Herein, we study
the mechanism of iron-catalyzed direct synthesis
of unprotected aminoethers from olefins by a hydroxyl amine derived
reagent using a wide range of analytical and spectroscopic techniques
(Mössbauer, Electron Paramagnetic Resonance, Ultra-Violet Visible
Spectroscopy, X-ray Absorption, Nuclear Resonance Vibrational Spectroscopy,
and resonance Raman) along with high-level quantum chemical calculations.
The hydroxyl amine derived triflic acid salt acts as the “oxidant”
as well as “amino” group donor. It activates the high-spin
Fe(II) (
S
t
= 2) catalyst [Fe(acac)
2
(H
2
O)
2
] (
1
) to generate
a high-spin (
S
t
= 5/2) intermediate (
Int I
), which decays to a second intermediate (
Int II
) with
S
t
= 2. The analysis of spectroscopic
and computational data leads to the formulation of
Int I
as [Fe(III)(acac)
2
-
N
-acyloxy] (an alkyl-peroxo-Fe(III)
analogue). Furthermore,
Int II
is formed by N–O
bond homolysis. However, it does
not
generate a high-valent
Fe(IV)(NH) species (a Fe(IV)(O) analogue), but instead a high-spin
Fe(III) center which is strongly antiferromagnetically coupled (
J
= −524 cm
–1
) to an iminyl radical,
[Fe(III)(acac)
2
-NH·], giving
S
t
= 2. Though Fe(NH) complexes as isoelectronic surrogates
to Fe(O) functionalities are known, detection of a high-spin Fe(III)-
N
-acyloxy intermediate (
Int I
), which undergoes
N–O bond cleavage to generate the active iron–nitrogen
intermediate (
Int II
), is unprecedented. Relative to
Fe(IV)(O) centers,
Int II
features a weak elongated Fe–N
bond which, together with the unpaired electron density along the
Fe–N bond vector, helps to rationalize its propensity for
N
-transfer reactions onto styrenyl olefins, resulting in
the overall formation of aminoethers. This study thus demonstrates
the potential of utilizing the iron-coordinated nitrogen-centered
radicals as powerful reactive intermediates in catalysis.
Nitronate anions, formally generated by α-deprotonating the corresponding nitroalkanes, are highly nucleophilic and versatile intermediates in many carbon–carbon bond-forming reactions. In contrast, the corresponding silyl nitronates are ambiphilic and react, at the same carbon atom, with both electrophiles and nucleophiles. However, while their nucleophilicity has been well exploited in catalytic enantioselective reactions with imines and aldehydes, utilizing the electrophilicity of silyl nitronates in asymmetric synthesis has remained elusive. Here we report the facile, efficient and general reactivity of readily available silyl nitronates with silyl ketene acetals, catalysed by highly Lewis-acidic and confined silylium imidodiphosphorimidate catalysts. The products of this reaction, so-called nitroso acetals, are obtained in excellent enantioselectivity and can be easily converted into N-Boc-β3-amino acid esters in a single step.
We elucidate the stereo-controlling factors of the asymmetric intramolecular hydroalkoxylation of terminal olefins catalyzed by bulky Brønsted acids [Science 2018, 359 (6383), 1501-1505] using high-level electronic structure methods. The catalyst-substrate...
We present an experimental study of a cyclooctatetraene-based molecular balance disubstituted with increasingly bulky tert-butyl (tBu), adamantyl (Ad), and diamantyl (Dia) substituents in the 1,4-/1,6-positions for which we determined the valence-bond shift equilibrium in n-hexane (hex), n-octane (oct), and n-dodecane (dod). Computations including implicit and explicit solvation support our temperature-dependent NMR equilibrium measurements indicating that the more sterically crowded 1,6-isomer is always favored, irrespective of solvent, and that the free energy is quite insensitive to substituent size.
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