Showing posts with label Organocatalysis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Organocatalysis. Show all posts

Friday, June 8, 2007

ASAP Friday

A couple of ASAP articles from JACS stood out for me this morning.

The first is an interesting Nazarov cyclization followed by a Wagner-Meerwein rearrangement reported by Alison Frontier. Depending on the substitution, the path of the Nazarov is altered and the reaction is terminated by either a hydride shift or an aryl shift. Interesting paper well worth reading the details.

Jie Huang and Alison J. Frontier, JACS DOI: 10.1021/ja0716148

Mukund Sibi reported a novel organocatalytic method for the conjugate addition of hydroxylamines. The catalyst provides for both hydrogen bonding activation of the substrate and hydrogen bond-directivity for the incoming nucleophile.

Mukund P. Sibi and Kennosuke Itoh, JACS DOI: 10.1021/ja071739c

Friday, June 1, 2007

I have returned

I have returned to the US after spending a little more than two weeks in France. I enjoyed food, wine and chemistry during my visit. I was very fortunate to taste some excellent wine including the bottle you see to the right! It was amazing. Was it worth the price? Well, in my opinion, no wine is worth that much, but it truly was exceptional. I am now playing catch up with all the work that was left undone here.

I suppose on a chemistry blog, I should post some chemistry. Among the plethora of fine literature contributions I missed while I was gone was this interesting organocatalytic cascade reaction reported by List.

Jian Zhou and Benjamin List JACS ASAP. DOI: 10.1021/ja072134j


Thursday, April 12, 2007

ASAP Thursday

Some good papers have shown up on ASAP this week. Here's two that rose to the top for me.

First is a contribution from Shu Kobayashi with some very interesting chemistry using chiral Calcium complexes. The reaction he investigated was the Michael addition of glycine derivatives with acrylates. He showed the importance of an enolizable proton on the bis-oxazoline ligand and suggests that the reactive species is a calcium Brønsted base. This generates a chiral calcium enolate that undergoes Michael addition to the acceptor. Subsequently, an intramolecular Mannich reaction ensues to afford pyrrolidines in very high selectivity.

Susumu Saito, Tetsu Tsubogo, and Shu Kobayahsi, JACS, DOI: 10.1021/ja0709730

Organocatalysis is all the rage now, and even we are trying our hand at some. Xiao has just reported a slightly new twist on organocatalysis by carrying out an intramolecular Friedel-Crafts reaction with indoles to form tricyclic compounds. Selectivities are are pretty good in some cases.

Chang-Feng Li, Hiu Liu, Jie Liao, Yi-Ju Cao, Xiao-Peng Liu, and Wen-Jing Xiao, OL, DOI: 10.1021/ol0703130