4.7 Article

Rhodium Catalyzed Asymmetric Hydroamination of Internal Alkynes with Indoline: Mechanism, Origin of Enantioselectivity, and Role of Additives

Journal

JOURNAL OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 83, Issue 5, Pages 2627-2639

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.joc.7b03047

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Funding

  1. Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), New Delhi

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A comprehensive mechanistic study on the title reaction by using DFT(B3LYP-D3) computational method is reported. Explicit consideration of mono- (m-xylylic) and dicarboxylic acid (phthalic) in the key transition states reveals active participation of the carboxylic acid, beginning with the generation of a monomeric Rh(I) active catalyst and in the ensuing catalytic steps. In the early catalytic event, uptake of alkyne is predicted to take place only after the oxidative addition of the Rh(I) active catalyst to the carboxylic acid. The hydrometalation of the alkyne bound to the Rh(III)-H intermediate then generates a Rh(III)-vinyl intermediate, which in turn converts to a Rh(III)-allyl species. The inclusion of m-xylylic acid results in a two-step pathway to Rh(III)-allyl species via Rh-allene intermediate. A number of weak noncovalent interactions (hydrogen bonding and C-H center dot center dot center dot pi) between the catalyst and the substrates and that involving m-xylylic acid are found to have a direct impact on the regiochemical preference toward the branched product and the enantiocontrolling hydroamination step involving C-N bond formation leading to the major enantiomer (S-allylic amine). The chiral induction is enabled by cumulative effect of noncovalent interactions, which is an insight that could aid future developments of chiral ligands for asymmetric hydroamination.

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