4.8 Article

Iridium-Catalyzed, β-Selective C(sp3)-H Silylation of Aliphatic Amines To Form Silapyrrolidines and 1,2-Amino Alcohols

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 140, Issue 51, Pages 18032-18038

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.8b10428

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Samsung Scholarship
  2. NIH [GM115812]

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The functionalization of unactivated C(sp(3))-H bonds of aliphatic amines catalyzed by transition-metal complexes is important because amine-based functionality is present in a majority of biologically active molecules and commercial pharmaceuticals. However, such reactions are underdeveloped and challenging to achieve in general because the basicity and reducing properties of alkylamines tends to interfere with potential reagents and catalysts. The functionalization of C-H bonds beta to the nitrogen of aliphatic amines to form prevalent 1,2-amino functionalized structures is particularly challenging because the C-H bond beta to nitrogen is stronger than the C-H bond alpha to nitrogen, and the nitrogen in the amine or its derivatives usually directs a catalyst to react at more distal gamma- and delta-C-H bonds to form 5- or 6-membered metallacyclic intermediate. The enantioselective functionalization of a C-H bond at any position in amines also has been vexing and is currently limited to reactions of specific, sterically hindered, cyclic structures. We report iridium-catalyzed, beta-selective silylations of unactivated C(sp(3))-H bonds of aliphatic amines to form silapyrrolidines that are both silicon-containing analogs of common saturated nitrogen heterocycles and precursors to 1,2-amino alcohols by Tamao-Fleming oxidation. These silylations of amines are accomplished by introducing a simple methylene linker between the heteroatom and silicon that has not been used previously for the silylation of C-H bonds. The reactions occur with high enantioselectivity when catalyzed by complexes of new chiral, pyridyl imidazoline ligands, and the rates of reactions with catalysts of these highly basic ligands are particularly fast, occuring in some cases at or even below room temperature.

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