Search results for "Dioxirane"

showing 10 items of 11 documents

Reactions at Interfaces: Oxygenation of n-Butyl Ligands Anchored on Silica Surfaces with Methyl(trifluoromethyl)dioxirane

2011

The oxygenation of n-butyl and n-butoxy chains bonded to silica with methyl(trifluoromethyl)dioxirane (1) revealed the ability of the silica matrix to release electron density toward the reacting C(2)-H σ-bond through the Si-C(1) and Si-O(1) σ-bonds connecting the alkyl chain to the surface (silicon β-effect). The silica surface impedes neither the alkyl chain adopting the conformation required for the silicon β-effect nor dioxirane 1 approaching the reactive C(2) methylene group. Reaction regioselectivity is insensitive to changes in the solvation of the reacting system, the location of organic ligands on the silica surface, and the H-bonding character of the silica surface. Reaction rates…

Ethylene OxideTrimethylsilylSiliconSurface PropertiesMolecular Conformationchemistry.chemical_elementChemistry Techniques SyntheticPhotochemistryReaction ratechemistry.chemical_compoundDioxiraneMethyleneAlkylchemistry.chemical_classificationTrifluoromethylOrganic ChemistryRegioselectivityEstersHydrogen BondingStereoisomerismSilicon DioxideOxygenSolutionsKineticschemistryButanesOxidation-ReductionThe Journal of Organic Chemistry
researchProduct

On the Reactivity of C(sp3)–H σ-Bonds: Oxygenation with Methyl(trifluoromethyl)­dioxirane

2008

The reactivity of C–H σ-bonds of a series of 2-substituted adamantanes 2 towards methyl(trifluoromethyl)dioxirane (1) shows a consistent dependence on the electron-withdrawing ability, either inductive or by resonance, of the substituent. The results are interpreted in terms of the ability of the substrate molecule to delocalize the electronic perturbation of the reacting center at the beginning of the reaction path. The model shows that the electronic demand from the reacting C–H σ-bond is transmitted along the substrate through a chain of hyperconjugative interactions, the relative intensities of which depend on the σ-bonds involved. The substrate molecule simultaneously provides positive…

chemistry.chemical_compoundTrifluoromethylDioxiranechemistryComputational chemistryOrganic ChemistrySubstrate moleculeSubstituentReaction pathPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryPhotochemistryHyperconjugationEuropean Journal of Organic Chemistry
researchProduct

Iodomethane Oxidation by Dimethyldioxirane:  A New Route to Hypoiodous Acid and Iodohydrines

1999

The oxidation of iodomethane with dimethyldioxirane allows the generation of stable neutral solutions of hypoiodous acid in the absence of any trapping agent for iodide anion. Hypoiodous acid is trapped in situ by addition to representative olefins to give iodohydrines in good yields. The stereochemical study of the products shows the anti-stereospecific nature of the iodohydroxylation reaction.

chemistry.chemical_classificationchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryOrganic ChemistryIodideOrganic chemistryPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryDimethyldioxiranePhotochemistryBiochemistryHypoiodous acidOrganic Letters
researchProduct

Oxyfunctionalization of Aliphatic Esters by Methyl(trifluoromethyl)dioxirane

1996

The oxidation of lineal, cyclic, and bicyclic aliphatic p-chlorobenzoic and p-chorobenzenesulfonic acid esters 2 with methyl(trifluoromethyl)dioxirane (TFDO) (1) occurs at positions in the hydrocarbon chain distant from the directing group with a significant degree of selectivity to give the corresponding keto or hydroxy esters. Compounds 2 are relatively deactivated with respect to this oxidation due to the electron-withdrawing nature of the ester moiety. Methylene Cα−H and Cβ−H bonds remain unchanged in all cases, but tertiary Cβ−H bonds undergo oxidation with TFDO (1). Stereoelectronic factors are used to explain the faster reaction rate in competition experiments for the oxidation of en…

chemistry.chemical_classificationReaction ratechemistry.chemical_compoundTrifluoromethylHydrocarbonchemistryDioxiraneBicyclic moleculeOrganic ChemistryMoietyMethyleneSelectivityMedicinal chemistryThe Journal of Organic Chemistry
researchProduct

Mechanism of the Oxidation of Sulfides by Dioxiranes. 1. Intermediacy of a 10-S-4 Hypervalent Sulfur Adduct

2002

Earlier studies established that dimethyldioxirane (1a) reacts with sulfides 2 in two consecutive concerted electrophilic oxygen-transfer steps to give first sulfoxides 3 and then sulfones 4. The same sequential electrophilic oxidation model was assumed for the reaction of sulfides 2 with the strongly electrophilic methyl(trifluoromethyl)dioxirane (1b). In this paper we report on a systematic and general study on the mechanism of the reaction of simple sulfides 2 with DMDO (1a) and TFDO (1b) which provides clear evidence for the involvement of hypervalent sulfur species in the oxidation process. In the oxidation of sulfides 2a-c, diphenyl sulfide (2d), para-substituted aryl methyl sulfides …

chemistry.chemical_classificationSulfideTemperatureHypervalent moleculechemistry.chemical_elementSulfoxideGeneral ChemistryReaction intermediateSulfidesBiochemistryMedicinal chemistrySulfurCatalysisSulfonechemistry.chemical_compoundColloid and Surface ChemistrychemistryDioxiraneOxygen RadioisotopesSolventsEpoxy CompoundsOrganic chemistryDimethyldioxiraneOxidation-ReductionSulfurJournal of the American Chemical Society
researchProduct

