79663-14-2Relevant academic research and scientific papers
B(C6F5)3-Catalyzed Deoxygenative Reduction of Amides to Amines with Ammonia Borane
Pan, Yixiao,Luo, Zhenli,Han, Jiahong,Xu, Xin,Chen, Changjun,Zhao, Haoqiang,Xu, Lijin,Fan, Qinghua,Xiao, Jianliang
supporting information, p. 2301 - 2308 (2019/01/30)
The first B(C6F5)3-catalyzed deoxygenative reduction of amides into the corresponding amines with readily accessible and stable ammonia borane (AB) as a reducing agent under mild reaction conditions is reported. This metal-free protocol provides facile access to a wide range of structurally diverse amine products in good to excellent yields, and various functional groups including those that are reduction-sensitive were well tolerated. This new method is also applicable to chiral amide substrates without erosion of the enantiomeric purity. The role of BF3 ? OEt2 co-catalyst in this reaction is to activate the amide carbonyl group via the in situ formation of an amide-boron adduct. (Figure presented.).
Ru-Catalyzed Deoxygenative Transfer Hydrogenation of Amides to Amines with Formic Acid/Triethylamine
Pan, Yixiao,Luo, Zhenli,Xu, Xin,Zhao, Haoqiang,Han, Jiahong,Xu, Lijin,Fan, Qinghua,Xiao, Jianliang
supporting information, p. 3800 - 3806 (2019/07/12)
A ruthenium(II)-catalyzed deoxygenative transfer hydrogenation of amides to amines using HCO2H/NEt3 as the reducing agent is reported for the first time. The catalyst system consisting of [Ru(2-methylallyl)2(COD)], 1,1,1-tris(diphenylphosphinomethyl) ethane (triphos) and Bis(trifluoromethane sulfonimide) (HNTf2) performed well for deoxygenative reduction of various secondary and tertiary amides into the corresponding amines in high yields with excellent selectivities, and exhibits high tolerance toward functional groups including those that are reduction-sensitive. The choice of hydrogen source and acid co-catalyst is critical for catalysis. Mechanistic studies suggest that the reductive amination of the in situ generated alcohol and amine via borrowing hydrogen is the dominant pathway. (Figure presented.).
Tailored Cobalt-Catalysts for Reductive Alkylation of Anilines with Carboxylic Acids under Mild Conditions
Liu, Weiping,Sahoo, Basudev,Spannenberg, Anke,Junge, Kathrin,Beller, Matthias
supporting information, p. 11673 - 11677 (2018/09/10)
The first cobalt-catalyzed hydrogenative N-methylation and alkylation of amines with readily available carboxylic acid feedstocks as alkylating agents and H2 as ideal reductant is described. Combination of tailor-made triphos ligands with cobalt(II) tetrafluoroborate significantly improved the efficiency, thus promoting the reaction under milder conditions. This novel protocol allows for a broad substrate scope with good functional group tolerance, even in the presence of reducible alkenes, esters, and amides.
Deoxygenative Hydrogenation of Amides Catalyzed by a Well-Defined Iridium Pincer Complex
Yuan, Ming-Lei,Xie, Jian-Hua,Zhu, Shou-Fei,Zhou, Qi-Lin
, p. 3665 - 3669 (2016/07/06)
The iridium-catalyzed highly chemoselective hydrogenation of amides to amines has been developed. Using a well-defined iridium catalyst bearing a P(O)C(O)P pincer ligand combined with B(C6F5)3, the C-O cleavage products are formed under mild reaction conditions. The reaction provides a new method for the preparation of amines from amides in good yield with high selectivity.
Boron Lewis Acid Promoted Ruthenium-Catalyzed Hydrogenation of Amides: An Efficient Approach to Secondary Amines
Yuan, Ming-Lei,Xie, Jian-Hua,Zhou, Qi-Lin
, p. 3036 - 3040 (2016/10/11)
The hydrogenation of amides to amines has been developed by using the catalyst [Ru(H)2(CO)(Triphos)] (Triphos=1,1,1-tri(diphenylphosphinomethyl)ethane) and catalytic boron Lewis acids such as B(C6F5)3 or BF3?Et2O as additives. The reaction provides an efficient method for the preparation of secondary amines from amides in good yields with high selectivity.
