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AzafulvenesMoorcroft, Nicholas Andrew January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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6,6-Diaryl Fulvenes. Reduction to Benzhydryl Cyclopentadiene by Amide BasesLorenz, Helmuth Heinrich 02 1900 (has links)
<p> This work was started to investigate new methods of synthesizing certain fulvenes. It was hoped that nucleophilic aromatic substitution of chlorine on 6,6-bis-(p-chlorophenyl) fulvene would provide an alternate route for the preparation of para-substituted 6,6-diphenyl fulvenes which had previously been prepared through the appropriately para-substituted benzophenone and cyclo-pentadienide (1,2). Attempts to prepare these substituted 6,6-diphenylfulvenes were unsuccessful.</p> <p> Secondly, a method of alkylating certain fulvenes in the cyclopentadiene ring was studied. With this in mind, 6,6-diphenylfulvene was treated with various nucleophiles which should give the relatively stable cyclopentadienide intermediate if the base adds to the exocyclic carbon atom. Alkylation of this anion, followed by expulsion of the nucleophilic group and a proton should then generate a new fulvene alkylated in the cyclopentadiene ring. In no case was any alkylated fulvene isolated. The major reaction products were two isomers of benzhydryl cyclopentadiene, rather than the expected alkylated fulvenes. The benzhydryl cyclopentadiene (mixture of two isomers) appears to have resulted from a reduction reaction.</p> <p> Since fulvenes of the type under study are generally unstable, an attempt was made to trap these alkylated fulvenes, if these were present, as their Diels-Alder adducts with tetracyanoethylene (TCNE). This attempt gave the adduct from one of the isomers of benzhydryl cyclopentadiene. The adducts from the other two possible isomers of benzhydryl cyclopentadiene were not detected. This result is an indication of the different reactivities of these isomers to TCNE.</p> <p> From the absence of TCNE adducts of the expected alkylated fulvenes, it was concluded that these fulvenes had not materialized in the attempted alkylation.</p> / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
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Structure And Reactivity In Bridged Polycylic Systems : Cis-trans Enantiomerism, Fulvene Cycloadditions And Crystallographic Studies Of Bridgehead β-KetoacidsGorla, Suresh Kumar 04 1900 (has links)
The thesis entitled "Structure and reactivity in bridged polycyclic systems: cis-trans enantiomerism, fulvene cycloadditions and crystallographic studies of bridgehead β-ketoacids " consists of two parts. Part I contains 3 chapters, and deals with cycloaddition reactions of 6-arylfulvenes with maleic anhydride and nitrones (The products in the case of maleic anhydride display cis-trans enantiomerism). Part II contains 2 chapters, and deals with resolution of racemic primary amines, racemic amino acids and the relative decarboxylation propensities of bicyclic β-ketoacids in solid state.
Part I
Chapter 1: A new case of the uncommon cis-trans enantiomerism is presented in the Diels-Alder cycloadducts (3 & 4) of 6-arylfulvenes (1) with maleic anhydride (2).1 The resolution of the cis-trans enantiomers were accomplished via the formation of diastereomeric imides 6 and 7 with (1S)-(naphth-1-yl)ethylamine (5), and their subsequent hydrolysis and recyclisation (Scheme 1). The enantiomers 3 and 4 were characterized spectrally, polarimetrically (including CD) and by chiral HPLC. The chiral anhydrides were also stereospecifically converted to the corresponding imides by treatment with aq. ammonia in excellent yields. The crystal structure of one of the diastereomeric imides (derived from 6-phenylfulvene) was determined, and based on the known S configuration of the naphthylethylamine moiety, the configurations of the original anhydride adducts could be assigned.2
Scheme 1
