67278-01-7Relevant academic research and scientific papers
Electrochemical Hydrogenation with Gaseous Ammonia
Li, Jin,He, Lingfeng,Liu, Xu,Cheng, Xu,Li, Guigen
supporting information, p. 1759 - 1763 (2019/01/16)
As a carbon-free and sustainable fuel, ammonia serves as high-energy-density hydrogen-storage material. It is important to develop new reactions able to utilize ammonia as a hydrogen source directly. Herein, we report an electrochemical hydrogenation of alkenes, alkynes, and ketones using ammonia as the hydrogen source and carbon electrodes. A variety of heterocycles and functional groups, including for example sulfide, benzyl, benzyl carbamate, and allyl carbamate were well tolerated. Fast stepwise electron transfer and proton transfer processes were proposed to account for the transformation.
Photocatalytic activation of pyridine for addition reactions: An unconventional reaction feature between a photo-induced hole and electron on TiO2
Ma, Dongge,Yan, Yan,Ji, Hongwei,Chen, Chuncheng,Zhao, Jincai
supporting information, p. 17451 - 17454 (2015/12/09)
TiO2 photocatalysis can be performed for the addition of pyridines to vinylarenes in an anti-Markovnikov manner. Seven examples with considerable yields (56-91%) and selectivity were demonstrated. A comparative survey of the involved process th
Charge migration in dicationic electrophiles and its application to the synthesis of aza-polycyclic aromatic compounds
Li, Ang,Kindelin, Patrick J.,Klumpp, Douglas A.
, p. 1233 - 1236 (2007/10/03)
Superacid-promoted reactions of dicationic electrophiles have been studied, and the positive charge centers are found to migrate apart in a predictable manner. Using isotopic labeling the charge migration is found in one system to occur through successive deprotonation-reprotonation steps. The charge migration chemistry is the basis for new general synthetic route to aza-polycyclic aromatic compounds.
Carbon-Skeletal Anionic and Radical Sigmatropic Rearrangements: Group Migratory Aptitudes as a Probe of Charge Type in the 1,2-Shifts of β-Phenyl-β-(2-pyridyl)- and β-Phenyl-β-(4-pyridyl)ethyl Systems
Eisch, John J.,Kovacs, Csaba A.,Chobe, Prabodh,Boleslawski, Marek P.
, p. 4427 - 4437 (2007/10/02)
In order to probe the occurrence and relative ease of carbon-skeletal sigmatropic rearrangements of the free-radical, anionic, or radical-anionic type, derivatives of the β,β-diphenyl-β-(2-pyridyl)- and the β,β-diphenyl-β-(4-pyridyl)ethane systems, PyPh2CCH2E (A), were treated with reagents expected to generate radical or anionic sites.The ensuing, competitive -shifts of the phenyl and/or pyridyl groups were then used as a diagnostic sign of the mechanism of rearrangement.Both the treatment of A (E = p-tolyl) with MeLi or KH and the reaction of A (E = Cl) with sodium or lithium in donor solvents caused an exclusive -pyridyl shift.Gas chromatographic and mass spectral analyses were able to place the limit of any -phenyl shift as under 0.5percent.In such alkali metal reactions, persistent aromatic radical-anions were detected by ESR spectroscopy until the completion of the reaction.Such signals and the significant amounts of carbon-carbon bond cleavage products support the formation of pyridyl radical-anions as precursors for such cleavages and -pyridyl rearrangements.That such radical-anions could lead to spiro intermediates that promote the -pyridyl migrations wins corroboration from the finding that the methiodide of 1-chloro-2-methyl-2-(4-pyridyl)propane can be reduced with lithium in THF to yield the isolable 1,1,6-trimethyl-6-azaspiroocta-4,7-diene.The same two chlorides of A responded differently under other rearrangement conditions: (1) in preparing such chlorides from the corresponding alcohols, PyPh2CCH2OH, with thionyl chloride, the 4-pyridyl isomer underwent a Wagner-Meerwein rearrangement with exclusive -phenyl migration; the 2 isomer underwent normal displacement of OH by Cl; (2) toward the free-radical reducing agent, (n-Bu)3SnH, the 2-chloro isomer underwent both -phenyl and -pyridyl shifts, while the 4-chloro isomer underwent neither reduction nor rearrangement; it simply induced the formation of hexa-n-butylditin.A similar reducing action was observed with bis(1,5-cyclooctadiene)nickel.These observations are analyzed with the aid of Hueckel molecular orbital theory and the rearrangements observed with reducing agents are assessed in terms of three types of mechanisms: (1) authentic -anionic shifts; (2) authentic -free-radical shifts; and (3) competing electron transfer from the metal to the chloride center or from the metal to the pyridyl ring, which permits anionic rearrangements to compete with rearrangements mediated by radical-anion or dianions, which latter processes form the crucial spiro intermediate by intramolecular nucleophilic displacement on the CH2Cl group.
