Different reaction selectivity occurs with the Lewis acids -chlorocatecholborane (ClBcat), -bromocatecholborane (BrBcat), and BBr, favoring either alkyne haloboration, electrophilic cyclization of a tethered nucleophilic sulfur onto the alkyne, or group transfer of the nucleophile. This reaction selectivity also depends on the chain length of the tethered nucleophile, revealing a subtle interplay of relative kinetics and thermodynamics. In all cases, BBr reacts readily with alkynes to form haloborated products; however, this process is reversible, and this reversibility can be harnessed to ultimately access regio- and stereodefined cyclic sulfonium zwitterions via the slower but thermodynamically favored electrophilic cyclization pathway.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDeprotonating substituted cyclohexanecarbonitriles with TMPZnCl·LiCl affords zincated nitriles that diastereoselectively couple with aryl bromides in the presence of catalytic Pd(OAc)(2) and S-Phos. Steric and electronic effects influence the diastereoselectivity; 4-t-butyl-, 4-TBSO-, and 2-Me-cyclohexanecarbonitriles exert virtually complete diastereocontrol whereas modest diastereoselectivity is observed with 4-i-Pr-, 4-Me-, and 3-Me-cyclohexanecarbonitriles. The unusual diastereoselectivity trends should prove useful for synthesizing substituted cyclohexanecarbonitrile-containing pharmaceuticals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQuaternary centers are efficiently installed in chelation-controlled alkylations of acyclic hydroxynitriles. Intriguingly, the stereoselectivity is determined by the nature of the electrophile and the structure of the Grignard used for the deprotonation. The alkylation strategy addresses the long-standing difficulty of performing diastereoselective alkylations with conformationally mobile, acyclic nitriles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSequential addition of i-PrMgCl and BuLi to sp3 hybridized iodoalcohols triggers a facile iodine-metal exchange. Intercepting the resulting cyclic Grignard reagents with a slight excess of an electrophile leads to a diverse range of substituted alcohols. The iodine-magnesium exchange strategy is effective with 3-carbon iodoalcohols bearing alkyl substitutents on the carbinol or adjacent carbons and with the chain-extended homolog 4-iodobutan-1-ol.
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