349126-18-7Relevant articles and documents
Direct amidation of non-activated carboxylic acid and amine derivatives catalyzed by TiCp2Cl2
Wang, Hui,Dong, Wei,Hou, Zhipeng,Cheng, Lidan,Li, Xiufen,Huang, Longjiang
, (2020/02/15)
This paper described a mild and efficient direct amidation of non-activated carboxylic acid and amine derivatives catalyzed by TiCp2Cl2. Arylacetic acid derivatives reacted with different amines to afford the corresponding amides in good to excellent yield except of aniline. Aryl formic acids failed to react with aniline but smoothly reacted with aliphatic amines and benzylamine in moderate to good yield, fatty acids reacting with benzyl and aliphatic amines give amides in good to excellent yield. Chiral amino acids derivatives were transformed into amides without racemization in moderate yield. The possible mechanism of direct amidation catalyzed by TiCp2Cl2 was discussed. This catalytic method is very suitable for the amidation of low sterically hindered arylacetic acid, fatty acids with different low sterically hindered amines except aniline, as well as the amidation of aryl formic acid with benzyl and aliphatic amines.
An efficient transformation of methyl ethers and nitriles to amides catalyzed by Iron(III) perchlorate hydrate
Yin, Guibo,Yan, Bin,Chen, Junqing,Ji, Min
, p. 1355 - 1363 (2019/04/30)
An efficient and inexpensive synthesis of N-substituted amides from the reaction of nitriles with methyl ethers catalyzed by Fe(ClO4)3·H2O is described. Fe(ClO4)3·H2O is an economically efficient catalyst for the Ritter Reaction under solvent-free conditions. A range of methyl ethers (benzyl, sec-alkyl and tert-butyl ethers) were reacted with nitriles to provide the corresponding amides in high–excellent yields.
Tetramethyl Orthosilicate (TMOS) as a Reagent for Direct Amidation of Carboxylic Acids
Braddock, D. Christopher,Lickiss, Paul D.,Rowley, Ben C.,Pugh, David,Purnomo, Teresa,Santhakumar, Gajan,Fussell, Steven J.
supporting information, p. 950 - 953 (2018/02/23)
Tetramethyl orthosilicate (TMOS) is shown to be an effective reagent for direct amidation of aliphatic and aromatic carboxylic acids with amines and anilines. The amide products are obtained in good to quantitative yields in pure form directly after workup without the need for any further purification. A silyl ester as the putative activated intermediate is observed by NMR methods. Amidations on a 1 mol scale are demonstrated with a favorable process mass intensity.