808740-71-8Relevant articles and documents
Light-driven MPV-type reduction of aryl ketones/aldehydes to alcohols with isopropanol under mild conditions
Cao, Dawei,Xia, Shumei,Pan, Pan,Zeng, Huiying,Li, Chao-Jun,Peng, Yong
supporting information, p. 7539 - 7543 (2021/10/12)
Alcohols are versatile structural motifs of pharmaceuticals, agrochemicals and fine chemicals. With respect to green chemistry, the development of more sustainable and cost-efficient processes for converting ketones/aldehydes to alcohols is highly desired. Herein, a direct light-driven strategy for reducing ketones/aldehydes to alcohols using isopropanol as the reducing agent and solvent, in the presence of t-BuOLi, under an air atmosphere at room temperature is developed. This operationally simple light-promoted Meerwein-Ponndorf-Verley (MPV) type reduction can be used to produce various benzylic alcohol derivatives as well as applied to bioactive molecules and PEEK model compounds, demonstrating its application potential.
Nickel Catalyzed Intermolecular Carbonyl Addition of Aryl Halide
Ishida, Seima,Suzuki, Hiroyuki,Uchida, Seiichiro,Yamaguchi, Eiji,Itoh, Akichika
supporting information, p. 7483 - 7487 (2019/12/11)
In this study, we develop a nickel-catalyzed carbonyl arylation reaction employing aldehydes with aryl and allyl halides. Various aryl, α,β-unsaturated aldehyde and aliphatic aldehydes can be converted into their corresponding secondary alcohols in moderate-to-high yields. In addition, we extended this approach to develop an asymmetric reductive coupling reaction that combines nickel salts with chiral bisoxazoline ligands to give secondary alcohols with moderate enantioselectivity.
Nucleofugality of aliphatic carboxylates in mixtures of aprotic solvents and water
Mati, Mirela,Denegri, Bernard,Kronja, Olga
, p. 375 - 384 (2015/10/12)
The leaving group ability (nucleofugality) of fluoroacetate, chloroacetate, bromoacetate, dichloroacetate, trifluoroacetate, trichloroacetate, heptafluorobutyrate, formate, isobutyrate, and pivalate have been derived from the solvolysis rate constants of the corresponding X,Y-substituted benzhydryl carboxylates in 60 % and 80 % aqueous acetonitrile and 60 % aqueous acetone, applying the LFER equation: log k = sf(Ef + Nf). The experimental barriers (ΔG?,exp) for solvolyses of 11 reference dianisylmethyl carboxylates in these solvents correlate very well (r = 0.994 in all solvents) with ΔG?,model of the model σ-assisted heterolytic displacement reaction of cis-2,3-dihydroxycyclopropyl trans-carboxylates calculated earlier. Linear correlation observed between the log k for the reference dianisylmethyl carboxylates and the sf values enables estimation of the reaction constant (sfestim). Using the ΔG?,exp vs. ΔG?,model correlation, and taking the estimated sfestim, the nucleofugality parameters for other 34 aliphatic carboxylates have been determined in 60 % and 80 % aqueous acetonitrile and 60 % aqueous acetone. The most important variable that determines the reactivity of aliphatic carboxylates in aprotic solvent/water mixtures is the inductive effect of the group(s) attached onto the carboxylate moiety.