The di-π-methane (DPM) rearrangement is an important organic photorearrangement that converts 1,4-diene-containing compounds to vinyl cyclopropanes, often resulting in extensive, synthetically valuable restructuring of the substrate's carbon framework. We investigated the influence of Lewis and Brønsted acids on the DPM rearrangement of dibenzobarrelenes. These studies have culminated in the identification of a dual chiral Brønsted acid-iridium photosensitizer system that enables the first highly enantioselective catalytic all-carbon DPM rearrangement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBicyclo[2.1.1]hexanes have emerged as valuable scaffolds for the design of new pharmaceutical and agrochemical active ingredients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA new reaction swaps an oxygen for a nitrogen in structurally complex molecules.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Paternò-Büchi reaction is the [2 + 2] photocycloaddition of a carbonyl with an alkene to afford an oxetane. Enantioselective catalysis of this classical photoreaction, however, has proven to be a long-standing challenge. Many of the best-developed strategies for asymmetric photochemistry are not suitable to address this problem because the interaction of carbonyls with Brønsted or Lewis acidic catalysts can alter the electronic structure of their excited state and divert their reactivity toward alternate photoproducts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe truxillates constitute a large class of dimeric natural products featuring a central, highly substituted cyclobutane core. In principle, these structures could be efficiently synthesized via [2 + 2] photocycloaddition. However, the difficulty in controlling the high-energy electronically excited reactive intermediates in the solution state can lead to poor regio- and diastereocontrol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhotochemical electrocyclization reactions are valued for both their ability to produce structurally complex molecules and their central role in elucidating fundamental mechanistic principles of photochemistry. We present herein a highly enantioselective 6π photoelectrocyclization catalyzed by a chiral Ir(III) photosensitizer. This transformation was successfully realized by engineering a strong hydrogen-bonding interaction between a pyrazole moiety on the catalyst and a basic imidazolyl ketone on the substrate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrg Biomol Chem
December 2023
Photochemistry provides an important platform for the discovery of synthetically useful transformations. The development of new oxidative photoreactions, however, has proven to be relatively challenging. The importance of the identity of the terminal oxidant has been an underappreciated consideration in the design of these reactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCarboxylic acids are valuable building blocks for pharmaceutical discovery because of their chemical stability, commercial availability, and structural diversity. Decarboxylative coupling reactions enable versatile functionalization of these feedstock chemicals, but many of the most general methods require prefunctionalization of carboxylic acids with redox-active moieties. These internal oxidants can be costly, their installation impedes rapid library synthesis, and their use results in environmentally problematic organic byproducts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPseudodimeric cyclobutanes constitute a large class of natural products that could, in principle, be efficiently synthesized via [2+2] photocycloadditions. However, the difficulty in developing chemo-, regio-, diastereo-, and enantioselective cycloadditions has limited their use in asymmetric syntheses. Herein, we show that chiral acid catalysts promote highly selective visible-light photocycloadditions, the products of which can be quickly transformed into truxinate natural products.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAllylic amination reactions enable the conversion of alkene feedstocks into value-added products with significant synthetic versatility. Here we describe a method for allylic amination involving photoredox activation and Cu(II)-mediated radical-polar crossover. A range of structurally varied allylic amines can be accessed using this strategy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHerein, we describe studies showing that Lewis acid co-catalysts can significantly broaden the scope of alkenes that can be incorporated into the photosensitized visible-light De Mayo reaction. Mechanistic studies suggest that the primary benefit of the Lewis acid is not on substrate sensitization but rather on bond-forming steps downstream of energy transfer, highlighting the diverse effects that Lewis acids can have on sensitized photoreactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
December 2022
Carboxylic acids are attractive building blocks for synthetic chemistry because they are chemically stable, abundant, and commercially available with substantial structural diversity. The process of combining two carboxylic acids to furnish a ketone is termed ketonization. This is a potentially valuable transformation that has been underutilized in organic synthesis due to the harsh reaction conditions generally required and the lack of selectivity obtained when coupling two distinct carboxylic acids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStereochemical control of photochemical reactions that occur via triplet energy transfer remains a challenge. Suppressing off-catalyst stereorandom reactivity is difficult for highly reactive open-shell intermediates. Strategies for suppressing racemate-producing, off-catalyst pathways have long focused on formation of ground state, substrate-catalyst chiral complexes that are primed for triplet energy transfer via a photocatalyst in contrast to their off-catalyst counterparts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA