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Prochiral carbonyl groups asymmetric addition

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]

The asymmetric reduction of carbonyl groups to form enantiopure secondary alcohols is a reaction of fundamental importance in modern synthetic chemistry. The carbonyl group is prochiral centre (if different groups are attached to carbonyl carbon) and can be attacked by hydride from re or si face to generate a racemic product if there are no additional chiral centres in the molecule. [Pg.242]

Among the carbon electrophiles, carbonyl compounds [113,114] were first applied in the reaction with lithiated ferrocenylalkyl amines (Sect. 4.S.3.3 and Fig. 4-18). Analogously, carboxylic acids are obtained from CO2 [153]. The reactivity pattern of palladated ferrocenylalkyl amines with carbon electrophiles is somewhat different. Carbon monoxide in alcohols leads to the formation of esters of substituted ferrocenecarboxylic acids [124]. With prochiral alcohols, a moderate asymmetric induction is observed [154]. a, -Unsaturated ketones react with palladated ferrocenylalkyl amines not with addition to the carbonyl group, but with substitution of a hydrogen at the carbon—carbon double bond, allowing the introduction of longer side chains at the ferrocene ring (Fig. 4-27c) [124, 152]. [Pg.205]

A carbonyl carbon bonded to two different substituents is a prochiral carbonyl carbon because it will become a chirality center (asymmetric carbon) if it adds a group unlike either of the groups already bonded to it. The addition product will be a pair of enantiomers. [Pg.765]


See other pages where Prochiral carbonyl groups asymmetric addition is mentioned: [Pg.84]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.14]    [Pg.1233]    [Pg.104]    [Pg.1073]    [Pg.1063]    [Pg.102]    [Pg.877]    [Pg.1194]    [Pg.304]    [Pg.145]    [Pg.40]    [Pg.291]    [Pg.272]    [Pg.550]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.4 , Pg.332 , Pg.333 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.4 , Pg.332 , Pg.333 ]




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Additive group additions

Asymmetric addition

Asymmetric groups

Carbonyl group addition

Carbonyl, addition

Carbonylation additive

Carbonylation asymmetric

Group additivity

Prochiral

Prochiral asymmetrization

Prochiral carbonyls

Prochiral groups

Prochirality

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