Boc-NH-4,4-dimethylpentanal
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Boc-NH-4,4-dimethylpentanal

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Category
Amino Aldehydes
Catalog number
BAT-002696
CAS number
892874-26-9
Molecular Formula
C12H23NO3
Molecular Weight
229.32
Boc-NH-4,4-dimethylpentanal
IUPAC Name
tert-butyl N-(4,4-dimethyl-1-oxopentan-3-yl)carbamate
Synonyms
tert-butyl N-(4,4-dimethyl-1-oxopentan-3-yl)carbamate; TERT-BUTYL 4,4-DIMETHYL-1-OXOPENTAN-3-YLCARBAMATE
Density
0.968 g/cm3
Boiling Point
318.2 °C at 760 mmHg
InChI
InChI=1S/C12H23NO3/c1-11(2,3)9(7-8-14)13-10(15)16-12(4,5)6/h8-9H,7H2,1-6H3,(H,13,15)
InChI Key
YQENZVRVJWTMQY-UHFFFAOYSA-N
Canonical SMILES
CC(C)(C)C(CC=O)NC(=O)OC(C)(C)C
1. Hydrogenation studies involving halobis(phosphine)-rhodium(I) dimers: use of parahydrogen induced polarisation to detect species present at low concentration
Simon A Colebrooke, Simon B Duckett, Joost A B Lohman, Richard Eisenberg Chemistry. 2004 May 17;10(10):2459-74. doi: 10.1002/chem.200305466.
Reaction of [RhCl(PPh3)2]2 with parahydrogen revealed that the binuclear dihydride [Rh(H)2(PPh3)2mu-Cl)2Rh(PPh3)2] and the tetrahydride complex [Rh(H)2(PPh3)2(mu-Cl)]2 are readily formed. While magnetisation transfer from free H2 into both the hydride resonances of the tetrahydride and [Rh(H)2Cl(PPh3)3] is observable, neither transfer into [Rh(H)2(PPh3)2(mu-Cl)2Rh(PPh3)2] nor transfer between the two binuclear complexes is seen. Consequently [Rh(H)2(PPh3)2(mu-Cl)]2 and [Rh(H)2(PPh3)2(mu-Cl)2Rh(PPh3)2] are not connected on the NMR timescale by simple elimination or addition of H2. The rapid exchange of free H2 into the tetrahydride proceeds via reversible halide bridge rupture and the formation of [Rh(H)2(PPh3)2(mu-Cl)RhCl(H)2(PPh3)2]. When these reactions are examined in CD2Cl2, the formation of the solvent complex [Rh(H)2(PPh3)2(mu-Cl)2Rh(CD2Cl2)(PPh3)] and the deactivation products [Rh(Cl)(H)PPh3)2(mu-Cl)(mu-H)Rh(Cl)(H)PPh3)2] and [Rh(Cl)(H)(CD2Cl2)(PPh3)(mu-Cl)(mu-H)Rh(Cl)(H)PPh3)2] is indicated. In the presence of an alkene and parahydrogen, signals corresponding to binuclear complexes of the type [Rh(H)2(PPh3)2(mu-Cl)(2)(Rh)(PPh3)(alkene)] are detected. These complexes undergo intramolecular hydride interchange in a process that is independent of the concentration of styrene and catalyst and involves halide bridge rupture, followed by rotation about the remaining Rh-Cl bridge, and bridge re-establishment. This process is facilitated by electron rich alkenes. Magnetisation transfer from the hydride ligands of these complexes into the alkyl group of the hydrogenation product is also observed. Hydrogenation is proposed to proceed via binuclear complex fragmentation and trapping of the resultant intermediate [RhCl(H)2PPh3)2] by the alkene. Studies on a number of other binuclear dihydride complexes including [(H)(Cl)Rh(PMe3)2(mu-H)(mu-Cl)Rh(CO)(PMe3)], [(H)2Rh(PMe3)2(mu-Cl)2Rh(CO)(PMe3)] and [HRh(PMe3)2(mu-H)(mu-Cl)2Rh(CO)(PMe3)] reveal that such species are able to play a similar role in hydrogenation catalysis. When the analogous iodide complexes [RhIPPh3)2]2 and [RhI(PPh3)3] are examined, [Rh(H)2(PPh3)2(mu-I)2Rh(PPh3)2], [Rh(H)2(PPh3)2(mu-I)]2 and [Rh(H)2I(PPh3)3] are observed in addition to the corresponding binuclear alkene-dihydride products. The higher initial activity of these precursors is offset by the formation of the trirhodium phosphide bridged deactivation product, [[(H)(PPh3)Rh(mu-H)(mu-I)(mu-PPh2)Rh(H)(PPh3)](mu-I)2Rh(H)2PPh3)2]
2. Synchronicity of mononuclear and dinuclear events in homogeneous catalysis. Hydroformylation of cyclopentene using Rh4(CO)12 and HRe(CO)5 as precursors
Chuanzhao Li, Li Chen, Marc Garland J Am Chem Soc. 2007 Oct 31;129(43):13327-34. doi: 10.1021/ja073339v. Epub 2007 Oct 5.
