Silylium ion equivalents have shown promise as Lewis acid catalysts for a range of important C-C bond-forming reactions. Here we describe chiral C-H acids that upon in situ silylation, generate silylium-carbanion pairs, which are extremely active Lewis acid catalysts for enantioselective Diels-Alder reactions of cinnamates with cyclopentadiene. Enantiomeric ratios of up to 97:3 and diastereomeric ratios of more than 20:1 are observed across a diverse set of substitution patterns with 1 mole percent (mol %) of C-H acid catalyst and 10 mol % of a silylating reagent. The results show promise for broad applications of such C-H acid-derived silylium ion equivalents in asymmetric Lewis acid catalysis.
The chemical synthesis of organic molecules involves, at its very essence, the creation of carbon-carbon bonds. In this context, the aldol reaction is among the most important synthetic methods, and a wide variety of catalytic and stereoselective versions have been reported. However, aldolizations yielding tertiary aldols, which result from the reaction of an enolate with a ketone, are challenging and only a few catalytic asymmetric Mukaiyama aldol reactions with ketones as electrophiles have been described. These methods typically require relatively high catalyst loadings, deliver substandard enantioselectivity or need special reagents or additives. We now report extremely potent catalysts that readily enable the reaction of silyl ketene acetals with a diverse set of ketones to furnish the corresponding tertiary aldol products in excellent yields and enantioselectivities. Parts per million (ppm) levels of catalyst loadings can be routinely used and provide fast and quantitative product formation in high enantiopurity. In situ spectroscopic studies and acidity measurements suggest a silylium ion based, asymmetric counteranion-directed Lewis acid catalysis mechanism.
Electrolytes with a high lithium transference number linked with high ionic conductivity are urgently needed for high power battery operation. In this work, we present newly synthesized lithium tetra(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)propene as a salt-in-glyme-based "salt-in-solvent" electrolyte. We employ impedance spectroscopy in symmetric Li/electrolyte/Li cells and pulsed field gradient nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to investigate the lithium conduction mechanism. We find predominant lithium conductivity with very high lithium transference numbers (∼70% from the polarization experiments) and three times higher ionic conductivity compared to well-known lithium triflate in diglyme electrolyte. This is a consequence of the reduced mobilities of large anions linked with improved ionic dissociation.
Carbon monoxide (CO) is an emerging gasotransmitter and reactive carbon species with broad anti-inflammatory, cytoprotective, and neurotransmitter functions along with therapeutic potential for the treatment of cardiovascular diseases. The study of CO chemistry in biology and medicine relative to other prominent gasotransmitters such as NO and H2S remains challenging, in large part due to limitations in available tools for the direct visualization of this transient and freely diffusing small molecule in complex living systems. Here we report a ligand-directed activity-based sensing (ABS) approach to CO detection through palladium-mediated carbonylation chemistry. Specifically, the design and synthesis of a series of ABS probes with systematic alterations in the palladium-ligand environment (e.g., sp3-S, sp3-N, sp2-N) establish structureactivity relationships for palladacycles to confer selective reactivity with CO under physiological conditions. These fundamental studies led to the development of an optimized probe, termed Carbon Monoxide Probe-3 Ester Pyridine (COP3E-Py), which enables imaging of CO release in live cell and brain settings, including monitoring of endogenous CO production that triggers presynaptic dopamine release in fly brains. This work provides a unique tool for studying CO in living systems and establishes the utility of a synthetic methods approach to activity-based sensing using principles of organometallic chemistry File list (5) download file view on ChemRxiv CJC COP CO Probes Main Text.pdf (5.60 MiB) download file view on ChemRxiv CJC COP CO Probes SI.pdf (2.77 MiB) download file view on ChemRxiv COP-1-PY.cif (26.99 KiB) download file view on ChemRxiv COP-1.cif (25.25 KiB) download file view on ChemRxiv COP-1'.cif (23.98 KiB)
Tetratrifylpropene (TTP) has been developed as a highly acidic, allylic C-H acid for Brønsted and Lewis acid catalysis. It can readily be obtained in two steps and consistently shows exceptional catalytic activities for Mukaiyama aldol, Hosomi-Sakurai, and Friedel-Crafts acylation reactions. X-ray analyses of TTP and its salts confirm its designed, allylic structure, in which the negative charge is delocalized over four triflyl groups. NMR experiments, acidity measurements, and theoretical investigations provide further insights to rationalize the remarkable reactivity of TTP.
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