAc)4 to give the ylide-derived diester favored by far over the cyclopropane (at 60 °C 93 7 ratio). This finding bespeaks the greater electrophilic selectivity of the carbenoid derived from ethyl diazomalonate. For reasons unknown, this property is not expressed, however, in the reaction with allyl chloride, as the carbenoids from both ethyl diazoacetate and diethyl diazomalonate exhibit a similarly high preference for cyclopropanation. [Pg.136]

The reaction of crotyl bromide with ethyl diazoacetate once again reveals distinct differences between rhodium and copper catalysis. Whereas with copper catalysts, the products 125 and 126, expected from a [2,3] and a [1,2] rearrangement of an intermediary halonium ylide, are obtained by analogy with the crotyl chloride reaction 152a), the latter product is absent in the rhodium-catalyzed reaction at or below room temperature. Only when the temperature is raised to ca. 40 °C, 126 is found as well, together with a substantial amount of bromoacetate 128. It was assured that only a minor part of 126 arose from [2,3] rearrangement of an ylide derived from 3-bromo-l-butene which is in equilibrium with the isomeric crotyl bromide at 40 °C. [Pg.137]

The Cu(acac)2-catalyzed decomposition of 6-diazopenicillanates 134 in the presence of allyl bromide furnishes the rather labile 6a-ally 1- 6 P-b ro mopen icil lanate 135 via the ylide pathway discussed above 155). [Pg.137]

As has been described for allyl bromide (see preceding paragraph), allyl sulfides and allyl phenyl selenide react with 6-diazopenicillanates 134 under Cu(acac)2 catalysis to give the products of ylide formation and subsequent [2,3] rearrangement 155-159). Both C-6 epimers are formed. The yields are better than with BF3 Et20 catalysis, and, in contrast to the Lewis acid case, no 6[Pg.139]


See other pages where Ylide bromides is mentioned: [Pg.132]    [Pg.133]    [Pg.132]    [Pg.133]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.126]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.158]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.1431]    [Pg.201]    [Pg.202]    [Pg.202]    [Pg.42]    [Pg.65]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.108]    [Pg.281]    [Pg.165]    [Pg.533]    [Pg.536]    [Pg.281]    [Pg.324]    [Pg.326]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.409]    [Pg.1021]    [Pg.136]    [Pg.247]    [Pg.125]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.132 ]




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Ylides Vinyl phosphonium bromide

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