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Mechanistic Investigation of Chiral Phosphoric Acid Catalyzed Asymmetric Baeyer–Villiger Reaction of 3‐Substituted Cyclobutanones with H 2 O 2 as the Oxidant
Author(s) -
Xu Senmiao,
Wang Zheng,
Li Yuxue,
Zhang Xumu,
Wang Haiming,
Ding Kuiling
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
chemistry – a european journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.687
H-Index - 242
eISSN - 1521-3765
pISSN - 0947-6539
DOI - 10.1002/chem.200902698
Subject(s) - chemistry , catalysis , transition state , reaction mechanism , medicinal chemistry , concerted reaction , electrophile , nucleophile , lewis acids and bases , acid catalysis , photochemistry , steric effects , stereochemistry , computational chemistry , organic chemistry
The mechanism of the chiral phosphoric acid catalyzed Baeyer–Villiger (B–V) reaction of cyclobutanones with hydrogen peroxide was investigated by using a combination of experimental and theoretical methods. Of the two pathways that have been proposed for the present reaction, the pathway involving a peroxyphosphate intermediate is not viable. The reaction progress kinetic analysis indicates that the reaction is partially inhibited by the γ‐lactone product. Initial rate measurements suggest that the reaction follows Michaelis–Menten‐type kinetics consistent with a bifunctional mechanism in which the catalyst is actively involved in both carbonyl addition and the subsequent rearrangement steps through hydrogen‐bonding interactions with the reactants or the intermediate. High‐level quantum chemical calculations strongly support a two‐step concerted mechanism in which the phosphoric acid activates the reactants or the intermediate in a synergistic manner through partial proton transfer. The catalyst simultaneously acts as a general acid, by increasing the electrophilicity of the carbonyl carbon, increases the nucleophilicity of hydrogen peroxide as a Lewis base in the addition step, and facilitates the dissociation of the OH group from the Criegee intermediate in the rearrangement step. The overall reaction is highly exothermic, and the rearrangement of the Criegee intermediate is the rate‐determining step. The observed reactivity of this catalytic B–V reaction also results, in part, from the ring strain in cyclobutanones. The sense of chiral induction is rationalized by the analysis of the relative energies of the competing diastereomeric transition states, in which the steric repulsion between the 3‐substituent of the cyclobutanone and the 3‐ and 3′‐substituents of the catalyst, as well as the entropy and solvent effects, are found to be critically important.

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