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Lewis facial selectivity

The regioselectivity benefits from the increased polarisation of the alkene moiety, reflected in the increased difference in the orbital coefficients on carbon 1 and 2. The increase in endo-exo selectivity is a result of an increased secondary orbital interaction that can be attributed to the increased orbital coefficient on the carbonyl carbon ". Also increased dipolar interactions, as a result of an increased polarisation, will contribute. Interestingly, Yamamoto has demonstrated that by usirg a very bulky catalyst the endo-pathway can be blocked and an excess of exo product can be obtained The increased di as tereo facial selectivity has been attributed to a more compact transition state for the catalysed reaction as a result of more efficient primary and secondary orbital interactions as well as conformational changes in the complexed dienophile" . Calculations show that, with the polarisation of the dienophile, the extent of asynchronicity in the activated complex increases . Some authors even report a zwitteriorric character of the activated complex of the Lewis-acid catalysed reaction " . Currently, Lewis-acid catalysis of Diels-Alder reactions is everyday practice in synthetic organic chemistry. [Pg.12]

The most successful of the Lewis acid catalysts are oxazaborolidines prepared from chiral amino alcohols and boranes. These compounds lead to enantioselective reduction of acetophenone by an external reductant, usually diborane. The chiral environment established in the complex leads to facial selectivity. The most widely known example of these reagents is derived from the amino acid proline. Several other examples of this type of reagent have been developed, and these will be discussed more completely in Section 5.2 of part B. [Pg.110]

The cycloaddition of chiral, racemic and non-racemic alkoxybutadienes 109 with phenyltriazolinedione led to aza compounds [110] in high yield, with good facial selectivity (diastereomeric excess 87-92%) (Equation 2.31). The cycloadditions of the same dienes with N-phenylmaleimide require Lewis acid catalysis. [Pg.73]

Summary of the Relationship between Diastereoselectivity and the Transition Structure. In this section we considered simple diastereoselection in aldol reactions of ketone enolates. Numerous observations on the reactions of enolates of ketones and related compounds are consistent with the general concept of a chairlike TS.35 These reactions show a consistent E - anti Z - syn relationship. Noncyclic TSs have more variable diastereoselectivity. The prediction or interpretation of the specific ratio of syn and anti product from any given reaction requires assessment of several variables (1) What is the stereochemical composition of the enolate (2) Does the Lewis acid promote tight coordination with both the carbonyl and enolate oxygen atoms and thereby favor a cyclic TS (3) Does the TS have a chairlike conformation (4) Are there additional Lewis base coordination sites in either reactant that can lead to reaction through a chelated TS Another factor comes into play if either the aldehyde or the enolate, or both, are chiral. In that case, facial selectivity becomes an issue and this is considered in Section 2.1.5. [Pg.78]

The stereogenic centers may be integral parts of the reactants, but chiral auxiliaries can also be used to impart facial diastereoselectivity and permit eventual isolation of enantiomerically enriched product. Alternatively, use of chiral Lewis acids as catalysts can also achieve facial selectivity. Although the general principles of control of the stereochemistry of aldol addition reactions have been well developed for simple molecules, the application of the principles to more complex molecules and the... [Pg.88]

In summary, the same factors that operate in the electrophile, namely steric, chelation, and polar effects, govern facial selectivity for enolates. The choice of the Lewis acid can determine if the enolate reacts via a chelate. The final outcome depends upon the relative importance of these factors within the particular TS. [Pg.106]

With titanium enolates it was found that use of excess (3 equiv.) of the titanium reagent reversed facial selectivity of oxazolidinone enolates.140 This was attributed to generation of a chelated TS in the presence of the excess Lewis acid. The chelation rotates the oxazolidinone ring and reverses the facial preference, while retaining the Z-configuration syn diastereoselectivity. [Pg.121]

Scheme 2.7 gives some examples of the control of stereoselectivity by use of additional Lewis acid and related methods. Entry 1 shows the effect of the use of excess TiCl4. Entry 2 demonstrates the ability of (C2H5)2A1C1 to shift the boron enolate toward formation of the 2,3-anti diastereomer. Entries 3 and 4 compare the use of one versus two equivalents of TiCl4 with an oxazoldine-2-thione auxiliary. There is a nearly complete shift of facial selectivity. Entry 5 shows a subsequent application of this methodology. Entries 6 and 7 show the effect of complexation of the aldehyde... [Pg.123]

