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Alkene chiral ketone-catalyzed asymmetric

The asymmetric epoxidation of alkenes constitutes a powerful approach to enantiomerically enriched epoxides, a class of highly versatile intermediates in organic synthesis [1]. Various effective epoxidation systems have been developed, including epoxidation of allylic [2, 3] and homoallylic [4] alcohols, metalunfunctionalized alkenes [5-7], and the nucleophilic epoxidation of electron-deficient alkenes [8]. During the past 10-15 years, much effort has been devoted to chiral ketone-catalyzed asymmetric epoxidation (Scheme 3.1). The subject has been described in great detail in the first edition [9] and other reviews [10]. This chapter provides an update on progress in this area since the first edition [9]. [Pg.85]

Scheme 3.1 Chiral ketone-catalyzed asymmetric epoxidation of alkenes. Scheme 3.1 Chiral ketone-catalyzed asymmetric epoxidation of alkenes.
A more versatile method to use organic polymers in enantioselective catalysis is to employ these as catalytic supports for chiral ligands. This approach has been primarily applied in reactions as asymmetric hydrogenation of prochiral alkenes, asymmetric reduction of ketone and 1,2-additions to carbonyl groups. Later work has included additional studies dealing with Lewis acid-catalyzed Diels-Alder reactions, asymmetric epoxidation, and asymmetric dihydroxylation reactions. Enantioselective catalysis using polymer-supported catalysts is covered rather recently in a review by Bergbreiter [257],... [Pg.519]

Asymmetric epoxidation of olefins is an effective approach for the synthesis of enan-tiomerically enriched epoxides. A variety of efficient methods have been developed [1, 2], including Sharpless epoxidation of allylic alcohols [3, 4], metal-catalyzed epoxidation of unfunctionalized olefins [5-10], and nucleophilic epoxidation of electron-deficient olefins [11-14], Dioxiranes and oxazirdinium salts have been proven to be effective oxidation reagents [15-21], Chiral dioxiranes [22-28] and oxaziridinium salts [19] generated in situ with Oxone from ketones and iminium salts, respectively, have been extensively investigated in numerous laboratories and have been shown to be useful toward the asymmetric epoxidation of alkenes. In these epoxidation reactions, only a catalytic amount of ketone or iminium salt is required since they are regenerated upon epoxidation of alkenes (Scheme 1). [Pg.202]

In fact, the role of copper and oxygen in the Wacker Process is certainly more complicated than indicated in equations (151) and (152) and in Scheme 10, and could be similar to that previously discussed for the rhodium/copper-catalyzed ketonization of terminal alkenes. Hosokawa and coworkers have recently studied the Wacker-type asymmetric intramolecular oxidative cyclization of irons-2-(2-butenyl)phenol (132) by 02 in the presence of (+)-(3,2,10-i -pinene)palladium(II) acetate (133) and Cu(OAc)2 (equation 156).413 It has been shown that the chiral pinanyl ligand is retained by palladium throughout the reaction, and therefore it is suggested that the active catalyst consists of copper and palladium linked by an acetate bridge. The role of copper would be to act as an oxygen carrier capable of rapidly reoxidizing palladium hydride into a hydroperoxide species (equation 157).413 Such a process is also likely to occur in the palladium-catalyzed acetoxylation of alkenes (see Section 61.3.4.3). [Pg.365]


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Alkene ketones

Alkenes asymmetric

Alkenes catalyze

Alkenes chiral

Asymmetric chirality

Asymmetrical alkene

Asymmetrical ketones

Chiral ketone-catalyzed

Chiral ketones

Chirality alkenes

Ketones alkenation

Ketones alkenic

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