このページは機械翻訳されています。他のページは英語で表示される場合があります。 View in English

光刺激されたニトロアレン媒介による酸化は, (-) - セキュリンゲンの総合成を可能にする

  • 0Department of Chemistry, Korea Advanced Institute of Science & Technology (KAIST), Daejeon 34141, Republic of Korea.

|

|

まとめ

No abstract available on PubMed

関連する概念動画

Synthesis of α-Substituted Carbonyl Compounds: The Stork Enamine Reaction 01:26

4.0K

α-Substituted ketones or aldehydes can be synthesized from enamines by the Stork enamine reaction, named after its pioneer Gilbert Stork. Enamines are useful synthetic intermediates where the lone pair on nitrogen is in conjugation with the C=C bond. They resemble enolate ions, as the resonance forms of both species have a nucleophilic α carbon.

However, enamines are neutral and less reactive than enolates, which bear a net negative charge. Consequently, enamines are effective Michael donors...

Preparation of 1° Amines: Gabriel Synthesis 01:28

4.4K

Direct alkylation is not a suitable method for synthesizing amines because it produces polyalkylated products. Gabriel synthesis is the most preferred method to exclusively make primary amines. The method uses phthalimide, which contains a protected form of nitrogen that participates in alkylation only once to predominantly give primary amines.
Strong bases like NaOH or KOH deprotonate the phthalimide to form the corresponding anion, which acts as a nucleophile. Further, the anion attacks an...

Nitrosation of Enols 01:19

8.5K

The nitrosation reaction is one of the methods of preparing 1,2-diketones. The enol tautomer of the starting ketone reacts with sodium nitrite in hydrochloric acid, generating the 1,2-diketone after hydrolysis.

Figure 1: Keto–enol tautomerization
As depicted in Figure 2, when treated with hydrochloric acid, sodium nitrite forms an oxonium ion. The expulsion of a water molecule from the oxonium ion produces a nitrosonium ion.

Figure 2: The chemical reaction of the formation of the...

Electrophilic Aromatic Substitution: Nitration of Benzene 01:20

8.1K

The nitration of benzene is an example of an electrophilic aromatic substitution reaction. It involves the formation of a very powerful electrophile, the nitronium ion, which is linear in shape. The reaction occurs through the interaction of two strong acids, sulfuric and nitric acid.

Sulfuric acid is stronger and protonates the nitric acid on the hydroxyl group, followed by loss of water molecule, generating the nitronium ion.

The nitronium ion acts as an electrophile that reacts with...

Preparation of Nitriles 01:12

2.6K

One of the common methods to prepare nitriles is the dehydration of amides. This method requires strong dehydrating agents like phosphorous pentoxide or boiling acetic anhydride for converting amides to nitriles. Another reagent namely, thionyl chloride also accomplishes the dehydration of amides, where amide acts as a nucleophile. The first step of the mechanism involves the nucleophilic attack by the amide on the thionyl chloride to form an intermediate. In the next step, the electron pairs...

Preparation of Amines: Reduction of Oximes and Nitro Compounds 01:29

4.5K

Oximes can be reduced to primary amines using catalytic hydrogenation, hydride reduction, or sodium metal reduction. The reduction of aliphatic and aromatic nitro compounds to primary amines takes place by either catalytic hydrogenation or by using active metals like Fe, Zn, and Sn in the presence of an acid.
Though catalytic hydrogenation can reduce nitrobenzenes, the reduction is nonselective in the presence of other functional groups. For instance, if nitrobenzene contains an aldehyde group,...