4 resultados para Friedel-Crafts alkylation reaction
em Universidad de Alicante
Resumo:
Dimeric anthracenyldimethyl-derived Cinchona ammonium salts are used as chiral organocatalysts in 5 mol% for the phase-transfer enantioselective alkylation reaction of 2-alkoxycarbonyl-1-indanones with activated bromides. The corresponding adducts bearing a new all-carbon quaternary center are obtained usually in high yield and with moderate and opposite enantioselectivity (up to 55%) when using ammonium salts derived from quinidine and its pseudoenantiomer quinine as organocatalysts. These catalysts can be almost quantitatively recovered by precipitation in ether and reused.
Resumo:
Supported iron oxide nanoparticles have been incorporated onto hierarchical zeolites by microwave-assisted impregnation and mechanochemical grinding. Nanoparticle-functionalised porous zeolites were characterised by a number of analytical techniques such as XRD, N2 physisorption, TEM, and surface acidity measurements. The catalytic activities of the synthesised nanomaterials were investigated in an alkylation reaction. The results pointed to different species with varying acidity and accessibility in the materials, which provided essentially different catalytic activities in the alkylation of toluene with benzyl chloride under microwave irradiation, selected as the test reaction.
Resumo:
The first organocatalyzed asymmetric alkylation of activated methylene compounds using benzylic and allylic alcohols as alkylating agents through dual hydrogen bond activation in an SN1-type reaction is reported. This green protocol employs a bis(2-aminobenzoimidazole) in combination with an achiral Brønsted acid as a bifunctional catalytic system and gives the alkylation products with moderate to good enantioselectivities. Although the scope of the reaction is limited, this methodology can be considered as complementary to existing metal-catalyzed processes. In addition, modest results were obtained in a first attempt to perform a metal-free asymmetric Tsuji–Trost reaction using allylic alcohols. Finally, the recovery and reusability of the organocatalyst is also achieved.
Resumo:
Naphthalene and biphenyl dianions are interesting compounds that can be obtained by double reduction of the corresponding arenes in solution with certain alkali metals. These dianions are highly reactive and rather elusive species with very high laying and highly delocalized electrons. They share many aspects of the reactivity of the alkali metal they originated from and consequently behave primarily as strong electron transfer (ET) reagents. We report here kinetic evidence for a different type of reactivity in their alkylation reactions with alkyl fluorides. By using cyclopropylmethyl fluoride (c-C3H5CH2F) as a very fast radical probe, we were able to settle that this alkylation does not involve the classical electron transfer reaction followed by radical coupling between diffusing radicals, but supports the alternative SN2 concerted mechanism, discerning thus this mechanistic SN2-ET dichotomy.