Search citation statements
Paper Sections
Citation Types
Year Published
Publication Types
Relationship
Authors
Journals
In 1925 Fischer, Müller, and Vilsmeier published a paper describing the reaction between phosphoryl chloride and N ‐methylacetanilide, giving a number of products, including the quinolinium salt and another salt. The probable course of the reaction was given in a paper by Vilsmeier and Haack in 1927, and they made the important discovery that the reagent obtained from N ‐methylformanilide and phosphoryl chloride, represented as a salt, would react with N,N ‐dimethylaniline, giving 4‐ N,N ‐dimethylaminobenzaldehyde. No 2‐substituted products were observed in this reaction. Other N,N ‐dialkylaniline derivatives, including 3, N,N ‐trimethylaniline and 1‐ N,N ‐dimethylaminonaphthalene were also successfully used as substrates to prepare aromatic aldehyde derivatives. The gradual development of the reagent for synthesis was accompanied by interest in the nature of the reagent. It was discovered that other acid chlorides (e.g., thionyl chloride, carbonyl chloride, and oxalyl chloride) could be used in the reaction and that substituted amides other than formamides gave ketones, although in generally poorer yields. Thionyl chloride frequently gives sulfur‐containing products. The most commonly used amide is dimethylformamide (DMF) and there is now a consensus that the reagent formed from DMF and most acid chlorides, other than phosphoryl chloride, can be represented by the structure given in the chapter, and this is illustrated for the reaction between DMF and carbonyl chloride. The salt is a stable compound and is often isolated before being reacted with a substrate. It seems likely that the most commonly used reagent, that made from DMF and phosphoryl chloride, is an equilibrium mixture of iminium salts. Recent unpublished spectroscopic studies have indicated that in DMF solution there is an equilibrium mixture of iminium compounds. One of the electrophilic chloroiminium salts then reacts with a substrate in an electrophilic substitution process yielding an iminium salt, which is usually hydrolyzed to the aromatic aldehyde. Vinylogous chloroiminium salts can be prepared from the corresponding vinylogous formamide derivatives and these yield, after hydrolysis, α,β‐unsaturated products. This particular reaction is generally limited to more reactive substrates. The formation of carbon–carbon bonds to fully conjugated carbocycles and heterocycles is the subject of this chapter; a subsequent chapter considers carbon–carbon bond‐formation reactions in alkenes (including heterosubstituted alkenes such as enamines and enol ethers), alkynes, and activated methyl and methylene compounds (aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acid derivatives, and nitriles). It is not surprising that the Vilsmeier reaction has been the subject of many review articles of varying scope and length. With so many excellent reviews dealing with the Vilsmeier reaction, its mechanism, and the structure of the various electrophilic reagents, coverage is restricted to important concepts rather than reiterate all the literature material. A brief description of the mechanism and regiochemistry of the Vilsmeier reaction is presented and this is elaborated with appropriate cases that deal with specific compound types.
In 1925 Fischer, Müller, and Vilsmeier published a paper describing the reaction between phosphoryl chloride and N ‐methylacetanilide, giving a number of products, including the quinolinium salt and another salt. The probable course of the reaction was given in a paper by Vilsmeier and Haack in 1927, and they made the important discovery that the reagent obtained from N ‐methylformanilide and phosphoryl chloride, represented as a salt, would react with N,N ‐dimethylaniline, giving 4‐ N,N ‐dimethylaminobenzaldehyde. No 2‐substituted products were observed in this reaction. Other N,N ‐dialkylaniline derivatives, including 3, N,N ‐trimethylaniline and 1‐ N,N ‐dimethylaminonaphthalene were also successfully used as substrates to prepare aromatic aldehyde derivatives. The gradual development of the reagent for synthesis was accompanied by interest in the nature of the reagent. It was discovered that other acid chlorides (e.g., thionyl chloride, carbonyl chloride, and oxalyl chloride) could be used in the reaction and that substituted amides other than formamides gave ketones, although in generally poorer yields. Thionyl chloride frequently gives sulfur‐containing products. The most commonly used amide is dimethylformamide (DMF) and there is now a consensus that the reagent formed from DMF and most acid chlorides, other than phosphoryl chloride, can be represented by the structure given in the chapter, and this is illustrated for the reaction between DMF and carbonyl chloride. The salt is a stable compound and is often isolated before being reacted with a substrate. It seems likely that the most commonly used reagent, that made from DMF and phosphoryl chloride, is an equilibrium mixture of iminium salts. Recent unpublished spectroscopic studies have indicated that in DMF solution there is an equilibrium mixture of iminium compounds. One of the electrophilic chloroiminium salts then reacts with a substrate in an electrophilic substitution process yielding an iminium salt, which is usually hydrolyzed to the aromatic aldehyde. Vinylogous chloroiminium salts can be prepared from the corresponding vinylogous formamide derivatives and these yield, after hydrolysis, α,β‐unsaturated products. This particular reaction is generally limited to more reactive substrates. The formation of carbon–carbon bonds to fully conjugated carbocycles and heterocycles is the subject of this chapter; a subsequent chapter considers carbon–carbon bond‐formation reactions in alkenes (including heterosubstituted alkenes such as enamines and enol ethers), alkynes, and activated methyl and methylene compounds (aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acid derivatives, and nitriles). It is not surprising that the Vilsmeier reaction has been the subject of many review articles of varying scope and length. With so many excellent reviews dealing with the Vilsmeier reaction, its mechanism, and the structure of the various electrophilic reagents, coverage is restricted to important concepts rather than reiterate all the literature material. A brief description of the mechanism and regiochemistry of the Vilsmeier reaction is presented and this is elaborated with appropriate cases that deal with specific compound types.
Die nach Vilsmeier‐Haak aus N(3)‐Methylsydnon und N‐Methyl‐formanilid bzw. aus N(3)‐p‐Anisylsydnon und N‐Methylformamid in Gegenwart von POCl3 in 77 bzw. 7 l%iger Ausbeute erhältlichen Formylsydnone (I) geben bei der Kondensation mit dem Phosphonsäureester (II) (Horner‐Reaktion) stereoselektiv die β‐Sydnonyl‐acrylsäureester (III) als E‐Isomere.
Sydnone Ethylenes. II. Electronic Interactions in 4‐Styryl‐sydnones An estimation of intramolecular donor/acceptor interactions in 4‐styryl‐sydnones can be made by the substituent increments Ztrans derived from the corresponding vinyl compounds and by the comparison of the u.v.‐spectra of ω(E)‐substituted styrols. Because of the different anisotropic effects of sydnone and aryl groups the chemical shifts of the ethylene protons are not suitable for this purpose. The observed and calculated u.v.‐spectra show that the electronic excitation of 4‐styryl‐sydnones causes a strengthening of the sydnone donor effect and a decrease of the bond‐order in the CC‐region.
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.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.