Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry (Oct 2013)

An investigation of the observed, but counter-intuitive, stereoselectivity noted during chiral amine synthesis via N-chiral-ketimines

  • Thomas C. Nugent,
  • Richard Vaughan Williams,
  • Andrei Dragan,
  • Alejandro Alvarado Méndez,
  • Andrei V. Iosub

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3762/bjoc.9.247
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 2103 – 2112

Abstract

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The default explanation for good to high diastereomeric excess when reducing N-chiral imines possessing only mediocre cis/trans-imine ratios (>15% cis-imine) has invariably been in situ cis-to-trans isomerization before reduction; but until now no study unequivocally supported this conclusion. The present study co-examines an alternative hypothesis, namely that some classes of cis-imines may hold conformations that erode the inherent facial bias of the chiral auxiliary, providing more of the trans-imine reduction product than would otherwise be expected. The ensuing experimental and computational (DFT) results favor the former, pre-existing, explanation.

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