Chapter 2: In this chapter tricyclic imides (8a-c) were prepared by Diels-Alder reaction of 6-arylfulvenes (1a-c) and maleic anhydride (2),2 followed by treatment with aq. NH3. The exo isomers were found to exist as conglomerates when the aryl group was p-tolyl or p-anisyl (although not phenyl). Triage of the p-tolyl racemate (Scheme 2), followed by reaction with p-toluenesulphonyl chloride in CH2Cl2/Et3N, led to the crystalline enantiopure N-tosylimides 9 (These were also found to be conglomerates). X-ray diffraction analysis of the N-tosylimides (9) via the anomalous dispersion technique led to the assignment of the absolute configurations (as either E or Z).3, 4 The original p-tolyl imide enantiomers were found to racemise upon UV irradiation in CHCl3. Based on this, a possible second order asymmetric transformation under photochemical conditions was attempted, and indeed led to the isolation of crystalline imide with a small ee (~15%).5
Scheme 2
Chapter 3: This chapter deals with the fulvene-nitrone cycloadditions. The possibility of discovering examples of the rare (6π + 4π) cycloaddition prompted an exploration of the reaction between electron-rich nitrones and pentafulvenes. In previous reports of such cycloadditions, diazomethane or benzonitrile oxide was used as 4π component.6 Building on previous work from this laboratory,7 the reaction between a set of substituted fulvenes and electron rich nitrones were studied. Theoretical calculations indicate that the (6π + 4π) mode would be favored when the fulvene-nitrone cycloaddition is controlled by the LUMO (fulvene) – HOMO (nitrones) interaction.8 Electron withdrawing groups on the fulvene would lower the LUMO and facilitate the above orbital interaction. Therefore the reaction between electron poor fulvenes and nitrones was taken up for further study. In particular, fulvene (10) was reacted with nitrones (11). However, only a (2π + 4π) mode was observed, involving one of the endocyclic double bond of the fulvene, in moderate yields (Scheme 3). Structures of these adducts were assigned based on NMR and X-ray crystal structure determination. The failure to observe the (6π + 4π) mode (14) is intriguing, and it is not clear whether this is due to electronic or steric reason.
Scheme 3
Part II
Chapter 1 describes the resolution of racemic primary amines and racemic amino acids (16) via the formation of diastereomeric imides. For this purpose D-camphoric anhydride (15) was chosen as the chiral auxiliary for the following reasons: it is of low-molecular weight with a rigid backbone, and is also easily prepared and purified.9 Primary amine (16) was treated with D-camphoric anhydride (15) in presence of CHCl3/DCC to form the corresponding diastereomeric imides 17 and 18. (In the case of amino acids, the corresponding methyl esters were treated with D-camphoric anhydride (15) in presence of triethylamine in chloroform). The resulting diastereomeric imides 17 and 18 were separated by silica gel column chromatography (Scheme 4), and hydrolyzed to the chiral amines (or amino acids). (The by-produced camphoric acid could be reconverted to D-camphoric anhydride (15).
Scheme 4
Chapter 2: The relative ease with which β-ketoacids tend to lose CO2 is intriguing and has been the focus of numerous mechanistic studies.10-12 It is generally believed that the decarboxylation of β-ketoacids occurs via a six-centered hydrogen bonded transition state (19), which leads to the formation of the enol tautomer (20) of the final ketone product (Scheme 5).
Scheme 5
Scheme 6
The initial formation of the enol is apparently supported by the high thermal stability of bicyclic β-ketoacids, in which the carboxylic acid functionality is at bridgehead. In these the formation of the enol would be disfavored by Bredt’s rule, which forbids the formation of a double bond at the bridgehead (particularly in the smaller bicyclic compounds). Also, it may be expected that these trends would be manifested in the ground state. This is because there would be a stereoelectronic requirement for the decarboxylation reaction, by which the bond to the carboxylic group would need to be parallel to the C=O π bond of the keto group. Therefore, it was of interest to study the crystal structures of suitable β-ketoacids in the hope of evidencing the above structural trends (Structure for the analogs 21-23 have been reported previously (Scheme 6)).13-15
In fact, the approach pioneered by Dunitz was of particular interest in this regard. 16 In this approach crystal structures of a series of analogs were studied; these analogs possess varying degrees of strain that could be considered as leading to the transition state of a certain reaction. The bond length and related data are then employed to ‘map’ the reaction dynamics.
