textjournal article
Origin of Chemoselectivity in N‑Heterocyclic Carbene Catalyzed Cross-Benzoin Reactions: DFT and Experimental Insights
Abstract
An exploration into the origin of chemoselectivity in the NHC-catalyzed cross-benzoin reaction reveals several key factors governing the preferred pathway. In the first computational study to explore the cross-benzoin reaction, a piperidinone-derived triazolium catalyst produces kinetically controlled chemoselectivity. This is supported by <sup>1</sup>H NMR studies as well as a series of crossover experiments. Major contributors include the rapid and preferential formation of an NHC adduct with alkyl aldehydes, a rate-limiting carbon–carbon bond formation step benefiting from a stabilizing π-stacking/π-cation interaction, and steric penalties paid by competing pathways. The energy profile for the analogous pyrrolidinone-derived catalyst was found to be remarkably similar, despite experimental data showing that it is less chemoselective. The chemoselectivity could not be improved through kinetic control; however, equilibrating conditions show substantial preference for the same cross-benzoin product kinetically favored by the piperidinone-derived catalyst- Text
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- Biophysics
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- Chemical Sciences not elsewhere classified
- equilibrating conditions show
- chemoselectivity
- kinetically
- energy profile
- pathway
- NHC adduct
- DFT
- Experimental InsightsAn exploration
- formation
- catalyst
- 1 H NMR studies
- crossover experiments
- steric penalties
- Major contributors
- alkyl aldehydes