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Teruaki Mukaiyama

Bio: Teruaki Mukaiyama is an academic researcher from Kitasato University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Silylation & Catalysis. The author has an hindex of 52, co-authored 1072 publications receiving 14878 citations. Previous affiliations of Teruaki Mukaiyama include University of Tokyo & Tokyo University of Science.


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TL;DR: In situ reduziertes TiCl4 eignet sich u.a. zur Reduktion von Chlorarenen oder zur Verknupfung zweier Aldehydmolekule zum Alken as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: Titantetrachlorid kann zahlreiche organische Reaktionen beschleunigen. Auf Umwandlungen funktioneller Gruppen mit TiCl4 beruhen vorteilhafte Synthesen z. B. von Allylsulfiden, Amiden, Enaminen und Ketonen. Hervorzuheben ist auserdem die Kohlenstoff-Kohlenstoff-Verknupfung mit TiCl4, die die Synthese von Hydroxyketonen und Carbonylverbindungen vom Typ der Michael-Addukte ermoglicht. In situ reduziertes TiCl4 eignet sich u. a. zur Reduktion von Chlorarenen oder zur Verknupfung zweier Aldehydmolekule zum Alken.

78 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors used chiral amino alcohols derived from L-hydroxyproline or (S)-proline as base catalysts for the addition of thiols to 2-cycloalkenone.
Abstract: Catalytic asymmetric addition of thiols to 2-cycloalkenone was studied by using the chiral amino alcohols, derived from L-hydroxyproline or (S)-proline, as base catalysts. Detailed investigation was carried out on the effects of the structure of the catalyst, the reaction medium, the temperature, and the concentration on the enantioselectivity. Good optical yields (47–88%) were achieved by the reaction of arenethiols and 2-cyclohexen-1-one in toluene at −5 °C, by using the catalyst (2S, 4S)-2-anilinomethyl-1-ethyl-4-hydroxypyrrolidine.

78 citations

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TL;DR: In the presence of a catalytic amount of bis(1,3-diketonato)cobalt(II), various olefins react with molecular oxygen and triethylsilane at room temperature to give the corresponding triethylsilyl peroxides in high yields under neutral conditions as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: In the presence of a catalytic amount of bis(1,3-diketonato)cobalt(II), various olefins react with molecular oxygen and triethylsilane at room temperature to give the corresponding triethylsilyl peroxides in high yields under neutral conditions. The reaction provides a new method for the preparation of various peroxides directly from olefins.

77 citations


Cited by
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TL;DR: In contrast to the very large number of special methods applicable to syntheses in the heterocyclic series, relatively few general methods are available as discussed by the authors, and the 1,3-dipolar addition offers a remarkably wide range of utility in the synthesis of five-membered heterocycles.
Abstract: In contrast to the very large number of special methods applicable to syntheses in the heterocyclic series, relatively few general methods are available. The 1,3-dipolar addition offers a remarkably wide range of utility in the synthesis of five-membered heterocycles. Here the “1,3-dipole”, which can only be represented by zwitterionic octet resonance structures, combines in a cycloaddition with a multiple bond system – the “dipolarophile” – to form an uncharged five-membered ring. Although numerous individual examples of this reaction were known, some even back in the nineteenth century, fruitful development of this synthetic principle has been achieved only in recent years.

2,285 citations

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TL;DR: In this Review, highlights of a number of selected syntheses are discussed, demonstrating the enormous power of these processes in the art of total synthesis and underscore their future potential in chemical synthesis.
Abstract: In studying the evolution of organic chemistry and grasping its essence, one comes quickly to the conclusion that no other type of reaction plays as large a role in shaping this domain of science than carbon-carbon bond-forming reactions. The Grignard, Diels-Alder, and Wittig reactions are but three prominent examples of such processes, and are among those which have undeniably exercised decisive roles in the last century in the emergence of chemical synthesis as we know it today. In the last quarter of the 20th century, a new family of carbon-carbon bond-forming reactions based on transition-metal catalysts evolved as powerful tools in synthesis. Among them, the palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions are the most prominent. In this Review, highlights of a number of selected syntheses are discussed. The examples chosen demonstrate the enormous power of these processes in the art of total synthesis and underscore their future potential in chemical synthesis.

