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"Benzene, 1,1'-(1,2-ethanediyl)bis[3-fluoro-" is a complex organic compound with the chemical formula C10H9F2. It is a derivative of benzene, featuring a 1,2-ethanediyl bridge connecting two 3-fluorobenzene units. This molecule is characterized by its symmetrical structure and fluorine substitution, which can influence its chemical reactivity and physical properties. The presence of fluorine atoms can enhance the electron-withdrawing nature of the molecule, potentially affecting its stability and interaction with other chemicals. Benzene, 1,1'-(1,2-ethanediyl)bis[3-fluoro- may be used in the synthesis of various pharmaceuticals, agrochemicals, or materials science applications due to its unique structure and properties.

351-22-4

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351-22-4 Usage

Check Digit Verification of cas no

The CAS Registry Mumber 351-22-4 includes 6 digits separated into 3 groups by hyphens. The first part of the number,starting from the left, has 3 digits, 3,5 and 1 respectively; the second part has 2 digits, 2 and 2 respectively.
Calculate Digit Verification of CAS Registry Number 351-22:
(5*3)+(4*5)+(3*1)+(2*2)+(1*2)=44
44 % 10 = 4
So 351-22-4 is a valid CAS Registry Number.

351-22-4SDS

SAFETY DATA SHEETS

According to Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals (GHS) - Sixth revised edition

Version: 1.0

Creation Date: Aug 20, 2017

Revision Date: Aug 20, 2017

1.Identification

1.1 GHS Product identifier

Product name 3,3'-difluoro-bibenzyl

1.2 Other means of identification

Product number -
Other names 3,3'-Difluor-bibenzyl

1.3 Recommended use of the chemical and restrictions on use

Identified uses For industry use only.
Uses advised against no data available

1.4 Supplier's details

1.5 Emergency phone number

Emergency phone number -
Service hours Monday to Friday, 9am-5pm (Standard time zone: UTC/GMT +8 hours).

More Details:351-22-4 SDS

351-22-4Downstream Products

351-22-4Relevant academic research and scientific papers

Ni-Catalyzed Iterative Alkyl Transfer from Nitrogen Enabled by the in Situ Methylation of Tertiary Amines

Nwachukwu, Chideraa Iheanyi,McFadden, Timothy Patrick,Roberts, Andrew George

, p. 9979 - 9992 (2020/09/03)

Current methods to achieve transition-metal-catalyzed alkyl carbon-nitrogen (C-N) bond cleavage require the preformation of ammonium, pyridinium, or sulfonamide derivatives from the corresponding alkyl amines. These activated substrates permit C-N bond cleavage, and their resultant intermediates can be intercepted to affect carbon-carbon bond-forming transforms. Here, we report the combination of in situ amine methylation and Ni-catalyzed benzalkyl C-N bond cleavage under reductive conditions. This method permits iterative alkyl group transfer from tertiary amines and demonstrates a deaminative strategy for the construction of Csp3-Csp3 bonds. We demonstrate PO(OMe)3 (trimethylphosphate) to be a Ni-compatible methylation reagent for the in situ conversion of trialkyl amines into tetraalkylammonium salts. Single, double, and triple benzalkyl group transfers can all be achieved from the appropriately substituted tertiary amines. Transformations developed herein proceed via recurring events: The in situ methylation of tertiary amines by PO(OMe)3, Ni-catalyzed C-N bond cleavage, and concurrent Csp3-Csp3 bond formation.

Photoredox-Catalysis-Modulated, Nickel-Catalyzed Divergent Difunctionalization of Ethylene

Li, Jiesheng,Luo, Yixin,Cheo, Han Wen,Lan, Yu,Wu, Jie

supporting information, p. 192 - 203 (2019/01/21)

