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Date: 27-10-2019
1100
Date: 11-5-2017
1849
Date: 27-9-2019
987
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Oxiranes (epoxides) are the most commonly encountered three-membered heterocycles. Epoxides are easily prepared by reaction of alkenes with peracids, usually with good stereospecificity. Because of the high angle strain of the three-membered ring, epoxides are more reactive that unstrained ethers. Addition reactions proceeding by electrophilic or nucleophilic opening of the ring constitute the most general reaction class. Example 1 in the following diagram shows one such transformation, which is interesting due to subsequent conversion of the addition intermediate into the corresponding thiirane. The initial ring opening is stereoelectronically directed in a trans-diaxial fashion, the intermediate relaxing to the diequatorial conformer before cyclizing to a 1,3-oxathiolane intermediate.
Other examples show similar addition reactions to thiiranes and aziridines. The acid-catalyzed additions in examples 2 and 3, illustrate the influence of substituents on the regioselectivity of addition. Example 2 reflects the SN2 character of nucleophile (chloride anion) attack on the protonated aziridine (the less substituted carbon is the site of addition). The phenyl substituent in example 3 serves to stabilize the developing carbocation to such a degree that SN1 selectivity is realized. The reduction of thiiranes to alkenes by reaction with phosphite esters (example 6) is highly stereospecific, and is believed to take place by an initial bonding of phosphorous to sulfur.
anoic acid (example 9) accounts both for the 1st-order kinetics of this reaction and the retention of configuration in the product. Note that two inversions of configuration at C-2 result in overall retention. Many examples of intramolecular interactions, such as example 10, have been documented.
An interesting regioselectivity in the intramolecular ring-opening reactions of disubstituted epoxides having a pendant γ-hydroxy substituent has been noted. As illustrated below, acid and base-catalyzed reactions normally proceed by 5-exo-substitution (reaction 1), yielding a tetrahydrofuran product. However, if the oxirane has an unsaturated substituent (vinyl or phenyl), the acid-catalyzed opening occurs at the allylic (or benzylic) carbon (reaction 2) in a 6-endo fashion. The π-electron system of the substituent assists development of positive charge at the adjacent oxirane carbon, directing nucleophilic attack to that site.
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تفوقت في الاختبار على الجميع.. فاكهة "خارقة" في عالم التغذية
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أمين عام أوبك: النفط الخام والغاز الطبيعي "هبة من الله"
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قسم شؤون المعارف ينظم دورة عن آليات عمل الفهارس الفنية للموسوعات والكتب لملاكاته
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