December 22, 2024, 02:44:35 PM
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Topic: Reductive Amination with really poor Nucleophile  (Read 2482 times)

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Offline Nescafe

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Reductive Amination with really poor Nucleophile
« on: June 20, 2014, 07:04:11 PM »
Hello,

I am struggling to get the reaction to proceed between an aniline with electron withdrawing groups and a ketone (hexanone). Weird thing is that the first time I did it in MeOH, AcOH and Sodium cyanoborohydride at 50C I got a 50% yield but now am only getting 10% at a larger scale.

Does anyone have advice or any tricks I could use?

Sina.

Offline kamiyu

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Re: Reductive Amination with really poor Nucleophile
« Reply #1 on: June 22, 2014, 05:36:44 AM »
1) Reproducibility on larger scale is often a problem. Also, pay a special attention on the safety. I think this kind of reaction is exothermic in nature. Don't get it overheated

2) I had experience in redctive amination before. My experience is that this reaction is time-sensitive. If you did it for a prolonged stirring, the yield drops A LOT.

Offline discodermolide

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Re: Reductive Amination with really poor Nucleophile
« Reply #2 on: June 23, 2014, 08:35:03 AM »
Acetic acid has a reasonable heat capacity, 123.1 J/(mol K), so it should not matter too much if the reaction gets warm, I doubt it will reach the boiling point of 118°C. That is assuming you have enough of it as a solvent.
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