Based on sulfur Other common ylides include
sulfonium ylides and
sulfoxonium ylides; for instance, the
Corey-Chaykovsky reagent used in the preparation of
epoxides or in the
Stevens rearrangement.
Based on oxygen Carbonyl ylides (RR'C=O+C−RR') can form by ring-opening of
epoxides or by reaction of
carbonyls with electrophilic
carbenes, which are usually prepared from
diazo compounds.
Oxonium ylides (RR'-O+-C−R'R) are formed by the reaction of
ethers with electrophilic
carbenes.
Based on nitrogen Certain
nitrogen-based ylides also exist such as
azomethine ylides with the general structure: : These compounds can be envisioned as
iminium cations placed next to a
carbanion. The
substituents R1, R2 are
electron withdrawing groups. These ylides can be generated by condensation of an α-
amino acid and an
aldehyde or by thermal ring opening reaction of certain N-substituted
aziridines. The further-unsaturated
nitrile ylides are known almost exclusively as unstable intermediates. A rather exotic family of dinitrogen-based ylides are the
isodiazenes (R1R2N+=N–), which generally decompose by extrusion of dinitrogen.
Stable carbenes also have a ylidic resonance contributor,
e.g.: :
Other Halonium ylides can be prepared from allyl halides and metal
carbenoids. After a [2,3]-rearrangement, a homoallylhalide is obtained. The active form of
Tebbe's reagent is often considered a titanium ylide. Like the Wittig reagent, it is able to replace the oxygen atom on carbonyl groups with a methylene group. Compared with the Wittig reagent, it has more functional group tolerance. ==Reactions==