Fukuyama reduction

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Fukuyama reduction
Named after Tohru Fukuyama
Reaction type Organic redox reaction
Identifiers
Organic Chemistry Portal fukuyama-reduction
RSC ontology ID RXNO:0000680

The Fukuyama reduction is an organic reaction and an organic reduction in which a thioester is reduced to an aldehyde by a silyl hydride in presence of a catalytic amount of palladium. This reaction was invented in 1990 by Tohru Fukuyama.[1] In the original scope of the reaction the silyl hydride was triethylsilane and the catalyst palladium on carbon:

The Fukuyama reduction

Fukuyama reductions are used for the conversion of carboxylic acids (as thioester precursor) to aldehydes which is considered a difficult procedure because of the ease of secondary reduction to an alcohol.

Scope

References

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