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Dive into the research topics where Tove Slagbrand is active.

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Featured researches published by Tove Slagbrand.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Chemoselective Reduction of Tertiary Amides under Thermal Control: Formation of either Aldehydes or Amines

Fredrik Tinnis; Alexey Volkov; Tove Slagbrand; Hans Adolfsson

The chemoselective reduction of amides in the presence of other more reactive reducible functional groups is a highly challenging transformation, and successful examples thereof are most valuable in synthetic organic chemistry. Only a limited number of systems have demonstrated the chemoselective reduction of amides over ketones. Until now, the aldehyde functionality has not been shown to be compatible in any catalytic reduction protocol. Described herein is a [Mo(CO)6 ]-catalyzed protocol with an unprecedented chemoselectivity and allows for the reduction of amides in the presence of aldehydes and imines. Furthermore, the system proved to be tunable by variation of the temperature, which enabled for either C-O or C-N bond cleavage that ultimately led to the isolation of both amines and aldehydes, respectively, in high chemical yields.


Chemical Society Reviews | 2016

Chemoselective reduction of carboxamides

Alexey Volkov; Fredrik Tinnis; Tove Slagbrand; Paz Trillo; Hans Adolfsson

The reduction of amides gives access to a wide variety of important compounds such as amines, imines, enamines, nitriles, aldehydes and alcohols. The chemoselective transformation into these functional groups is challenging due to the intrinsic stability of the amide bond; nevertheless, the ability to reduce highly stable carboxamides selectively in the presence of sensitive functional groups is of high synthetic value for academic and industrial chemists. Hydride-based reagents such as LiAlH4 or diboranes are today the most commonly used compounds for amide reductions, and apart from the substantial amount of waste generated using these methods, they lack tolerance to most other functional groups. This tutorial review provides an overview of the recent progress made in the development of chemoselective protocols for amide reduction and gives an insight to their advantages and drawbacks.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014

Ruthenium-catalyzed tandem-isomerization/asymmetric transfer hydrogenation of allylic alcohols.

Tove Slagbrand; Helena Lundberg; Hans Adolfsson

A one-pot procedure for the direct conversion of racemic allylic alcohols to enantiomerically enriched saturated alcohols is presented. The tandem-isomerization/asymmetric transfer hydrogenation process is efficiently catalyzed by [{Ru(p-cymene)Cl2 }2 ] in combination with the α-amino acid hydroxyamide ligand 1, and performed under mild conditions in a mixture of ethanol and THF. The saturated alcohol products are isolated in good to excellent chemical yields and in enantiomeric excess up to 93 %.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2012

Automated annotation and quantification of metabolites in (1)H NMR data of biological origin

Erik Alm; Tove Slagbrand; K. Magnus Åberg; Erik Wahlström; Ingela Gustafsson; Johan Lindberg

In 1H NMR metabolomic datasets, there are often over a thousand peaks per spectrum, many of which change position drastically between samples. Automatic alignment, annotation, and quantification of all the metabolites of interest in such datasets have not been feasible. In this work we propose a fully automated annotation and quantification procedure which requires annotation of metabolites only in a single spectrum. The reference database built from that single spectrum can be used for any number of 1H NMR datasets with a similar matrix. The procedure is based on the generalized fuzzy Hough transform (GFHT) for alignment and on Principal-components analysis (PCA) for peak selection and quantification. We show that we can establish quantities of 21 metabolites in several 1H NMR datasets and that the procedure is extendable to include any number of metabolites that can be identified in a single spectrum. The procedure speeds up the quantification of previously known metabolites and also returns a table containing the intensities and locations of all the peaks that were found and aligned but not assigned to a known metabolite. This enables both biopattern analysis of known metabolites and data mining for new potential biomarkers among the unknowns.


Chemical Communications | 2017

Facile preparation of pyrimidinediones and thioacrylamides via reductive functionalization of amides

Paz Trillo; Tove Slagbrand; Fredrik Tinnis; Hans Adolfsson

The development of an efficient protocol for the reductive functionalization of amides into pyrimidinediones and amino-substituted thioacrylamides is presented. Enamines are generated in a highly chemoselective amide hydrosilylation reaction catalyzed by molybdenum hexacarbonyl in combination with 1,1,3,3-tetramethyldisiloxane. The direct addition of either isocyanate or isothiocyanate generates the corresponding pyrimidinediones and 3-aminothioacrylamides in high yields.


ChemistryOpen | 2017

Mild Reductive Functionalization of Amides into N‐Sulfonylformamidines

Paz Trillo; Tove Slagbrand; Fredrik Tinnis; Hans Adolfsson

Abstract The development of a protocol for the reductive functionalization of amides into N‐sulfonylformamidines is reported. The one‐pot procedure is based on a mild catalytic reduction of tertiary amides into the corresponding enamines by the use of Mo(CO)6 (molybdenum hexacarbonyl) and TMDS (1,1,3,3‐tetramethyldisiloxane). The formed enamines were allowed to react with sulfonyl azides to give the target compounds in moderate to good yields.


Chemcatchem | 2015

Bimetallic Catalysis: Asymmetric Transfer Hydrogenation of Sterically Hindered Ketones Catalyzed by Ruthenium and Potassium

Tove Slagbrand; Tove Kivijärvi; Hans Adolfsson

An efficient protocol for the asymmetric reduction of sterically hindered ketones under transfer‐hydrogenation conditions was developed. The corresponding chiral alcohols were obtained in good to excellent yields with enantiomeric excess values up to 99 %. The role of the cation associated with the base present in the reduction reaction was investigated. In contrast to previous studies on this catalyst system, potassium ions rather than lithium ions significantly enhanced the reaction outcome.


ACS Catalysis | 2017

Transformation of Amides into Highly Functionalized Triazolines

Tove Slagbrand; Alexey Volkov; Paz Trillo; Fredrik Tinnis; Hans Adolfsson


Chemical Communications | 2014

Mo(CO)6 catalysed chemoselective hydrosilylation of α,β-unsaturated amides for the formation of allylamines

Alexey Volkov; Fredrik Tinnis; Tove Slagbrand; Ida Pershagen; Hans Adolfsson


Advanced Synthesis & Catalysis | 2017

An Efficient One-pot Procedure for the Direct Preparation of 4,5-Dihydroisoxazoles from Amides

Tove Slagbrand; Gabriella Kervefors; Fredrik Tinnis; Hans Adolfsson

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Paz Trillo

University of Alicante

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Erik Alm

Stockholm University

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