Nickel-Catalyzed Enantioconvergent Borylation of Racemic Secondary Benzylic Electrophiles.
Zhaobin WangShoshana BachmanAlexander S DudnikGregory C FuPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2018)
Nickel-catalyzed cross-coupling has emerged as the most versatile approach to date for achieving enantioconvergent carbon-carbon bond formation using racemic alkyl halides as electrophiles. In contrast, there have not yet been reports of the application of chiral nickel catalysts to the corresponding reactions with heteroatom nucleophiles to produce carbon-heteroatom bonds with good enantioselectivity. Herein, we establish that a chiral nickel/pybox catalyst can borylate racemic secondary benzylic chlorides to provide enantioenriched benzylic boronic esters, a highly useful family of compounds in organic synthesis. The method displays good functional group compatibility (e.g., being unimpeded by the presence of an indole, a ketone, a tertiary amine, or an unactivated alkyl bromide), and both of the catalyst components (NiCl2 ⋅glyme and the pybox ligand) are commercially available.
Keyphrases
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- room temperature
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- visible light
- magnetic resonance
- capillary electrophoresis
- carbon dioxide
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- water soluble