110 research outputs found
Copper-Catalyzed Borylation of Cyclic Sulfamidates:Access to Enantiomerically Pure (β-and γ-Amino-alkyl)boronic Esters
Cyclic sulfamidates undergo borylation under copperâcatalyzed conditions using B(2)pin(2) to give enantiomerically (and diasteromerically) defined (aminoalkyl)boronic esters. External iodide is essential, but the intermediacy of simple alkyl iodides has been excluded; Nâsulfated intermediates are key in the borylation sequence. Based on stereochemical studies and trapping experiments, the involvement of carbonâcentered radicals under these copperâcatalyzed conditions appears likely
Nickel-Catalyzed CarbonâCarbon Bond-Forming Reactions of Unactivated Tertiary Alkyl Halides: Suzuki Arylations
The first Suzuki cross-couplings of unactivated tertiary alkyl electrophiles are described. The method employs a readily accessible catalyst (NiBr[subscript 2]¡diglyme/4,4â˛-di-tert-butyl-2,2â˛-bipyridine, both commercially available) and represents the initial example of the use of a group 10 catalyst to cross-couple unactivated tertiary electrophiles to form CâC bonds. This approach to the synthesis of all-carbon quaternary carbon centers does not suffer from isomerization of the alkyl group, in contrast with the umpolung strategy for this bond construction (cross-coupling of a tertiary alkylmetal with an aryl electrophile). Preliminary mechanistic studies are consistent with the generation of a radical intermediate along the reaction pathway.National Institute of General Medical Sciences (U.S.) (R01-GM62871)Merck Research Laboratories (Summer Fellowship
Catalytic Enantioselective Cross-Couplings of Secondary Alkyl Electrophiles with Secondary Alkylmetal Nucleophiles: Negishi Reactions of Racemic Benzylic Bromides with Achiral Alkylzinc Reagents
We have developed a nickel-catalyzed method for the asymmetric cross-coupling of secondary electrophiles with secondary nucleophiles, specifically, stereoconvergent Negishi reactions of racemic benzylic bromides with achiral cycloalkylzinc reagents. In contrast to most previous studies of enantioselective Negishi cross-couplings, tridentate pybox ligands are ineffective in this process; however, a new, readily available bidentate isoquinolineâoxazoline ligand furnishes excellent eeâs and good yields. The use of acyclic alkylzinc reagents as coupling partners led to the discovery of a highly unusual isomerization that generates a significant quantity of a branched cross-coupling product from an unbranched nucleophile
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