Catalytic N-Alkylation of Amines Using Carboxylic Acids and Molecular Hydrogen
Sorribes, Iván,Cabrero-Antonino, Jose R.,Vicent, Cristian,Junge, Kathrin,Beller, Matthias
supporting information, p. 13580 - 13587 (2015/11/10)
A convenient, practical and green N-alkylation of amines has been accomplished by applying readily available carboxylic acids in the presence of molecular hydrogen. Applying an in situ formed ruthenium/triphos complex and an organic acid as cocatalyst, a broad range of alkylated secondary and tertiary amines are obtained in good to excellent yields. This novel method is also successfully applied for the synthesis of unsymmetrically substituted N-methyl/alkyl anilines through a direct three-component coupling reaction of the corresponding amines, carboxylic acids, and CO2 as a C1 source.
Selective N-alkylation of amines using nitriles under hydrogenation conditions: Facile synthesis of secondary and tertiary amines
Ikawa, Takashi,Fujita, Yuki,Mizusaki, Tomoteru,Betsuin, Sae,Takamatsu, Haruki,Maegawa, Tomohiro,Monguchi, Yasunari,Sajiki, Hironao
supporting information; experimental part, p. 293 - 304 (2012/02/01)
Nitriles were found to be highly effective alkylating reagents for the selective N-alkylation of amines under catalytic hydrogenation conditions. For the aromatic primary amines, the corresponding secondary amines were selectively obtained under Pd/C-catalyzed hydrogenation conditions. Although the use of electron poor aromatic amines or bulky nitriles showed a lower reactivity toward the reductive alkylation, the addition of NH4OAc enhanced the reactivity to give secondary aromatic amines in good to excellent yields. Under the same reaction conditions, aromatic nitro compounds instead of the aromatic primary amines could be directly transformed into secondary amines via a domino reaction involving the one-pot hydrogenation of the nitro group and the reductive alkylation of the amines. While aliphatic amines were effectively converted to the corresponding tertiary amines under Pd/C-catalyzed conditions, Rh/C was a highly effective catalyst for the N-monoalkylation of aliphatic primary amines without over-alkylation to the tertiary amines. Furthermore, the combination of the Rh/C-catalyzed N-monoalkylation of the aliphatic primary amines and additional Pd/C-catalyzed alkylation of the resulting secondary aliphatic amines could selectively prepare aliphatic tertiary amines possessing three different alkyl groups. According to the mechanistic studies, it seems reasonable to conclude that nitriles were reduced to aldimines before the nucleophilic attack of the amine during the first step of the reaction.
Radiation curable compositions for food applications
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Page/Page column 30, (2009/04/23)
A liquid radiation curable composition for inkjet printing comprising a photoinitiating system consisting of one or more diffusion hindered photoinitiators selected from the group consisting of non-polymeric di- or multifunctional initiators, oligomeric o
Reactions of arenediazonium o-benzenedisulfonimides with aliphatic triorganoindium compounds
Barbero, Margherita,Cadamuro, Silvano,Dughera, Stefano,Ghigo, Giovanni
scheme or table, p. 862 - 868 (2009/04/11)
The reaction of various arenediazonium o-benzenedisulfonimides with aliphatic triorganoindium compounds is described. Surprisingly, with triethyl- or tributylindium we obtained N-ethyl- or N-butylanilines, respectively. This is the first case in which, at least formally, the reactive site of a diazonium salt is the nitrogen atom directly bonded to the aromatic ring. In contrast, with trimethylindium we obtained only formaldehyde (aryl)hydrazones. In order to explain the difference between trimethyl- and triethylindium we have proposed some reaction mechanisms, supported by detailed density functional (DFT) calculations. The possible role of diazene/hydrazone tautomerism initially assumed was discarded and therefore three mechanisms for the key step (nucleophilic addition of the trialkylindium to the N=N double bond of diazene) were studied. For the favoured mechanism there is a difference in the energy barriers of 2 kcalmol-1 between the reactions with trimethyl- and triethylindium. This difference is explained on the basis of the different C-In bond energies in the two organometallics and it is assumed to be enough to explain their different behaviour under the experimental conditions. Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 2008.
Chemoselectivity of tetrabutylammonium borohydride towards bifunctional esters
Narasimhan,Swarnalakshmi,Balakumar,Velmathi
, p. 1321 - 1322 (2007/10/03)
Chemoselective reduction of functional groups in the presence of esters is observed with tetrabutylammonium borohydride in chloro solvents.
