Several types of chiral hetero-and carbocyclic compounds have been synthesized using the asymmetric hydrogenation of cyclic alkenes. N, P-ligated iridium catalysts reduced six-membered cyclic alkenes with various substituents and heterofunctionality in good to excellent enantioselectivity; whereas the reduction of five-membered cyclic alkenes was generally less selective, giving modest enantiomeric excesses. The stereoselectivity of hydrogenation depended more strongly on substrate structure for the five-rather than sixmembered cyclic alkenes. The major enantiomer formed in the reduction of six-membered alkenes could be predicted from a selectivity model and isomeric alkenes had complementary enantioselectivity, giving opposite optical isomers upon hydrogenation.The utility of the reaction was demonstrated by using it as a key step in the preparation of chiral 1,3-ciscyclohexane carboxylates.
Asymmetric hetero-Diels-Alder (HDA) reactions of N-sulfinyl dienophiles using bis(oxazoline)-copper(II) and -zinc(II) triflates are described. The cycloadditions with cyclic and acyclic 1,3-dienes have been studied. In most cases, good enantioselectivities (70-98% ee) and yields (60-85%) were obtained with stoichiometric amounts of the Lewis acids. Cyclic dienes gave the endo adducts as major products, while acyclic dienes provided cis adducts. The HDA adducts have been transformed into N-protected alpha-amino acid methyl esters, amino alcohols, and homoallylic amines. A stereochemical model, which accounts for the enantiofacial selectivity of the HDA reaction by a tetrahedral metal center, has been proposed. Mechanistic studies revealed positive nonlinear effects, assumed to arise from the formation of less-reactive heterochiral complexes. Investigation of the temperature dependence of the enantioselectivity indicated that at least two selective reaction steps exist in the zinc-catalyzed reaction. Reactions run with 10 mol % chiral Lewis acid gave poor yields and selectivities. However, in combination with TMSOTf (100 mol %), high yields (68-86%) and enantioselectivities (97-98% ee) were obtained.
Optical rotation of 14 molecules containing the pyrrole group is calculated by employing both time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) with the CAM-B3LYP functional and the second-order approximate coupled-cluster singles and doubles (CC2) method. All optical rotations have been provided using the aug-cc-pVDZ basis set at λ = 589 nm. The two methods predict similar results for both sign and magnitude for the optical rotation of all molecules. The obtained signs are consistent with experiments as well, although several conformers for four molecules needed to be studied to reproduce the experimental sign. We have also calculated excitation energies and rotatory strengths for the six lowest lying electronic transitions for several conformers of the two smallest molecules and found that each rotatory strength has various contributions for each conformer which can cause different optical rotations for different conformers of a molecule. Our results illustrate that both methods are able to reproduce the experimental optical rotations, and that the CAM-B3LYP functional, the least computationally expensive method used here, is an applicable and reliable method to predict the optical rotation for these molecules in line with previous studies.
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