The Cu-BOX catalysts function as Lewis acids at the carbonyl oxygen. The chiral ligands promote facial selectivity, as shown in Figure 2.3. [Pg.128]

Summary of Facial Stereoselectivity in Aldol and Mukaiyama Reactions. The examples provided in this section show that there are several approaches to controlling the facial selectivity of aldol additions and related reactions. The E- or Z-configuration of the enolate and the open, cyclic, or chelated nature of the TS are the departure points for prediction and analysis of stereoselectivity. The Lewis acid catalyst and the donor strength of potentially chelating ligands affect the structure of the TS. Whereas dialkyl boron enolates and BF3 complexes are tetracoordinate, titanium and tin can be... [Pg.133]

These examples serve to illustrate several general points about use of chiral catalysts for D-A reactions. A cationic metal center is present in nearly all of the catalysts developed to date and has several functions. It is the anchor for the chiral ligands and also serves as a Lewis acid with respect to the dienophile. The chiral ligands establish the facial selectivity of the complexed dienophile. There are several indications of the importance of the anions to catalytic activity. Anions, in general,... [Pg.513]

The Lewis acid-promoted [4+ 2]-cycloaddition reaction of the allenic ester 103 having a camphor-derived chiral auxiliary with cydopentadiene provided the adduct with excellent Jt-facial selection, leading to an enantioselective synthesis of (-)-/l-san-talene [92]. [Pg.760]

Brimble and coworkers176 studied the asymmetric Diels-Alder reactions of cyclopentadiene with chiral naphthoquinones 272 bearing different chiral auxiliaries. The highest endo and facial selectivities were obtained using zinc dichloride as the Lewis acid catalyst and (—)-pantolactone as the chiral auxiliary. Thus, the reaction between cyclopentadiene and 272 afforded a 98 2 mixture of 273 and 274 (equation 76). The chiral auxiliary was removed easily by lithium borohydride reduction. [Pg.393]

Ci.v-1 -(arylsulfonamido)indan-2-ols have been shown to be excellent chiral auxiliaries for asymmetric Diels-Alder reactions191. Some results obtained in the Lewis acid catalyzed Diels-Alder reaction of 1 (p-lohicnc sulfonamido)indan-2-yl acrylate (303) with cyclopentadiene (equation 84) have been depicted in Table 17. The reaction conducted in the absence of a Lewis acid did not afford any facial selectivity and only moderate endo/exo selectivity. However, when a Lewis acid was added, excellent de values and almost complete endo selectivities (cf. 304) were observed, almost independent of the type and amount of Lewis acid added. [Pg.400]

This modification is based on the consideration that such bidentate dienophiles would form rigid complexes with a chiral Lewis acid, resulting in high reactivity and a good level of TT-facial selectivity during the cycloaddition reaction. [Pg.295]

Considerable effort has been devoted to finding Lewis acid or other catalysts that could induce high enantioselectivity in the Mukaiyama reaction. As with aldol addition reactions involving enolates, high diastereoselectivity and enantioselectivity requires involvement of a transition state with substantial facial selectivity with respect to the electrophilic reactant and a preferred orientation of the nucleophile. Scheme 2.4 shows some examples of enantioselective catalysts. [Pg.88]

Similar facial selectivity has been observed in nitronates derived from chiral vinyl ethers (69), as well as from nitronates prepared with a chiral Lewis acid, which lack any bias from a chiral auxiliary (66). Even in the absence of a substituent at C(4), as in the nitronate 287, there remains a high facial selectivity upon the addition of a dipolarophile (Eq. 2.28) (84). Both RHE and B3LYP calculations for the approach of a dipolarophile to the nitronates 289 and 290 show at least a... [Pg.147]

