16798-93-9Relevant articles and documents
Extended Pummerer fragmentation mediated by carbon dioxide and cyanide
Liu, Jian,Kragh, Rasmus R.,Kamounah, Fadhil S.,Lee, Ji-Woong
supporting information, (2020/10/30)
Pummerer rearrangement reactions generate sulfur (II) oxidation state from sulfur (IV) starting materials in the presence of activating reagents. We found unprecedented transformation of vinyl sulfoxide; disulfide formation reactions mediated by atmospheric pressure of carbon dioxide in extended Pummerer rearrangement reactions. Only under CO2 atmosphere, we observed moderate to high yields of disulfide starting from sulfur (IV) starting materials. Investigations on the reaction mechanism revealed that the degradation of the starting materials and the products was significant in the absence of CO2. Further evidence for the suggested reaction mechanism was obtained by a cross-over experiment and a radical trapping reagent.
Difluoro- and trifluoro diazoalkanes-complementary approaches in batch and flow and their application in cycloaddition reactions
Hock, Katharina J.,Mertens, Lucas,Metze, Friederike K.,Schmittmann, Clemens,Koenigs, Rene M.
supporting information, p. 905 - 909 (2017/08/14)
Herein we report on applications of fluorinated diazoalkanes in cycloaddition reactions, with the emphasis on studying subtle differences between diverse fluorinated diazo compounds. These differences led to two major synthetic protocols in batch and flow that allow the safe and scalable synthesis of fluoroalkyl-, sulfone-substituted pyrazolines.
Palladium-Catalyzed Synthesis of Aryl Vinyl Sulfides via 1,3-Oxathiolanes As Vinyl Sulfide Surrogates
Schmink, Jason R.,Dockrey, Summer A. Baker,Zhang, Tianyi,Chebet, Naomi,Van Venrooy, Alexis,Sexton, Mary,Lew, Sarah I.,Chou, Steffany,Okazaki, Ami
supporting information, p. 6360 - 6363 (2016/12/23)
A nontraditional approach to synthesizing aryl vinyl sulfides is described. 2,2-Diphenyl-1,3-oxathiolane slowly liberates a vinyl sulfide anion under basic conditions. Using a Pd/Xantphos catalyst system to activate a wide range of aryl bromides, this transient sulfide species can be effectively trapped and fed into a traditional Pd0/PdII catalytic cycle. Scope and limitations of the methodology are presented along with significant discussion of a competitive C-S bond activation by this catalyst system.