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Catalysis in Organic Syntheses 1977 | 1977

NEW SYNTHESES AND REACTIONS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS: REACTIONS WITH CARBON TETRACHLORIDE AND OTHER PERHALOMETHANES IN POWDERED POTASSIUM HYDROXIDE – t -BUTYL ALCOHOL

Cal Y. Meyers; Walter S. Matthews; Laurence L. Ho; Vera M. Kolb; Thomas E. Parady

Ketones, sulfones, alcohols, and “acidic” hydrocarbons are readily halogenated with perhalomethanes—CCl 4 , CBr 4 , CBrCl 3 , CCl 2 Br 2 , etc,—in t-butyl alcohol-powdered potassium hydroxide. Depending upon the structure of the substrate, the halogenated derivative may be isolated or other, specific products formed from it in situ in this medium are obtained, generally in high yields. For the most part the halogenations with these reagents are selective and do not affect other sites of the substrate or other compounds that are usually sensitive to halogenating agents. Powdered potassium hydroxide suspended in t-butyl alcohol plays a special role in these halogenations as well as the subsequent reactions, which are all base-induced (“catalyzed”). The reactions occur rapidly apparently on the surface of the potassium hydroxide which is essentially insoluble in t-butyl alcohol. This phenomenon readily lends itself to commercial adaptation and high yields of products have been obtained merely by passing a solution of substrate in perhalomethane – t-butyl alcohol through a column packed with powdered potassium hydroxide on an inert support; the effluent is simply collected and evaporated, leaving the product. Evidence suggests that a finite concentration of potassium t-butoxide is maintained virtually on the surface of the potassium hydroxide (from commercial pellets, 15% H 2 O) in equilibrium with the KOH, H 2 O, and t-BuOH, and is responsible for the formation of substrate anion. In turn, these poorly solvated anions—in these studies mainly enolates or other varieties of carbanions —readily share an electron with perhalomethanes, and in the resulting caged radical/anion-radical pair (RARP) halogen-atom transfer is effected. Anions which cannot easily share an electron with the perhalomethanes are unreactive under these conditions; anions which actually transfer an electron to perhalomethanes are not halogenated either, but are responsible for the formation of free-radical related products. This chapter summarizes and categorizes the variety of new syntheses made available with these reactions. While the reaction pathways responsible for these syntheses are discussed in the respective sections, mechanistic details associated with the important halogenation step are described in the final section. The fact that CCl 4 , KOH, and t-BuOH are readily available, inexpensive, easily and safely handled and stored in any laboratory, and readily removed from the reaction products, contributes to the attractiveness of these new syntheses.


Tetrahedron Letters | 1974

The rapid reaction of benzhydryl sulfones with CCl4-KOH. A new route to 1,1-diarylalkenes

Cal Y. Meyers; Walter S. Matthews; Gregory J. McCollum; John C. Branca

Benzhydrylsulfone (I) reagieren mit KOH, tert.-Butanol und Tetrachlorkohlenstoff uber die Zwischenstufen (II), (III) und (IV) zu den Olefinen (V).


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1975

Equilibrium acidities of carbon acids. VI. Establishment of an absolute scale of acidities in dimethyl sulfoxide solution

Walter S. Matthews; Joseph E. Bares; John E. Bartmess; Frederick G. Bordwell; Frederick J. Cornforth; George E. Drucker; Zafra Margolin; Robert J. McCallum; Gregory J. McCollum; Noel R. Vanier


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 1977

Carbon acids. 13. Acidifying effects of phenylthio substituents

Frederick G. Bordwell; Joseph E. Bares; John E. Bartmess; George E. Drucker; John Gerhold; Gregory J. McCollum; Michael Van Der Puy; Noel R. Vanier; Walter S. Matthews


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1975

Acidities of carbon acids. VII. Conjugation and strain in some cyclopropyl anions

Frederick G. Bordwell; Noel R. Vanier; Walter S. Matthews; James B. Hendrickson; Paul L. Skipper


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1975

Acidities of carbon acids. IV. Kinetic vs. equilibrium acidities as measures of carbanion stabilities. Relative effects of phenylthio, diphenylphosphino, and phenyl groups

Frederick G. Bordwell; Walter S. Matthews; Noel R. Vanier


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1975

Acidities of carbon acids. V. Correlation of acidities in dimethyl sulfoxide with gas-phase acidities

Frederick G. Bordwell; John E. Bartmess; George E. Drucker; Zafra Margolin; Walter S. Matthews


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1974

Equilibrium acidities of carbon acids. II. Hydrocarbon indicators, phenylacetylene, and other carbon acids in the 20-27 pK region

F. G. Bordwell; Walter S. Matthews


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 1974

Equilibrium acidities of carbon acids. III. Carbon acids in the membrane series

G. F. Bordwell; Walter S. Matthews


ChemInform | 1976

ACIDITIES OF CARBON ACIDS. VII. CONJUGATION AND STRAIN IN SOME CYCLOPROPYL ANIONS

Frederick G. Bordwell; Noel R. Vanier; Walter S. Matthews; James B. Hendrickson; Paul L. Skipper

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Cal Y. Meyers

Southern Illinois University Carbondale

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Gregory J. McCollum

Southern Illinois University Carbondale

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Joseph E. Bares

Phillips Petroleum Company

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Ashok M. Malte

Southern Illinois University Carbondale

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Duy H. Hua

Kansas State University

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