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Published September 12, 2012 | Accepted Version + Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Nonenzymatic Dynamic Kinetic Resolution of Secondary Alcohols via Enantioselective Acylation: Synthetic and Mechanistic Studies

Abstract

Because of the ubiquity of the secondary carbinol subunit, the development of new methods for its enantioselective synthesis remains an important ongoing challenge. In this report, we describe the first nonenzymatic method for the dynamic kinetic resolution (DKR) of secondary alcohols (specifically, aryl alkyl carbinols) through enantioselective acylation, and we substantially expand the scope of this approach, vis-à-vis enzymatic reactions. Simply combining an effective process for the kinetic resolution of alcohols with an active catalyst for the racemization of alcohols did not lead to DKR, due to the incompatibility of the ruthenium-based racemization catalyst with the acylating agent (Ac_2O) used in the kinetic resolution. A mechanistic investigation revealed that the ruthenium catalyst is deactivated through the formation of a stable ruthenium–acetate complex; this deleterious pathway was circumvented through the appropriate choice of acylating agent (an acyl carbonate). Mechanistic studies of this new process point to reversible N-acylation of the nucleophilic catalyst, acyl transfer from the catalyst to the alcohol as the rate-determining step, and carbonate anion serving as the Brønsted base in that acyl-transfer step.

Additional Information

© 2012 American Chemical Society. Received: July 27, 2012. Published: August 30, 2012. Support has been provided by the National Institutes of Health (National Institute of General Medical Sciences: R01−GM057034 for G.C.F. and F32 GM087889 for J.M.M.) and by the Global COE in Chemistry, Nagoya University (fellowship to A.U.). We thank Dr. Jeffrey H. Simpson (Department of Chemistry Instrumentation Facility) for assistance with NMR spectroscopy, Dr. Peter Müller for assistance with X-ray crystallography (and NSF grant CHE-0946721 for the purchase of an X-ray diffractomer), and Dr. Gerald B. Rowland for preliminary studies.

Attached Files

Published - ja307425g.pdf

Accepted Version - nihms-404669.pdf

Supplemental Material - ja307425g_si_001.pdf

Supplemental Material - ja307425g_si_002.cif

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Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 20, 2023