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Journal ArticleDOI

Dimethylformamide as a carbon monoxide source in fast palladium-catalyzed aminocarbonylations of aryl bromides

TLDR
The carbonylation procedure reported herein, which relies on the in situ generation of carbon monoxide, serves as a convenient alternative to othercarbonylation methods and is particularly applicable to small-scale reactions where short reaction times are desired and the direct use of carbonmonoxide gas is impractical.
Abstract
Dimethylformamide (DMF) acts as an efficient source of carbon monoxide and dimethylamine in the palladium-catalyzed aminocarbonylation (Heck carbonylation) of p-tolyl bromide to provide the dimethylamide. Addition of amines to the reaction mixture in excess delivers the corresponding aryl amides in good yields. The amines employed, benzylamine, morpholine, and aniline, all constitute good reaction partners. The reaction proceeds smoothly with bromobenzene and more electron-rich aryl bromides, but electron-deficient aryl bromides fail to undergo aminocarbonylation. The reactions are conducted at 180-190 degrees C for 15-20 min with microwave heating in a reaction mixture containing imidazole and potassium tert-butoxide: the latter is required to promote decomposition of the DMF solvent at a suitable rate. The beneficial effects of controlled microwave irradiation as an energy source for the rapid heating of the carbonylation reaction mixture are demonstrated. The carbonylation procedure reported herein, which relies on the in situ generation of carbon monoxide, serves as a convenient alternative to other carbonylation methods and is particularly applicable to small-scale reactions where short reaction times are desired and the direct use of carbon monoxide gas is impractical.

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Book ChapterDOI

9.10 Organic Synthesis Using Microwave Heating

TL;DR: In this article, the key tenets of microwave-assisted organic chemistry are explored in the context of particular classes of reaction, such as metal catalysis, reactions involving gases as reagents, combinatorial chemistry, monitoring reactions in real-time, and reaction scale-up.
Journal ArticleDOI

Palladium-Catalyzed Aminocarbonylation of Aryl Halides with 2,4,6-Trichloro-1,3,5-triazine/Formamide Mixed Reagent

TL;DR: In this article, the mixture of formamide and 2,4,6-trichloro-1,3,5-triazine (cyanuric chloride or TCT) was introduced as a new amidating agent in Pd-catalyzed aminocarbonylation of aryl halides.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nickel-Catalyzed Amination of Aryl Chlorides with Amides.

TL;DR: In this article, a nickel-catalyzed amination of aryl chlorides with diverse amides via C-N bond cleavage was realized under mild conditions, and a broad substrate scope with excellent functional group tolerance was obtained.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanistic Insight into Weak-Base-Catalyzed Generation of Carbon Monoxide from Phenyl Formate and Its Application to Catalytic Carbonylation at Room Temperature without Use of External Carbon Monoxide Gas

TL;DR: In this article, a weak base-catalyzed generation of carbon monoxide (CO) and phenol from phenyl formate was investigated by experimental and theoretical methods, and a first-order reaction was found to proceed by an E2 α-elimination pathway, which involves the abstraction of the formyl proton of phenyl formsate, simultaneously generating CO and phenoxide.
Journal ArticleDOI

Construction of Benzimidazoles and Benzoxazoles through the Molybdenum‐Mediated Carbonylation of Aryl Halides

TL;DR: In this article, the facile and efficient one-pot construction of benzimidazoles and benzoxazoles through the Mo(CO)6-mediated carbonylation of aryl halides was examined.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Progress in hydroformylation and carbonylation

TL;DR: The last 15 years of hydroformylation and carbonylation chemistry are reviewed in this article, including technical and commercial aspects, and the authors present a review of the most relevant papers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Developments in Microwave-Assisted Organic Chemistry

TL;DR: The CSIRO continuous microwave reactor (CMR) and microwave batch reactor (MBR) were developed for organic synthesis and operated at temperatures up to 200°C (1400 kPa) and 260°C(10 MPa) respectively as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microwave-assisted high-speed chemistry: a new technique in drug discovery.

TL;DR: It is believed that the time saved by using focused microwaves is potentially important in traditional organic synthesis but could be of even greater importance in high-speed combinatorial and medicinal chemistry.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fast Microwave-Assisted Preparation of Aryl and Vinyl Nitriles and the Corresponding Tetrazoles from Organo-halides

TL;DR: A very potent HIV-1 protease inhibitor (K(i) = 0.
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