RESUMO
Readily available 1,2-amino alcohols provide the framework for a new generation of chiral carboxylic acid catalysts that rival the acidity of the widely used chiral phosphoric acid catalyst (S)-TRIP. Covalently linked thiourea sites stabilize the carboxylate conjugate bases of these catalysts via anion-binding, an interaction that is largely responsible for the low pKa values. The utility of the new catalysts is illustrated in the context of challenging [4 + 2] cycloadditions of salicylaldehyde-derived acetals with homoallylic and bishomoallylic alcohols, providing polycyclic chromanes in a highly enantioselective fashion.
Assuntos
Acetais/síntese química , Ácidos Carboxílicos/química , Acetais/química , Catálise , Reação de Cicloadição , Estrutura MolecularRESUMO
Acyclic ketone-derived oxocarbenium ions are involved as intermediates in numerous reactions that provide valuable products, however, they have thus far eluded efforts aimed at asymmetric catalysis. We report that a readily accessible chiral carboxylic acid catalyst exerts control over asymmetric cyclizations of acyclic ketone-derived trisubstituted oxocarbenium ions, thereby providing access to highly enantioenriched dihydropyran products containing a tetrasubstituted stereogenic center. The high acidity of the carboxylic acid catalyst, which exceeds that of the well-known chiral phosphoric acid catalyst TRIP, is largely derived from stabilization of the carboxylate conjugate base through intramolecular anion-binding to a thiourea site.