1 / 39

Asymmetric Synthesis

Asymmetric Synthesis. Additions to carbonyl compounds. Outline. Addition of non-chiral nucleophiles to chiral aldehydes or ketones Cram’s rule Felkin-Anh model Chelation control Chiral auxiliaries Chiral acetals Chiral reagents Chiral catalysts ‘Chiral amplification’.

tuyet
Télécharger la présentation

Asymmetric Synthesis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Asymmetric Synthesis Additions to carbonyl compounds

  2. Outline • Addition of non-chiral nucleophiles to chiral aldehydes or ketones • Cram’s rule • Felkin-Anh model • Chelation control • Chiral auxiliaries • Chiral acetals • Chiral reagents • Chiral catalysts • ‘Chiral amplification’

  3. Achiral Nu + prochiral C=O

  4. Addition to Cram Karabatsos Cram & Elhafez, J Amer Chem Soc 1952, 74, 5828.

  5. Addition to Cram & Elhafez, J Amer Chem Soc 1952, 74, 5828.

  6. Faulty Assumptions • Ground state and reactive conformation are wrong. • Ground state and reactive conformation (TS) cannot be assumed to be the same. • The directing influence of substituents does not only derive from their steric effects. Electronic interactions are crucial. • The C=O group assumes pyramidal state early, therefore Cram model is unfavourable.

  7. Felkin-Anh Model

  8. Nucleophile Approach Anh, Bürgi-Dunitz

  9. Chelation Control J Amer Chem Soc1990, 112, 6130.

  10. Examples

  11. Chiral auxiliaries • Attached to the carbonyl compound • Attached to the nucleophile • Chiral acetals and a-ketoaldehydes • Sulfoxides • Organometallics • Allylboranes, -silanes, -stannanes

  12. Auxiliary attached to carbonyl Tetrah Lett 1991, 32, 2919

  13. 1,3-Oxathianes

  14. Transition state model

  15. Auxiliary attached to nucleophile J C S Perkin I 1981, 1278

  16. Organometallic: Chiral ligand Tetrah Lett 1986, 27, 5711

  17. Allylic nucleophiles • Alternative route to aldol-type products • Two new chiral centres introduced • Complication: reaction at C-1 • Achiral reactants: syn and anti racemates • Chiral reactants: in principle one major stereoisomer

  18. Chiral boron reagents

  19. Examples (1) R anti:syn e.e. % n-C9H19 > 99:1 88 TBSOCH2CH2 > 97:3 85 tBu 95:5 73 n-C7H15CH=CH > 99:1 74

  20. Examples (2) R anti:syn e.e. % n-C9H19 3:97 86 TBSOCH2CH2 > 3:97 72 tBu > 1:99 70 n-C7H15CH=CH 3:97 62

  21. Examples (3) R e.e. % n-C4H9 95 Ph 90 tBu 98 C6H11 99 Chen, Eur J Org Chem2005, 1665-1668

  22. Transition state

  23. Selectivity: E→ anti

  24. Double asymmetric synthesis

  25. Iterative Asymmetric Synthesis J Amer Chem Soc 1990, 112, 6348

  26. Diisopinocampheylborane

  27. Addition to aldehydes R e.e. % Yield % Me 93 74 Et 86 71 iPr 90 86 nBu 87 72 tBu 83 88 Ph 96 81

  28. Other allylic boranes • High diastereoselectivity and enantioselectivity • Reagent enantioselectivity overrides intrinsic chiral aldehyde facial selectivity • Consistent and predictable • Also with -chiral aldehydes • Diamine-based ligands

  29. Allylsilanes and Allylstannanes • Promoted by Lewis acids • High diastereoselectivity • ‘Cram controlled’ • “Chelation controlled’

  30. Chiral Catalysts • Organozinc catalysts • Chiral amplification

  31. Chiral ligand as catalyst • Organometallic reagent must be relatively unreactive towards C=O unless combined with the catalyst – ligand acceleration. • Catalyst must have suitable 3D structure to provide high e.e.

  32. Dialkylzinc addition to aldehydes R Nu e.e., % Ph Me 91 Ph Et 99 Ph Bu 98 p-Cl-Ph Et 93 p-MeO-Ph Et 93 2-Furyl C5H11 >95 (E)-C6H5-CH=CH Et 96 (E)-Bu3SnCH=CH C5H11 85 PhCH2CH2 Et 90 J Amer Chem Soc 1986, 108, 6071

  33. Transition state model

  34. Aminothiocyanate derivatives R Yield, % e.e., % Ph 98 96 p-Cl-Ph 97 95 o-MeO-Ph 96 90 p-MeO-Ph 95 91 2-Naphthyl 95 93 C6H13 82 75 Tetrahedron Letters 2005, 46(15), 2695-2696

  35. Transition state? Tetrahedron Letters2005, 46, 2695-2696

  36. Chiral amplification • High catalyst optical purity is not needed! J Amer Chem Soc 1989, 111, 4028

  37. Why amplification? (50%) (50%)

  38. Summary • Addition of non-chiral nucleophiles to chiral aldehydes or ketones • Cram’s rule • Felkin-Anh model • Chelation control • Chiral auxiliaries • Chiral acetals • Chiral reagents • Chiral catalysts • ‘Chiral amplification’

  39. Questions ?

More Related