Divergent synthesis that enables a catalytic reaction to selectively produce different products from common substrates will allow the charting of wider chemical space and the unveiling of distinct mechanistic paradigms. A common strategy for it employs different ligands to modulate organometallic catalysts. Dramatic developments in photocatalysis have enabled previously inaccessible transformations. In particular, photoredox catalysis modulates the oxidation state of transition-metal complexes, offering enormous opportunities for methodology development. Herein, we developed a photo-mediated divergent ethylene difunctionalization via modulating oxidation states of the nickel catalyst by using different photoredox catalysts. This work will inspire new perspectives for value-added chemical synthesis using ethylene as a feedstock and shed light on photoredox-catalyst-based divergent synthesis, which fundamentally differs from ligand-controlled transition-metal catalysis.Divergent synthesis represents a powerful strategy for directly accessing different molecular scaffolds originating from the same starting materials. Access to different end products via transition-metal catalysis is conventionally achieved by ligand control. We herein demonstrate the use of ethylene feedstock and commercially available aryl halides to accomplish the divergent synthesis of 1,2-diarylethanes, 1,4-diarylbutanes, or 2,3-diarylbutanes in a highly selective fashion through the synergistic combination of nickel and photoredox catalysis. Mechanistic studies suggest that the observed selectivity was due to different active states of Ni(I) and Ni(0) modulated by Ru- and Ir-based photoredox catalysts, respectively. The ability to access different organometallic oxidation states via photoredox catalysis promises to inspire new perspectives for synergistic transition-metal-catalyzed divergent synthesis.Functionalization of ethylene without polymerization is challenging under photo-irradiation conditions. We have demonstrated that the photo-transformation of ethylene can be controllable by merging photoredox and transition-metal catalysis. In our study, the use of different photoredox catalysts was able to modulate the oxidation state of the nickel catalyst. Through different oxidation states, the nickel-catalyzed couplings proceeded via distinct pathways to generate divergent ethylene difunctionalization products selectively from the same feedstock.

Reductive Homocoupling of Organohalides Using Nickel(II) Chloride and Samarium Metal

Liu, Yongjun,Xiao, Shuhuan,Qi, Yan,Du, Feng

, p. 673 - 678 (2017/03/22)

A homocoupling method for organohalides and organosulfonates promoted by samarium metal and HMPA, and catalyzed by NiCl2 has been developed. Various organohalides (benzyl, aryl, heterocyclic, alkenyl and alkyl halides), α-haloacetophenones, and phenyl organosulfonates were tolerated, and the reaction afforded coupling products with high efficiency. Excellent chemoselectivity was exhibited between halides and other groups, such as ?COOH, ?NO2, halogen, heterocyclic ring, ester, and ketone groups. The stereoselectivity suggested that the reaction mechanism might involve an organosamarium species.

Photochemical Reductive C–C Coupling with a Guanidine Electron Donor

Wiesner, Sven,Walter, Petra,Wagner, Arne,Kaifer, Elisabeth,Himmel, Hans-J?rg

, p. 5045 - 5054 (2016/10/26)

The metal-free photoinduced reductive C–C coupling reactions of a number of substituted benzyl halides (15 examples) with the organic electron-donor 2,3,5,6-tetrakis(tetramethylguanidino)pyridine are evaluated. Depending on the substituents at the benzyl group, a C–C coupling product yield in the range 50–95 % is achieved. The photochemical benzyl-radical formation by homolytic N–C bond cleavage of the initially formed benzyl-pyridinium salts is the rate-determining step of these reactions. Electron-withdrawing as well as -donating substituents at the phenyl group increase the reaction rate. Quantum chemical computations did not reveal any correlation between either the enthalpy or Gibbs free energy of the N–C bond cleavage step and the experimentally determined first-order rate constants. Instead, the structural difference between the excited state generated by irradiation and the electronic ground state of the pyridinium ions could be used to rationalize the differences in the reaction rates.

An unprecedented oxidative intermolecular homo coupling reaction between two sp3C–sp3C centers under metal-free condition

Sahoo, Santosh K.

supporting information, p. 3476 - 3480 (2016/07/15)

An unprecedented formation of benzylic sp3C–sp3C coupled dibenzylic products has been illustrated. The reactions have been carried out in the presence of three oxidizing reagents, i.e., diacetoxy-iodobenzene (IBDA), N-fluorobenzenesulfonimide (NFSI), and pyridine (Py) using toluene derivatives.

