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Catalytic Stereoselective S N 1‐Type Reactions Promoted by Chiral Phosphoric Acids as Brønsted Acid Catalysts
Author(s) -
Gualandi Andrea,
Rodeghiero Giacomo,
Cozzi Pier Giorgio
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
asian journal of organic chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.846
H-Index - 44
eISSN - 2193-5815
pISSN - 2193-5807
DOI - 10.1002/ajoc.201800359
Subject(s) - chemistry , carbenium ion , organocatalysis , oxocarbenium , brønsted–lowry acid–base theory , iminium , catalysis , heteroatom , nucleophile , stereocenter , phosphoric acid , reactivity (psychology) , organic chemistry , electrophile , enantioselective synthesis , combinatorial chemistry , medicinal chemistry , medicine , ring (chemistry) , alternative medicine , pathology
In recent years, the field of organocatalysis has extensively explored the use of carbenium ions for practical C−C bond forming reactions. In order to control the formation of new stereocenters, the generation of carbenium ions was investigated by exploring asymmetric Brønsted acid catalysis. Oxocarbenium ions, iminium ions, and other carbenium ions stabilized by heteroatoms could also be generated by Brønsted acid catalysis, through the departure of suitable leaving groups. The aforementioned reactivity has recently been exploited leading to remarkable achievements. The application of chiral Brønsted acids in the generation of heteroatom stabilized carbenium ions has recently been investigated, with the demonstration of important results. Although diverse architectural arrays of Brønsted acid catalysts were conceived, BINOL‐derived phosphoric acids have played a dominant role in this area of research. Their low pK a values combined with the possibility to alter their architecture, and their ability to assemble ordered transition states was exploited in different S N 1‐type reactions allowing the formation of a variety of products with high enantiomeric excesses. In addition, the generation of highly stabilized chiral counter anions allowed the exploitation of counterion asymmetric catalysis with various nucleophiles.