7 research outputs found
An Ir/Zn Dual Catalysis for Enantio- and Diastereodivergent α‑Allylation of α‑Hydroxyketones
An Ir/Zn dual catalysis has been
developed for the enantio- and
diastereodivergent α-allylation of unprotected α-hydroxyketones
under mild conditions, in the absence of any additional base. The
cooperative action of a chiral iridium complex derived from phosphoramidites
and a chiral Zn-ProPhenol complex is most likely responsible for its
high reactivity, excellent enantioselectivity (up to >99% ee),
and
good diastereoselectivity (up to >20:1 dr). All four product stereoisomers
could be prepared from the same set of starting materials and under
identical conditions by simple selection of appropriate catalyst combinations
An Ir/Zn Dual Catalysis for Enantio- and Diastereodivergent α‑Allylation of α‑Hydroxyketones
An Ir/Zn dual catalysis has been
developed for the enantio- and
diastereodivergent α-allylation of unprotected α-hydroxyketones
under mild conditions, in the absence of any additional base. The
cooperative action of a chiral iridium complex derived from phosphoramidites
and a chiral Zn-ProPhenol complex is most likely responsible for its
high reactivity, excellent enantioselectivity (up to >99% ee),
and
good diastereoselectivity (up to >20:1 dr). All four product stereoisomers
could be prepared from the same set of starting materials and under
identical conditions by simple selection of appropriate catalyst combinations
Direct α‑Arylation of Benzo[<i>b</i>]furans Catalyzed by a Pd<sub>3</sub> Cluster
As an interim paradigm for the catalysts between those
based on
more conventional mononuclear molecular Pd complexes and Pdn nanoparticles widely used in organic synthesis,
polynuclear palladium clusters have attracted great attention for
their unique reactivity and electronic properties. However, the development
of Pd cluster catalysts for organic transformations and mechanistic
investigations is still largely unexploited. Herein, we disclose the
use of trinuclear palladium (Pd3Cl) species as an active
catalyst for the direct C–H α-arylation of benzoÂ[b]Âfurans with aryl iodides to afford 2-arylbenzofurans in
good yields under mild conditions. With this method, broad substrate
adaptability was observed, and several drug intermediates were synthesized
in high yields. Mechanistic studies indicated that the Pd3 core most likely remained intact throughout the reaction course
Synergistic Pd/Cu-Catalyzed 1,5-Double Chiral Inductions
Much attention has been focused on the catalytic asymmetric
creation
of single chiral centers or two adjacent stereocenters. However, the
asymmetric construction of two nonadjacent stereocenters is of significant
importance but is challenging because of the lack of remote chiral
induction models. Herein, based on a CC bond relay strategy,
we report a synergistic Pd/Cu-catalyzed 1,5-double chiral induction
model. All four stereoisomers of the target products bearing 1,5-nonadjacent
stereocenters involving both allenyl axial and central chirality could
be obtained divergently by simply changing the combination of two
chiral catalysts with different configurations. Control experiments
and DFT calculations reveal a novel mechanism involving 1,5-oxidative
addition, contra-thermodynamic η3-allyl palladium
shift, and conjugate nucleophilic substitution, which play crucial
roles in the control of reactivity, regio-, enantio-, and diastereoselectivity.
It is expected that this CC bond relay strategy may provide
a general protocol for the asymmetric synthesis of structural motifs
bearing two distant stereocenters
Hydrogen-Bond-Activated Palladium-Catalyzed Allylic Alkylation via Allylic Alkyl Ethers: Challenging Leaving Groups
C–O bond cleavage of allylic
alkyl ether was realized in
a Pd-catalyzed hydrogen-bond-activated allylic alkylation using only
alcohol solvents. This procedure does not require any additives and
proceeds with high regioselectivity. The applicability of this transformation
to a variety of functionalized allylic ether substrates was also investigated.
Furthermore, this methodology can be easily extended to the asymmetric
synthesis of enantiopure products (99% ee)