Kinetics and mechanism of the reaction of benzyl bromide with copper in hexamethylphosphoramide

Egorov, Anatoly M.,Matyukhova, Svetlana A.,Anisimov, Alexander V.

, p. 296 - 305 (2007/10/03)

The reaction of copper with benzyl bromides in hexamethylphosphoramide has been studied. The kinetic and thermodynamic parameters of the reaction have been obtained. Hammett plots of log (script k sign/script k sign°) vs the substituent constant σ gave good correlations (ρ = 0.15, S ρ = 0.02, r = 0.954). The structure of the organic group has little effect on the rate of reaction of benzyl bromide with copper. In the absence of atmospheric oxygen, the oxidative dissolution of copper occurred by the mechanism of single-electron transfer with the formation of 1,2-diphenylethane and copper(I) complexes. The stereochemistry and intermediates compound was also investigated. The reaction mechanism is discussed.

Flash vacuum pyrolysis over magnesium. Part 1 - Pyrolysis of benzylic, other aryl/alkyl and aliphatic halides

Aitken, R. Alan,Hodgson, Philip K.G.,Morrison, John J.,Oyewale, Adebayo O.

, p. 402 - 415 (2007/10/03)

Flash vacuum pyrolysis over a bed of freshly sublimed magnesium on glass wool results in efficient coupling of benzyl halides to give the corresponding bibenzyls. Where an ortho halogen substituent is present further dehalogenation gives some dihydroanthracene and anthracene. Efficient coupling is also observed for halomethylnaphthalenes and halodiphenylmethanes while chlorotriphenylmethane gives 4,4′-bis(diphenylmethyl)biphenyl. By using α,α′-dihalo-o-xylenes, benzocyclobutenes are obtained in good yield, while the isomeric α,α′-dihalo-p-xylenes give a range of high thermal stability polymers by polymerisation of the initially formed p-xylylenes. Other haloalkylbenzenes undergo largely dehydrohalogenation where this is possible, in some cases resulting in cyclisation. Deoxygenation is also observed with haloalkyl phenyl ketones to give phenylalkynes as well as other products. With simple alkyl halides there is efficient elimination of HCl or HBr to give alkenes. For aliphatic dihalides this also occurs to give dienes but there is also cyclisation to give cycloalkanes and dehalogenation with hydrogen atom transfer to give alkenes in some cases. For 5-bromopent-1-ene the products are those expected from a radical pathway but for 6-bromohex-1-ene they are clearly not. For 2,2-dichloropropane and 1,1-dichloropropane elimination of HCl occurs but for 1,1-dichlorobutane, -pentane and -hexane partial hydrolysis followed by elimination of HCl gives E, E-, E,Z- and Z,Z- isomers of the dialk-1-enyl ethers and fully assigned 13C NMR data are presented for these. With 6-chlorohex-1-yne and 7-chlorohept-1-yne there is cyclisation to give methylenecycloalkanes and -cycloalkynes. The behaviour of 1,2-dibromocyclohexane and 1,2-dichlorocyclooctane under these conditions is also examined. Various pieces of evidence are presented that suggest that these processes do not involve generation of free gas-phase radicals but rather surface-adsorbed organometallic species.

Dehalogenation of organic halides by flash vacuum pyrolysis over magnesium: A versatile synthetic method

Aitken, R. Alan,Hodgson, Philip K. G.,Oyewale, Adebayo O.,Morrison, John J.

, p. 1163 - 1164 (2007/10/03)

Flash vacuum pyrolysis over magnesium at 600°C results in efficient dehalogenation of a variety of organic halides and provides a preparatively useful method for C-C bond formation and other reactions.

Titanium-Mediated Carbonyl Olefinations. 2. Benzylidenations of Carbonyl Compounds with Dibenzyltitanocene

Petasis, Nicos A.,Bzowej, Eugene I.

, p. 1327 - 1330 (2007/10/02)

Mild thermolysis of carbonyl compounds with dibenzyltitanocene affords phenyl-substituted olefins, enol ethers, and enamines.

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