by Hanmo Zhang, E. Ben Hay, Steven J. Geib and
Dennis P. Curran*
Radical cyclizations of cyclic ene sulfonamides provide
stable bicyclic and tricyclic aldimines and ketimines in good yields. Depending
on the structure of the precursor, the cyclizations occur to provide fused and
spirocyclic imines with five-, six-, and seven-membered rings. The initial
radical cyclization produces an α-sulfonamidoyl radical that undergoes
elimination to form the imine and a phenylsulfonyl radical. In a related
method, 3,4-dihydroquinolines can also be produced by radical translocation
reactions of N-(2-iodophenylsulfonyl)tetrahydroiso-quinolines. In
either case, very stable sulfonamides are cleaved to form imines (rather than
amines) under mild reductive conditions.
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Publication Date (Web): October 10, 2013
We make the custom synthesis process more efficient and cost effective while maintaining the highest standards of quality and reliability. N-butyl-3-metylpyridinium bis((trifluoromethyl)sulfonyl)imide
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