Palladium-catalyzed oxidation of 1,3-dienes in acetic acid using an oxidation system of Mn02 and catalytic amounts of p-benzoquinone selectively gives l,4-diacetoxy-2-alkenes. The reaction proceeds with high stereoand regioselectivity, and by ligand control the reaction can be made to take place with either cis or trans 1,4-diacetoxylation across the diene in cyclic systems. Also in an acyclic system the 1,4-relative stereochemistry can be controlled as shown by the stereoselective oxidation of (EE)-and (£rZ)-2,4-hexadiene to their corresponding dl (>88% di) and meso (>95% meso) diacetates 15 and 18, respectively. Evidence is provided that supports a mechanism involving a trans acetoxypalladation of the conjugated diene to give an intermediate (ir-allyl)palladium complex, followed by either a cis or trans attack by acetate on the allyl group. The cis attack is best explained
Formation of 4-methoxycyclohex-2-enyl acetate (3) from the n-allylpalladium complex (2) shows that the acetate has attacked the 7r-ally1 ligand from the same side as the metal (cis-addition).THE stereochemistry of nucleophilic addition to n-allyl-and 7r-olefin-palladium complexes has been investigated extensively during the last decade.l-* The two principal modes of addition to n-ally1 complexes are shown in Scheme 1.Recently Trost et al.2*3 found that Pd(PPh,), catalyses the cis-trans isomerization of substituted cyclohexen-3-yl acetates. They rationalized the isomerization by assuming the formation of a n-allylpalladium intermediate, which may give both trans-and cis-acetate addition (paths A and B, ieipectively). A comparison of
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.