10352-44-0Relevant articles and documents
A Mild Heteroatom (O -, N -, and S -) Methylation Protocol Using Trimethyl Phosphate (TMP)-Ca(OH) 2Combination
Tang, Yu,Yu, Biao
, (2022/03/27)
A mild heteroatom methylation protocol using trimethyl phosphate (TMP)-Ca(OH)2combination has been developed, which proceeds in DMF, or water, or under neat conditions, at 80 °C or at room temperature. A series of O-, N-, and S-nucleophiles, including phenols, sulfonamides, N-heterocycles, such as 9H-carbazole, indole derivatives, and 1,8-naphthalimide, and aryl/alkyl thiols, are suitable substrates for this protocol. The high efficiency, operational simplicity, scalability, cost-efficiency, and environmentally friendly nature of this protocol make it an attractive alternative to the conventional base-promoted heteroatom methylation procedures.
Preparation method of acetamide compound
-
Paragraph 0035-0047, (2021/05/19)
The invention discloses a preparation method of an acetamide compound, the preparation method comprises the following steps: reacting tetracarbonyl dichloride rhodium, 1, 3-bis (diphenylphosphine) propane, tungsten carbonyl, sodium phosphate, sodium iodide, water, a nitro compound and dimethyl carbonate at 120 DEG C for 24 hours, and after the reaction is completed, performing post-treatment to obtain the acetamide compound. According to the preparation method, dimethyl carbonate serves as a C1 source and also serves as a green solvent, operation is easy, reaction starting raw materials are low in price and easy to obtain, the tolerance range of substrate functional groups is wide, and reaction efficiency is high. Various acetamide compounds can be synthesized according to actual needs, so that the practicability of the method is widened while the operation is convenient.
Nitromethane as a nitrogen donor in Schmidt-type formation of amides and nitriles
Jiao, Ning,Liu, Jianzhong,Qiu, Xu,Song, Song,Wei, Jialiang,Wen, Xiaojin,Zhang, Cheng,Zhang, Ziyao
supporting information, p. 281 - 285 (2020/01/28)
The Schmidt reaction has been an efficient and widely used synthetic approach to amides and nitriles since its discovery in 1923. However, its application often entails the use of volatile, potentially explosive, and highly toxic azide reagents. Here, we report a sequence whereby triflic anhydride and formic and acetic acids activate the bulk chemical nitromethane to serve as a nitrogen donor in place of azides in Schmidt-like reactions. This protocol further expands the substrate scope to alkynes and simple alkyl benzenes for the preparation of amides and nitriles.