The combined application of two or more metals in homogeneous catalysis can lead to synergistic effects; however, the phenomenological basis for these observations often goes undetermined. The hetero-bimetallic catalytic binuclear elimination reaction, a system involving both mononuclear and dinuclear intermediates, has been repeatedly suggested as a possible mechanism. In the present contribution, the simultaneous application of Rh4(CO)12 and HRe(CO)5 as precursors in the hydroformylation reaction leads to a very strong synergistic rate effect. In situ spectroscopic measurements confirm the presence of both mononuclear and dinuclear intermediates such as RCORh(CO)4 and RhRe(CO)9 in the active system. Moreover, kinetic analysis confirms interconversion of these intermediates as well as their statistical correlation with organic product formation. Specifically, the rate of hydrogen activation by RhRe(CO)9 is exactly equal to the rate of aldehyde formation from binuclear elimination between HRe(CO)5 and RCORh(CO)4 at all reaction conditions studied. Thus the catalytic events involving mononuclear species and those involving dinuclear species are synchronized. In the present experiments, the new topology is orders of magnitude more efficient than the corresponding unicyclic rhodium system.
3. Concurrent synergism and inhibition in bimetallic catalysis: catalytic binuclear elimination, solute-solute interactions and a hetero-bimetallic hydrogen-bonded complex in rh-mo hydroformylations
Chuanzhao Li, Shuying Cheng, Martin Tjahjono, Martin Schreyer, Marc Garland J Am Chem Soc. 2010 Apr 7;132(13):4589-99. doi: 10.1021/ja909696b.
Hydroformylations of cyclopentene and 3,3-dimethylbut-1-ene were performed using both Rh(4)(CO)(12) and (eta(5)-C(5)H(5))Mo(CO)(3)H as precursors in n-hexane at 298 K. Both stoichiometric and catalytic hydroformylations were conducted as well as isotopic labeling experiments. Six organometallic pure component spectra were recovered from the high-pressure FTIR experiments, namely the known species Rh(4)(CO)(12), (eta(5)-C(5)H(5))Mo(CO)(3)H, RCORh(CO)(4), and the new heterobimetallic complexes RhMo(CO)(7)(eta(5)-C(5)H(5)), a weak hydrogen bonded species (eta(5)-C(5)H(5))Mo(CO)(3)H-C(5)H(9)CORh(CO)(4), and a substituted RhMo(CO)(7-y)(eta(5)-C(5)H(5))L(y), where y = 1 or 2 and L = (pi-C(5)H(8)). The main findings were (1) catalytic binuclear elimination (CBER) occurs between (eta(5)-C(5)H(5))Mo(CO)(3)H and RCORh(CO)(4) resulting in aldehyde and RhMo(CO)(7)(eta(5)-C(5)H(5)), and this mechanism is responsible for ca. 10% of the product formation; (2) molecular hydrogen is readily activated by the new heterobimetallic complex(es); (3) FTIR and DFT spectroscopic evidence suggests that the weak hydrogen bonded species (eta(5)-C(5)H(5))Mo(CO)(3)H-C(5)H(9)CORh(CO)(4) has an interaction of the type eta(5)-C(5)H(4)-H...O=C; and (4) independent physicochemical experiments for volumes of interaction confirm that significant solute-solute interactions are present. With respect to the efficiency of the catalytic cycle, the formation of a weak (eta(5)-C(5)H(5))Mo(CO)(3)H-C(5)H(9)CORh(CO)(4) complex results in a significant decrease in the measured turnover frequency (TOF) and is the primary reason for the inhibition observed in the bimetallic catalytic hydroformylation. Such hydrogen bonding through the eta(5)-C(5)H(5) ring might have relevance to inhibition observed in other catalytic metallocene systems. The present catalytic system is an example of concurrent synergism and inhibition in bimetallic homogeneous catalysis.
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