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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Development of transition-metal catalyzed/mediated reductive carbon-carbon bond forming reactions

Komanduri, Venukrishnan 13 July 2012 (has links)
Carbon-Carbon bond forming reactions are very important in organic synthesis. Preparation of most of the leading drugs on the market involves at least one carbon-carbon bond forming transformation. However, use of preformed oganometallics for this purpose is neither atom economical nor cost effective. Thus, development of atom economical and environmentally benign carbon-carbon bond forming methods is highly desirable. Catalytic hydrogenation is one of the most widely used transformations in the pharmaceutical and chemical industry. However, for several years the catalytic hydrogenation was limited to the carbon-carbon bond forming processes such as alkene hydroformylation and the Fischer-Tropsch reactions. In 2004 Krische group demonstrated a novel reductive aldol cyclization under rhodium catalyzed hydrogenation conditions. Following this, a variety of reductive carbon-carbon bond forming reactions were developed under hydrogenation conditions. The first chapter of this dissertation summarizes the reductive couplings of π-unsaturates to imines. N-heterocyclic compounds are very valuble in pharmaceutical and agrochemical industries. In the second chapter a variety of hydrogen mediated reductive couplings to aromatic N-heterocycles have been described. Transfer hydrogenation represents another important class of reactions in organic chemistry. This process employs hydrogen sources other than gaseous dihydrogen, such as isopropanol. Very recently, the Krische group reported a number of novel C-C coupling reactions using the concept of transfer hydrogenation. Thus, in chapter 3 a very elegant ruthenium catalyzed allylation reaction has been described. Finally, chapter 4 focuses on the reactivity of zinc enolates toward less reactive electrophiles such as allylic carbonates in the absence of any transition metal catalyst. During this process a direct allylic substitution of allylic carbonates with diorganozinc reagents has been discovered. These two transformations are conceptually very interesting. / text
2

Transition metal catalyzed hydrogenative and transfer hydrogenative C-C bond formation

Skucas, Eduardas 24 August 2010 (has links)
Carbon-carbon bond formation is one the fundamental reactions in organic synthesis. The quest for the development of new and more efficient processes for the construction of this bond has been an ongoing focus for years. The transformations that permit the use of simple precursors to access complex structural architectures in the absence of stoichiometric quantities by-products are highly desirable. Hydrogen is a cheapest and cleanest reductant available to the mankind. The catalytic hydrogenation has been widely utilized in the industry, however the construction of the carbon-carbon bond under hydrogenative conditions has been achieved only for alkene hydroformylations and Fisher-Tropsh process and limited to the use of carbon monoxide. The extension of the hydrogenative carbon-carbon bond formations beyond aforementioned processes would be of a great significance to the synthetic community. The overview of allene use in the metal catalyzed reactions to achieve carbonyl and imine allylation and vinylation is presented in Chapter 1. The following chapter vii discusses the development of metal catalyzed hydrogenative and transfer hydrogenative coupling of allenes and carbonyl compounds to afford allylation products. These studies have resulted in the development of the first carbonyl allylation from the alcohol oxidation level. Chapter 3 discusses efforts towards achieving highly enantioselective hydrogenative coupling of alkynes to carbonyl compounds. / text

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