multitude of techniques are available to obtain a useful understanding of photocatalytic mechanisms. The combination of LED illumination with nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (LED-NMR) provides a rapid, convenient means to directly monitor a photocatalytic reaction in situ. Herein, we describe a study of the mechanism of an enantioselective intermolecular [2 + 2] photocycloaddition catalyzed by a chiral Ir photocatalyst using LED-NMR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStereoinduction in complex organic reactions often involves the influence of multiple stereocontrol elements. The interaction among these can often result in the observation of significant cooperative effects that afford different rates and selectivities between the matched and mismatched sets of stereodifferentiating chiral elements. The elucidation of matched/mismatched effects in ground-state chemical reactions was a critically important theme in the maturation of modern stereocontrolled synthesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReactions that enable carbon-nitrogen, carbon-oxygen and carbon-carbon bond formation lie at the heart of synthetic chemistry. However, substrate prefunctionalization is often needed to effect such transformations without forcing reaction conditions. The development of direct coupling methods for abundant feedstock chemicals is therefore highly desirable for the rapid construction of complex molecular scaffolds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAsymmetric catalysis is a major theme of research in contemporary synthetic organic chemistry. The discovery of general strategies for highly enantioselective photochemical reactions, however, has been a relatively recent development, and the variety of photoreactions that can be conducted in a stereocontrolled manner is consequently somewhat limited. Asymmetric photocatalysis is complicated by the short lifetimes and high reactivities characteristic of photogenerated reactive intermediates; the design of catalyst architectures that can provide effective enantiodifferentiating environments for these intermediates while minimizing the participation of uncontrolled racemic background processes has proven to be a key challenge for progress in this field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFControl over the stereochemistry of excited-state photoreactions remains a significant challenge in organic synthesis. Recently, it has become recognized that the photophysical properties of simple organic substrates can be altered upon coordination to Lewis acid catalysts, and that these changes can be exploited in the design of highly enantioselective catalytic photoreactions. Chromophore activation strategies, wherein simple organic substrates are activated towards photoexcitation upon binding to a Lewis acid catalyst, rank among the most successful asymmetric photoreactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report that an NMR spectrometer equipped with a high-power LED light source can be used to study a fast enantioselective photocatalytic [2+2] cycloaddition. While traditional applications of NMR provide considerable information on reaction mechanisms, they are often ineffective for observing fast reactions. Recently, motivated by renewed interest in organic photochemistry, several approaches have been reported for monitoring of photochemical reactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnantioselective catalytic Giese addition of photogenerated α-alkoxy radicals to acyl pyrazolidinones can be accomplished using a tandem Sc(III) Lewis acid/photoredox catalyst system. Surprisingly, the excited-state oxidation potential was not the only important variable, and the optimal photocatalyst was not the strongest oxidant screened. Our results show that both the oxidation and reduction potentials of the photocatalyst can be important for the reaction outcome, highlighting the importance of holistic considerations in designing photochemical reactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOxidative heterofunctionalization reactions are among the most attractive methods for the conversion of alkenes and heteroatomic nucleophiles into complex saturated heterocycles. However, the state-of-the-art transition-metal-catalyzed methods to effect oxidative heterofunctionalizations are typically limited to unhindered olefins, and different nucleophilic partners generally require quite different reaction conditions. Herein, we show that Cu(II)-mediated radical-polar crossover allows for highly efficient and exceptionally mild photocatalytic oxidative heterofunctionalization reactions between bulky tri- and tetrasubstituted alkenes and a wide variety of nucleophilic partners.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCyclobutyl moieties in drug molecules are rare, and in general, they are minimally substituted and stereochemically simple. Methods to assemble structurally complex cyclobutane building blocks suitable for rapid diversification are thus highly desirable. We report herein a photosensitized [2 + 2] cycloaddition with vinyl boronate esters affording straightforward access to complex, densely functionalized cyclobutane scaffolds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe nature of the terminal oxidant in oxidation reactions is an important reaction variable that can profoundly impact the mechanism, efficiency, and practicality of a synthetic protocol. One might reasonably categorize catalytic oxidation reactions into either "oxygenase" type reactions, in which the oxidant serves as an atom- or group-transfer reagent, or "oxidase" type reactions, where the oxidant is involved in catalyst turnover but does not become structurally incorporated into the product. As the field of photoredox catalysis has matured over the past decade, many successful oxygenase-type photoreactions have been reported.
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