The
Grubbs G-I or G-II catalyst gives the ruthenium ethoxy carbene
complex, which catalyzes ring-opening cross metathesis (ROCM) of a
strained cyclic alkene to give a diene where one of the two alkene
moieties in the product contains an ethoxy substituent. No polymeric
products are detected. Hydrocarbons such as parent norbornene or substituted
cyclopropenes can proceed with the reaction smoothly. Tertiary amines, N-alkylimides, esters, and aryl or alkyl bromides remain
intact under the reaction conditions. In addition to vinyl ethers,
vinylic esters can also be used. The time required to reach a 50%
yield of the ROCM product t
50 varies from
0.01 to 140 h depending on the strain and nucleophilicity of the double
bond. Anchimeric participation of an electron-rich group would result
in significant enhancement of the reactivity, and the t
50 could be as short as several minutes. A similar substrate
without such a neighboring group shows a much slower rate. An exo-norborne derivative reacts much faster than the corresponding endo-isomer. Alkenes with poor nucleophilicity are less
favored for the ROCM process, so is less strained cyclooctene.
The nickel-catalyzed olefination of benzylic dithioacetal with MeMgI or the corresponding zinc reagent generates Mg(ii) or Zn(ii) mercaptide which converts 2-arylpropene into dimer regioselectively.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.