Design, Synthesis, and Biological Evaluation of Novel Fluorinated Ethanolamines

2011

The preparation of novel fluorinated allylamines and their use as key fragments for the stereoselective synthesis of hydroxyethyl secondary amine (HEA)-type peptidomimetics is described. Our strategy employs chiral sulfinyl imines as synthesis intermediates, by treatment of hemiaminal precursors with two equivalents of vinylmagnesium bromide. The subsequent oxidation of the allylic amines to the corresponding epoxides was achieved by treatment with methyl(trifluoromethyl)dioxirane. Finally, epoxide ring opening with a range of nitrogen nucleophiles provided a library of HEA-derived peptidomimetics with a phenyldifluoromethylene moiety. The biological evaluation of these derivatives revealed…

Allylic rearrangementHalogenationPhthalic AcidsSulfonium CompoundsEpoxideCatalysisNocardiaantimicrobialsMycobacteriumchemistry.chemical_compoundDioxiraneNucleophileAnti-Infective AgentsfluorineMoietyOrganic chemistryAspartic Acid EndopeptidasesHumansEthanolamineTrifluoromethylMolecular StructureAntimicrobialsOrganic ChemistryEthanolaminesStereoisomerismBACE1FluorineGeneral ChemistrychemistryEthanolaminespeptidomimeticsHemiaminalethanolaminesEpoxy CompoundsIminesPeptidomimeticsAmyloid Precursor Protein Secretases
researchProduct

The oxidation of alkanes with dimethyldioxirane; a new mechanistic insight

1997

Abstract Primary kinetic isotope effects were measured for the oxidation of cyclohexane and methylcyclohexane with DMDO in solution and in the gas phase. These experiments suggest an electrophilic oxygen insertion mechanism for the oxidation of alkanes by DMDO.

Primary (chemistry)CyclohexaneOrganic Chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementPhotochemistryBiochemistryOxygenchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryMechanism (philosophy)Drug DiscoveryKinetic isotope effectElectrophileMethylcyclohexaneDimethyldioxiraneTetrahedron Letters
researchProduct

Oxygenation of Alkane C−H Bonds with Methyl(trifluoromethyl)dioxirane:  Effect of the Substituents and the Solvent on the Reaction Rate

2005

[Chemical reaction: See text] The mechanism of the oxygenation of alkane C-H bonds with methyl(trifluoromethyl)dioxirane (1a) is studied through the effect of the substituent and solvent on the rate of oxygenation of 2-substituted adamantanes (2). The results suggest a remarkable electron deficiency at the reacting carbon atom in the transition state leading to the regular oxygenation products. The linearity of the Hammett plot reveals that the reaction mechanism does not change within a range of 0.15-0.67 units of sigma(I). A change in the solvent does not affect the distribution of the products, indicating a through-bond transmission of the substituent effect as the origin of the deactiva…

Reaction mechanismTrifluoromethylOrganic ChemistrySubstituentGeneral MedicineElectron deficiencyPhotochemistryMedicinal chemistryChemical reactionReaction ratechemistry.chemical_compoundHammett equationchemistryDioxiraneSolvent effectsThe Journal of Organic Chemistry
researchProduct

The equilibrium structure and fundamental vibrational frequencies of dioxirane

1998

Complete sets of quadratic and cubic force constants calculated for four isotopomers of dioxirane (CH2OO) are used to estimate vibration-rotation interaction contributions to observed values of rotational constants (B″), thereby yielding empirical estimates of the corresponding equilibrium values (Be). At the highest levels of theory, least-squares refinements of atomic coordinates to both the empirical Be values and the associated isotope shifts yield consistent sets of structural parameters. Recommended values are re(CO)=1.3846±0.0005 A; re(OO)=1.5133±0.0005 A; re(CH)=1.0853±0.0015 A and θe(HCH)=117.03±0.20°. Semidiagonal quartic force constants (in the normal coordinate representation) a…

IsotopeInfraredAnharmonicityGeneral Physics and AstronomyThermodynamicsIsotopomerschemistry.chemical_compoundQuadratic equationDioxiranechemistryComputational chemistryQuartic functionPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryRepresentation (mathematics)The Journal of Chemical Physics
researchProduct

Influence of Remote Substituents on the Equatorial/Axial Selectivity in the Monooxygenation of Methylene C−H Bonds of Substituted Cyclohexanes

2001

The reactivity of individual C--H bonds in the methyl(trifluoromethyl)dioxirane TFDO oxygenation of stereogenic methylene groups in conformationally homogeneous monosubstituted cyclohexanes (2) has been determined. The unexpectedly high occurrence of O-atom insertion into C--H(ax) bonds suggests an in plane trajectory attack in the oxygenation while the diastereoselectivity of the reaction is qualitatively interpreted on the basis of the distinct hyperconjugative stabilization by the substituent of diastereomeric transition states due to long-range through bond interactions.

TrifluoromethylStereochemistrySubstituentGeneral ChemistryBiochemistryCatalysisTransition stateStereocenterchemistry.chemical_compoundColloid and Surface ChemistrychemistryDioxiraneCyclohexanesReactivity (chemistry)MethyleneJournal of the American Chemical Society
researchProduct