“…To benefit from the advantages of phosphite and pyridine moieties, we took the first generation of Pfaltz's phosphinite-pyridine ligands 40 and replaced the phosphinite moiety with a biaryl phosphite group to provide ligands 41-52a-g ( Figure 15). [16] With Ir/41-52a-g catalysts, we could reach excellent enantioselectivities (ee values up to 99%) over a wide range of E-and Z-trisubstituted alkenes, including more demanding triaryl-substituted olefins, dihydronaphthalenes, and disubstituted substrates (Figure 16). A range of allylic alcohols, acetates, a,b-unsaturated esters and ketones, allylic silanes, vinylboronates, and trifluoromethyl olefins were also hydrogenated with high enantioselectivities.…”