Fr. 135.00

The Chemistry of Zirconacycles and 2,6-Diazasemibullvalenes - Synthesis, Structures, Reactions, and Applications in the Synthesis of Novel N-Heterocycles

English · Hardback

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In this thesis, the author introduces two strategies used to construct various types of N-heterocycles, based on the chemistry of zirconacycles and 2,6-diazasemibullvalenes. In the first part, the author presents the development of multi-component cyclization of a zirconacyclobutene-silacyclobutene fused compound, nitriles and unsaturated compounds. These reactions provide synthetically useful methodology for various N-heterocycles such as 3-acyl pyrrole, pyrrolo[3,2-d]pyridazine and dihydropyrroloazepine, which are all difficult to synthesize by other means. The isolation and characterization of the key three-fused-ring Zr/Si-containing intermediates are also described in detail. These results show that the zirconacyclobutene-silacyclobutene fused compound behaves as a chemical transformer upon treatment with various substrates via the coordination-induced skeleton rearrangement mechanism. In the second part, the author demonstrates the synthesis and isolation of a series of 2,6-diazasemibullvalenes (NSBVs) from the reaction of 1,4-dilithio-1,3-dienes and nitriles, highlighting the significant progress made for the first time in this work: (1) determination of X-ray crystal structure of a substituted 2,6-diazasemibullvalene; (2) measurement of the activation barrier of its rapid intramolecular aza-Cope rearrangement in solution; (3) exploration of several reaction types of NSBV with diverse ring-expansion products and bowl-shape or cage-shape N-containing polycyclic skeletons; (4) demonstration of the localized structure as the predominant form and the homoaromatic delocalized structure as a minor component in the equilibrium using theoretical analysis. Based on well-founded results, this work sheds new light on this controversial topic.

List of contents

Introduction to Zirconacycle Chemistry.- Zirconocene-Mediated Cyclization of Bis(alkynyl)silanes and Nitriles: Synthesis of N-Heterocycles and Isolation, Characterization and Synthetic Application of Zr/Si-containing Reactive Intermediates.- Bulky-Nitrile Coordination Induced Skeleton Rearrangement of Zr/Si-containing Metallacycles and Selective Synthesis of 5-Azaindoles.- Introduction to Semibullvalenes and Azasemibullvalenes.- 2,6-Diazasemibullvalenes: Synthesis, Structure, Theoretical Analysis and Computational Chemistry.- 2,6-Diazasemibullvalenes: Reaction Chemistry and Synthetic Application.

Summary

In this thesis, the author introduces two strategies used to construct various types of N-heterocycles, based on the chemistry of zirconacycles and 2,6-diazasemibullvalenes. In the first part, the author presents the development of multi-component cyclization of a zirconacyclobutene-silacyclobutene fused compound, nitriles and unsaturated compounds. These reactions provide synthetically useful methodology for various N-heterocycles such as 3-acyl pyrrole, pyrrolo[3,2-d]pyridazine and dihydropyrroloazepine, which are all difficult to synthesize by other means. The isolation and characterization of the key three-fused-ring Zr/Si-containing intermediates are also described in detail. These results show that the zirconacyclobutene-silacyclobutene fused compound behaves as a “chemical transformer” upon treatment with various substrates via the “coordination-induced skeleton rearrangement” mechanism. In the second part, the author demonstrates the synthesis and isolation of a series of 2,6-diazasemibullvalenes (NSBVs) from the reaction of 1,4-dilithio-1,3-dienes and nitriles, highlighting the significant progress made for the first time in this work: (1) determination of X-ray crystal structure of a substituted 2,6-diazasemibullvalene; (2) measurement of the activation barrier of its rapid intramolecular aza-Cope rearrangement in solution; (3) exploration of several reaction types of NSBV with diverse ring-expansion products and “bowl-shape” or “cage-shape” N-containing polycyclic skeletons; (4) demonstration of the localized structure as the predominant form and the homoaromatic delocalized structure as a minor component in the equilibrium using theoretical analysis. Based on well-founded results, this work sheds new light on this controversial topic.

Product details

Authors Shaoguang Zhang
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2014
 
EAN 9783662450208
ISBN 978-3-662-45020-8
No. of pages 173
Dimensions 165 mm x 243 mm x 13 mm
Weight 431 g
Illustrations XI, 173 p. 131 illus., 5 illus. in color.
Series Springer Theses
Springer Theses
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Chemistry > Organic chemistry

Physikalische Chemie, Werkstoffprüfung, B, ORGANOMETALLIC CHEMISTRY, Quanten- und theoretische Chemie, Chemistry and Materials Science, Crystallography and Scattering Methods, Physical Chemistry, Crystallography, Quantum & theoretical chemistry, Theoretical and Computational Chemistry, Chemistry, Physical and theoretical, Theoretical Chemistry

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