The dipolar cycloaddition of nitronates has been applied to the synthesis of several natural products in the context of the tandem [4+2] / [3 + 2] nitroalkene cycloaddition process. All of these syntheses have focused on the construction of pyrrolidine, pyrrolizidine, and indolizidine alkaloids. For example, the synthesis of ( )-hastanecine (316), a necine alkaloid, involves the elaboration of a p-benzoy-loxynitroalkene 311 via [4 + 2] cycloaddition with a chiral vinyl ether (312) in the presence of a titanium based Lewis acid, to provide the nitronate 313 with high diastereo- and facial selectivity (Scheme 2.30) (69). The dipolar cycloaddition of... [Pg.155]

The Diels-Alder cycloaddition reaction of both cis- and trans-dienyl-2-azetidi-nones with unsymmetrical dienophiles in the presence of Lewis acid catalysts has been reported to give in regio-, stereo-, and remarkably high 7i-facial selectivity novel l,3,4-trisubstituted-2-azetidinone derivatives in good yields (I and II, Fig. 26), [306],... [Pg.173]

The intermolecular Diels-Alder reaction between the dibromoenone (111) and dienes (112) provides access to bicyclo[5.4.0]undecane systems (113) that are common core structures of many natural products (Scheme 32).118 The alio-threonine-derived O-(/ -biphenyl carbonyl oxy)-/i-phenyloxazaborolidi none catalyses the enan-tioselective Diels-Alder reaction of acyclic enones with dienes.119 The reversal of facial selectivity in the Diels-Alder cycloaddition of a semicyclic diene with a bro-moenone was induced by the presence of the bromo substituent in the dienophile.120 Mixed Lewis acid catalyst (AlBr3/AIMe3) catalyses the Diels-Alder reaction of hindered silyloxydienes with substituted enones to produce highly substituted cyclohexenes.121 Chiral /V-enoyl sultams have been used as chiral auxiliaries in the asymmetric Diels-Alder reactions with cyclopentadiene.122... [Pg.370]

The only paper concerning catalysis by Lewis acids of the Diels-Alder reactions of these simple sulfinyl ethylenes was due to Ronan and Kagan [20], who studied the influence of TMSOTf in the reaction of compound (S)-l with cyclo-pentadiene and furane. In the first case, the reaction occurs at 0°C in 3 h, giving an 89 11 mixture of endo and exo adducts (overall yield 60%) with very high n-facial selectivity (de> 92%). The high efficiency of the catalyst increasing the reactivity of 1 also made possible its reaction with furan, which evolved with low endo/exo selectivity (55 45) and lower 7r-facial selectivity (de 70%) than that observed with cyclopentadiene. These excellent results were nevertheless, eclipsed by those reported in the same paper [20] concerning the activation of... [Pg.9]

Pyridylsulfoxides 14a and 14b are able to react with furan, yielding a mixture of four adducts 18. In Scheme 9, only the major endo(t) and exo t)- adducts, derived from 14a, have been depicted. In the presence of Et2AlCl the reaction of 14a required 7 days at room temperature to reach completion [34], and its n-facial selectivity was very high (93 7 mixture of endo adducts and 96 4 mixture of exo-adducts), the results obtained from 14b being similar. In contrast, the endo/exo selectivity is only moderate for both dienophiles (<2 1). In the absence of the Lewis acid (50 °C, 6 days), the endo/exo selectivity of these reactions was slightly higher (almost 4 1 for 14a), but the 7r-facial selectivity for the endo-approach was clearly poorer (55 45). [Pg.17]

The use of Lewis acids has no stereochemical consequence on the course of the reaction. Therefore, the formation of a chelated species such as A (Fig. 5), involving the oxygens of the sulfinyl and nitro groups, was disregarded by the authors (it would be consistent with an inversion of the 7r-facial selectivity). [Pg.42]


See other pages where Lewis facial selectivity is mentioned: [Pg.255]    [Pg.121]    [Pg.134]    [Pg.500]    [Pg.1197]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.1078]    [Pg.162]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.255]    [Pg.447]    [Pg.447]    [Pg.369]    [Pg.336]    [Pg.179]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.30]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.41]    [Pg.52]    [Pg.68]    [Pg.79]    [Pg.82]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.113]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.573 ]




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