Mechanistic investigation of Rh(i)-catalysed asymmetric Suzuki–Miyaura coupling with racemic allyl halides

Understanding how catalytic asymmetric reactions with racemic starting materials can operate would enable new enantioselective cross-coupling reactions that give chiral products. Here we propose a catalytic cycle for the highly enantioselective Rh( i )-catalysed Suzuki–Miyaura coupling of boronic ac...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature catalysis 2021-04, Vol.4 (4), p.284-292
Hauptverfasser: van Dijk, Lucy, Ardkhean, Ruchuta, Sidera, Mireia, Karabiyikoglu, Sedef, Sari, Özlem, Claridge, Timothy D. W., Lloyd-Jones, Guy C., Paton, Robert S., Fletcher, Stephen P.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Understanding how catalytic asymmetric reactions with racemic starting materials can operate would enable new enantioselective cross-coupling reactions that give chiral products. Here we propose a catalytic cycle for the highly enantioselective Rh( i )-catalysed Suzuki–Miyaura coupling of boronic acids and racemic allyl halides. Natural abundance 13 C kinetic isotope effects provide quantitative information about the transition-state structures of two key elementary steps in the catalytic cycle, transmetallation and oxidative addition. Experiments with configurationally stable, deuterium-labelled substrates revealed that oxidative addition can happen via syn - or anti -pathways, which control diastereoselectivity. Density functional theory calculations attribute the extremely high enantioselectivity to reductive elimination from a common Rh complex formed from both allyl halide enantiomers. Our conclusions are supported by analysis of the reaction kinetics. These insights into the sequence of bond-forming steps and their transition-state structures will contribute to our understanding of asymmetric Rh–allyl chemistry and enable the discovery and application of asymmetric reactions with racemic substrates. A major drive in current chemistry research is to develop asymmetric versions of widely used carbon–carbon bond-forming reactions, such as Suzuki-Miyaura cross-couplings. Now, the origins of diastereo- and enantioselectivity in a Rh-catalysed cross-coupling of boronic acid and racemic allyl halides have been established.
ISSN:2520-1158
2520-1158
DOI:10.1038/s41929-021-00589-y