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Bifunctional catalysts zinc-based

Catalysts (25) are the Lewis acid-Lewis base bifunctional catalysts in which Lewis acid-Al(III) moiety activates acyl iminium ion and the Lewis base (oxygen of phosphine oxide) does TMSCN, simultaneously (Scheme 5.7). Halogen atoms at the 6-position enhanced both yields and enantioselectivity in Reissert-type cyanation of the imino part of 26. However, the order for the activation is not parallel to the electronegativity of the halogen atoms and, moreover, the strong electron-withdrawing trifluoromethyl group provided unexpectedly the worst result for the activation [13]. It is not simple to explain this phenomenon only in terms of the increased Lewis acidity of the metal center. Trifluoromethylated BINOL-zirconium catalysts (28) for asymmetric hetero Diels-Alder reaction (Scheme 5.8) [14], trifluoromethylated arylphosphine-palladium catalyst (32) for asymmetric hydrosilylation (Scheme 5.9) [15], and fluorinated BINOL-zinc catalyst (35) for asymmetric phenylation (Scheme 5.10) [16] are known. [Pg.190]

The direct asymmetric aldol reaction has also received much recent attention. High ees have been obtained using lanthanide- or zinc-based bifunctional catalysts bearing both Lewis acidic and Lewis basic sites. The most significant recent advance in this area is the discovery that cheap, readily available organic catalysts such as L-proline are also effective. [Pg.179]

Artificial enzymes with metal ions can also hydrolyze phosphate esters (alkaline phosphatase is such a natural zinc enzyme). We examined the hydrolysis of p-nitro-phenyfdiphenylphosphate (29) by zinc complex 30, and also saw that in a micelle the related complex 31 was an even more effective catalyst [118]. Again the most likely mechanism is the bifunctional Zn-OH acting as both a Lewis acid and a hydroxide nucleophile, as in many zinc enzymes. By attaching the zinc complex 30 to one or two cyclodextrins, we saw even better catalysis with these full enzyme mimics [119]. A catalyst based on 25 - in which a bound La3+ cooperates with H202, not water - accelerates the cleavage of bis-p-nitrophenyl phosphate by over 108-fold relative to uncatalyzed hydrolysis [120]. This is an enormous acceleration. [Pg.9]

Finally, carbohydrate ligands of enantioselective catalysts have been described for a limited number of reactions. Bis-phosphites of carbohydrates have been reported as ligands of efficient catalysts in enantioselective hydrogenations [182] and hydrocyanations [183], and a bifunctional dihydroglucal-based catalyst was recently found to effect asymmetric cyanosilylations of ketones [184]. Carbohydrate-derived titanocenes have been used in the enantioselective catalysis of reactions of diethyl zinc with carbonyl compounds [113]. Oxazolinones of amino sugars have been shown to be efficient catalysts in enantioselective palladium(0)-catalyzed allylation reactions of C-nucleophiles [185]. [Pg.494]


See other pages where Bifunctional catalysts zinc-based is mentioned: [Pg.35]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.53]    [Pg.387]    [Pg.656]    [Pg.99]    [Pg.169]    [Pg.555]    [Pg.193]    [Pg.311]    [Pg.274]    [Pg.702]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.241]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.179 , Pg.193 ]




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Zinc-based catalysts

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