2,268 citations

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TL;DR: This Review gives a brief summary of conventional fluorination reactions, including those reactions that introduce fluorinated functional groups, and focuses on modern developments in the field.
Abstract: Over the past decade, the most significant, conceptual advances in the field of fluorination were enabled most prominently by organo- and transition-metal catalysis. The most challenging transformation remains the formation of the parent C-F bond, primarily as a consequence of the high hydration energy of fluoride, strong metal-fluorine bonds, and highly polarized bonds to fluorine. Most fluorination reactions still lack generality, predictability, and cost-efficiency. Despite all current limitations, modern fluorination methods have made fluorinated molecules more readily available than ever before and have begun to have an impact on research areas that do not require large amounts of material, such as drug discovery and positron emission tomography. This Review gives a brief summary of conventional fluorination reactions, including those reactions that introduce fluorinated functional groups, and focuses on modern developments in the field.

1,897 citations

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TL;DR: A new iron(III) halide-promoted aza-Prins cyclization between γ,δ-unsaturated tosylamines and aldehydes provides six-membered azacycles in good to excellent yields.
Abstract: A new iron(III) halide-promoted aza-Prins cyclization between γ,δ-unsaturated tosylamines and aldehydes provides six-membered azacycles in good to excellent yields. The process is based on the consecutive generation of γ-unsaturated-iminium ion and further nucleophilic attack by the unsaturated carbon−carbon bond. Homoallyl tosylamine leads to trans-2-alkyl-4-halo-1-tosylpiperidine as the major isomer. In addition, the alkyne aza-Prins cyclization between homopropargyl tosylamine and aldehydes gives 2-alkyl-4-halo-1-tosyl-1,2,5,6-tetrahydropyridines as the only cyclic products. The piperidine ring is widely distributed throughout Nature, e.g., in alkaloids,1 and is an important scaffold for drug discovery, being the core of many pharmaceutically significant compounds.2,3 The syntheses of these type of compounds have been extensively studied in the development of new drugs containing six-membered-ring heterocycles.4 Reactions between N-acyliminium ions and nucleophiles, also described as amidoalkylation or Mannich-type condensations, have been frequently used to introduce substituents at the R-carbon of an amine.5 There are several examples that involve an intramolecular attack of a nucleophilic olefin into an iminium cation for the construction of a heterocyclic ring system.6 Traditionally, the use of hemiaminals or their derivatives as precursors of N-acyliminium intermediates has been a common two-step strategy in these reactions.6a Among this type of cyclization is the aza-Prins cyclization,7 which uses alkenes as intramolecular nucleophile. However, cy† X-ray analysis. E-mail address: malopez@ull.es. (1) (a) Fodor, G. B.; Colasanti, B. Alkaloids: Chemical and Biological PerspectiVes; Pelletier, S. W., Ed.; Wiley: New York, 1985; Vol. 23, pp 1-90. (b) Baliah, V.; Jeyarama, R.; Chandrasekaran, L. Chem. ReV. 1983, 83, 379-423. (2) Watson, P. S.; Jiang, B.; Scott, B. Org. Lett. 2000, 2, 3679-3681. (3) Horton, D. A.; Bourne, G. T.; Smythe, M. L. Chem. ReV. 2003, 103, 893-930. (4) Buffat, M. G. P. Tetrahedron 2004, 60, 1701-1729 and references therein. (5) Speckamp, W. N.; Moolenaar, M. J. Tetrahedron 2000, 56, 3187- 3856 and references therein. (6) (a) Hiemstra, H.; Speckamp, W. N. In ComprehensiVe Organic Synthesis; Trost, B. M., Fleming, O., Heathcock, C. H., Eds.; Pergamon: New York, 1991; Vol. 2, pp 1047-1081. (b) Speckamp, W. N.; Hiemstra, H. Tetrahedron 1985, 41, 4367-4416. (7) (a) Dobbs, A. P.; Guesne, S. J. J.; Hursthouse, M. B.; Coles, S. J. Synlett 2003, 11, 1740-1742. (b) Dobbs, A. P.; Guesne, S. J. J.; Martinove, S.; Coles, S. J.; Hursthouse, M. B. J. Org. Chem. 2003, 68, 7880-7883. (c) Hanessian, S.; Tremblay, M.; Petersen, F. W. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2004, 126, 6064-6071 and references therein. (d) Dobbs, A. P.; Guesne, S. J. Synlett 2005, 13, 2101-2103. ORGANIC

1,854 citations