118 research outputs found
ChemInform Abstract: Catalyst-Controlled Aliphatic C-H Oxidations with a Predictive Model for Site-Selectivity.
Selective CāH oxidations for complex molecule synthesis and diversification
Synthetic chemists are continually challenged to develop more efficient and selective methods for the synthesis of both simple and complex molecules. Traditionally, starting materials for synthesis are derived from petroleum or other natural sources and have been pre-oxidized and pre-activated with reactive functional groups. These functional groups readily participate in a wide range of CāC and other bond forming processes, oxidations, and reductions, referred to as functional group manipulations. In contrast, the CāH bonds that make up the majority of organic frameworks are generally viewed as an inert scaffold upon which the chemistry of other functional groups takes place. Recently a novel strategy for synthesis has emerged that seeks to eliminate the requirement for pre-oxidation and carry out synthetic manipulations directly from a CāH bond, establishing it not simply as a bystander, but as a functional group in its own right. As a result, feedstock materials may be more rapidly transformed into final products. Nature has recognized the power of this approach and routinely oxidizes CāH bonds directly for the purpose of biosynthesis or metabolism. However, central to the application of CāH oxidation in the laboratory is the ability to not only break CāH bonds, but do so in a selective and predictable way. This work describes the development of novel CāH oxidation processes and strategies for their application to the synthesis and diversification of organic molecules.
First, harnessing the abundance and simplicity of Ī±-olefins as starting materials, a Pd(II)/bis-sulfoxide catalyst is utilized to carry out a selective intramolecular allylic CāH oxidation to generate a versatile synthetic intermediate (1,4-dioxanones). In contrast to many CāH oxidations, which transform a simple starting material into a single value added product, dioxanones can diverge to form motifs prevalent in natural products (i.e. differentially protected 1,2-diols, polyoxidized motifs and syn-pyrans). This work represents a novel application of CāH oxidation to achieve synthetic versatility.
A highly selective intermolecular oxidative Heck vinylation is also described that forms di- and polyenes from simple Ī±-olefins. Notably the Heck reaction requires only one pre-activated coupling partner. While traditional intermolecular Heck reactions are generally limited to resonance-activated olefins like styrenes, enol ethers and Ī±,Ī²-unsaturated carbonyls, Pd(II)/bis-sulfoxide catalysis enables a broad range of olefins to be vinylated in high yields and selectivities, expanding the applicability of this reaction in complex molecule synthesis.
Finally, aliphatic CāH oxidation of unactivated bonds is perhaps the most challenging CāH transformation because of the ubiquity and strength of these bonds. Our group reported a non-heme iron catalyst [Fe(PDP)], which demonstrated that aliphatic CāH bonds could be selectively oxidized in both simple and complex molecules in preparative yields. Central to this reactivity was the sensitivity of Fe(PDP) to the electronic, steric and stereoelectronic properties of the substrate that differentiate CāH bonds from one another. This work describes the development of a novel CāH oxidation catalyst [Fe(CF3-PDP)] that is able to override these inherent substrate biases and access new sites of oxidation based on catalyst control. Furthermore, a predictive model was developed that quantitatively describes the site-selectivity of oxidation as a function of catalyst. The combination of catalyst-controlled reactivity and quantitative predictability should allow unprecedented application of aliphatic CāH oxidation to the synthesis, diversification, and study of metabolism of organic structures
ChemInform Abstract: Synthetic Versatility in C-H Oxidation: A Rapid Approach to Differentiated Diols and Pyrans from Simple Olefins.
Catalyst-Controlled Aliphatic CāH Oxidations with a Predictive Model for Site-Selectivity
Selective aliphatic
C-H bond oxidations may have a profound impact
on synthesis because these bonds exist across all classes of organic
molecules. Central to this goal are catalysts with broad substrate
scope (small-molecule-like) that predictably enhance or overturn the
substrateās inherent reactivity preference for oxidation (enzyme-like).
We report a simple small-molecule, non-heme iron catalyst that achieves
predictable catalyst-controlled site-selectivity in preparative yields
over a range of topologically diverse substrates. A catalyst reactivity
model quantitatively correlates the innate physical properties of
the substrate to the site-selectivities observed as a function of
the catalyst
Catalyst-Controlled Aliphatic CāH Oxidations with a Predictive Model for Site-Selectivity
Selective aliphatic
C-H bond oxidations may have a profound impact
on synthesis because these bonds exist across all classes of organic
molecules. Central to this goal are catalysts with broad substrate
scope (small-molecule-like) that predictably enhance or overturn the
substrateās inherent reactivity preference for oxidation (enzyme-like).
We report a simple small-molecule, non-heme iron catalyst that achieves
predictable catalyst-controlled site-selectivity in preparative yields
over a range of topologically diverse substrates. A catalyst reactivity
model quantitatively correlates the innate physical properties of
the substrate to the site-selectivities observed as a function of
the catalyst
Catalyst-Controlled Aliphatic CāH Oxidations with a Predictive Model for Site-Selectivity
Selective aliphatic
C-H bond oxidations may have a profound impact
on synthesis because these bonds exist across all classes of organic
molecules. Central to this goal are catalysts with broad substrate
scope (small-molecule-like) that predictably enhance or overturn the
substrateās inherent reactivity preference for oxidation (enzyme-like).
We report a simple small-molecule, non-heme iron catalyst that achieves
predictable catalyst-controlled site-selectivity in preparative yields
over a range of topologically diverse substrates. A catalyst reactivity
model quantitatively correlates the innate physical properties of
the substrate to the site-selectivities observed as a function of
the catalyst
Total Synthesis of Ellagitannins through Regioselective Sequential Functionalization of Unprotected Glucose.
Article first published online: 9 APR 2015Short total syntheses of natural glycosides (ellagitannins) were performed through sequential and regioselective functionalization of the hydroxy groups of unprotected glucose. The key reactions are Ī²-selective glycosidation of a gallic acid derivative by using unprotected glucose as a glycosyl donor and catalyst-controlled regioselective introduction of a galloyl group into the inherently less reactive hydroxy group of the glucoside
Oxidative Heck Vinylation for the Synthesis of Complex Dienes and Polyenes
We introduce an oxidative Heck reaction
for selective complex diene and polyene formation. The reaction proceeds
via oxidative PdĀ(II)/sulfoxide catalysis that retards palladium-hydride
isomerizations which previously limited the Heck manifoldās
capacity for furnishing stereodefined conjugated dienes. Limiting
quantities of nonactivated terminal olefins (1 equiv) and slight excesses
of vinyl boronic esters (1.5 equiv) that feature diverse functionality
can be used to furnish complex dienes and polyenes in good yields
and excellent selectivities (generally <i>E</i>:<i>Z</i> = >20:1; internal:terminal = >20:1). Because this
reaction only requires prior activation of a single vinylic carbon,
improvements in efficiency are observed for synthetic sequences relative
to ones featuring reactions that require activation of both coupling
partners
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