Enantioselective organic catalysis represents one of the more rapidly expanding fields of research in modern organic chemistry. A number of fundamental organic reaction that once required the use of metal-based, enantiopure catalyst can now be performed, with equal level of chemical and stereochemical efficiency, exploiting substoichiometric amounts of structurally simple organic molecules.1 In this context, "organic" hints to the metal-free nature of the catalyst, and emphasizes the advantages of performing a reaction under metal-free conditions. These advantages might include, inter alia, the possibility of: i) working in wet solvents and under an aerobic atmosphere; ii) dealing with a stable and robust catalyst; and iii) avoiding the problem of a (possibly) expensive and toxic metal leaching into the organic product.2 The catalytic enantioselective allylation of aldehydes provides a paradigmatic example of how an organometallic catalyst can be effectively replaced by a metal-free one.3 Once promoted by chiral Lewis acids, this reaction can currently be carried out in the presence of a variety of organic Lewis bases as catalysts, the most important being chiral pyridine N-oxides. On these bases we started a project aimed to the development of structurally simple chiral pyridine N-oxides as catalysts for the enantioselective allylation of aldehydes.

Enantioselective allylation of aldehydes with allyltrichlorosilane promoted by new chiral organocatalysts / M. Benaglia - In: Conference in Green Chemistry / Royal Society of Chemistry. - [s.l] : Royal Society of Chemistry, 2005. (( convegno Conference of Green Chemistry tenutosi a Cambridge (GB) nel 2005.

Enantioselective allylation of aldehydes with allyltrichlorosilane promoted by new chiral organocatalysts

M. Benaglia
Primo
2005

Abstract

Enantioselective organic catalysis represents one of the more rapidly expanding fields of research in modern organic chemistry. A number of fundamental organic reaction that once required the use of metal-based, enantiopure catalyst can now be performed, with equal level of chemical and stereochemical efficiency, exploiting substoichiometric amounts of structurally simple organic molecules.1 In this context, "organic" hints to the metal-free nature of the catalyst, and emphasizes the advantages of performing a reaction under metal-free conditions. These advantages might include, inter alia, the possibility of: i) working in wet solvents and under an aerobic atmosphere; ii) dealing with a stable and robust catalyst; and iii) avoiding the problem of a (possibly) expensive and toxic metal leaching into the organic product.2 The catalytic enantioselective allylation of aldehydes provides a paradigmatic example of how an organometallic catalyst can be effectively replaced by a metal-free one.3 Once promoted by chiral Lewis acids, this reaction can currently be carried out in the presence of a variety of organic Lewis bases as catalysts, the most important being chiral pyridine N-oxides. On these bases we started a project aimed to the development of structurally simple chiral pyridine N-oxides as catalysts for the enantioselective allylation of aldehydes.
Settore CHIM/06 - Chimica Organica
2005
Book Part (author)
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/17764
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