Compound Bond* lengths (Å) Increase in the bond length compared to ketopinic acid (%) Decarboxylation temp.17
* fine bond at the bridgehead to the COOH group.
In the case of the decarboxylation of β-ketoacids, a correlation between the lengthening of the bond to the COOH group and the ease of decarboxylation was sought. Therefore the set of analogs 24-26 were prepared (Scheme 6) and their crystal structures determined by X-ray diffraction (at 100K). In the case of 26, an increase of 2.47% relative to 21 in the Cα-COOH bond length was observed. However, no evidence for an intramolecular O=C-O-H…O=C H-bonding, was observed in the crystal structures of 24-26. Instead, the COOH moieties were seen to participate in intermolecular O-H…O hydrogen bonding via the well known carboxylic acid dimer motif. The β-ketoacids were also converted into their corresponding S-benzylisothiouronium salts (Scheme 6), to study the effect of destroying the COOH dimer motif. The salts 27 and 28 could be obtained in a form suitable for single crystal X-ray diffraction. The crystal structures revealed an increase in the Cα-COO- bond length to an extent of 1.97% in case of 28 relative to 27. Also, there is an increase in the relevant bond length of ~0.8% on going from 24 (m.p. 145 °C) to 26 (m.p. 132 °C). Note also that these compounds melts with decompositions. Therefore, it appears that the ease of decarboxylation of these analogs is reflected in the relative lengthening of the bond to the COOH group. Thus, this study represents an application of the Dunitz crystallographic approach to reaction dynamics,16 to the case of the decarboxylation of β-ketoacids.(For structural formula pl see the pdf file)
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Transfert de chiralité dans les réarrangements en cascade d'ènediynes / Chirality transfer in cascade rearrangements of enediynesCampolo, Damien 13 December 2013 (has links)
La synthèse asymétrique d’aza-hétérocycles (tétrahydro-isoquinoléines et naphtodiazépines) a été réalisée grâce à la mise en œuvre d’un processus faisant intervenir des réactions radicalaires et polaires en cascade à partir des ènediynes portant un centre stéréogène. Ce processus implique successivement : la formation d’un ényne-allène (via une migration-1,3 de proton, une réaction d’un alcyne terminal avec un carbénoïde de cuivre, ou encore une réaction d’homologation de Crabbé)/ la cyclisation de Saito-Myers/ le transfert-1,5 d’un atome d’hydrogène/ la recombinaison du biradical résultant. Les deux dernières étapes élémentaires de ce réarrangement étaient idéalement adaptées à l’application d’une stratégie basée sur le phénomène de mémoire de chiralité. Des études mécanistiques basées sur des expériences de marquage isotopique et des calculs théoriques ont permis de mieux comprendre les paramètres qui contrôlent la régio- et la stéréosélectivité de la réaction. L’ambition de contrôler par cette voie, via une double mémoire de chiralité, deux centres stéréogènes nous a conduits à étudier le transfert de la chiralité axiale d’un motif allénique judicieusement substitué. Cette étude a permis de découvrir une cycloisomérisation originale catalysée par le cuivre (I) conduisant à des fulvènes chiraux via un double transfert de chiralité (centrique-axial-centrique). / The asymmetric synthesis of azaheterocycles (tetrahydorisoquinolines and naphthodiazepines) was successfully achieved via the polar/radical cross-over rearrangement of enediynes bearing a stereogenic center. This process involves successively : enyne-allene formation (via 1,3-proton shift, reaction of a terminal alkyne group with carbenoids or Crabbé homologation)/Saito-Myers cyclization/1,5-hydrogen atom transfer/biradical recombination. It was ideally suited to apply a strategy based on the memory of chirality phenomenon. Mechanistic studies based on isotopic labelling and theoretical calculations enabled to go deeper into the understanding of the parameters controlling the regio- and the stereoselectivity of the reaction. The ambition to control two stereogenic centers via double memory of chirality, led us to investigate the transfer of the axial chirality of a designed allenic moiety. This study led to the discovery of an original copper (I)-mediated cycloisomerization leading to chiral fulvenes and proceeding via central-to-axial-to-central double chirality transfer.
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