TY - JOUR
T1 - Asymmetric Transfer Hydrogenation of Ketones Using New Iron(II) (P-NH-N-P′) Catalysts
T2 - Changing the Steric and Electronic Properties at Phosphorus P′
AU - Smith, Samantha A.M.
AU - Prokopchuk, Demyan E.
AU - Morris, Robert H.
N1 - Funding Information:
Bob Morris is a professor of chemistry at the University of Toronto. He was born in Ottawa in 1952. He received his PhD from the University of British Columbia in 1978. After postdoctoral work at the Nitrogen Fixation Laboratory, University of Sussex and the Pennsylvania State University he joined the faculty of the University of Toronto in 1980. He was appointed full Professor there in 1989 and served as Acting Chair and Chair of the Chemistry Department from 2008–2013. His research interests include inorganic, organic and catalytic chemistry with applications in the fine chemical industry. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and of the Chemical Institute of Canada and a Killam Research Fellow (2015-2017).
Funding Information:
NSERC Canada is thanked for a Discovery Grant to RHM and scholarship funding to DEP. SAM thanks Digital Specialty Chemicals Ltd. for an OGSST Scholarship. The authors acknowledge the Canadian Foundation of Innovation, project number 19119, and the Ontario Research Fund for funding of the Centre for Spectroscopic Investigation of Complex Organic Molecules and Polymers and Compute Canada for providing computational resources.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
PY - 2017/12
Y1 - 2017/12
N2 - The asymmetric transfer hydrogenation (ATH) of ketones is an efficient method for producing enantio-enriched alcohols which are used as intermediates in a variety of industrial processes. Here we report the synthesis of new iron ATH precatalysts (S,S)-[FeBr(CO)(Ph2PCH2CH2NHCHPhCHPhNC=CHCH2PR′2)][BPh4] (R′=Et, and ortho-tolyl (o-Tol)) where one of the phosphine groups is modified with small alkyl and large aryl substituents to probe the effect of this change on the activity and selectivity of the catalytic system. A simple reversible equilibrium kinetic model is used to obtain the initial TOF and the inherent enantioselectivity S=kR/kS of these catalysts along with those for the previously reported catalysts with R′=Ph and Cy for the ATH of acetophenone. With an increase in the size of the PR′2 group, the TOF goes through a maximum at PPh2 while the S value goes through a maximum of 510 at R′=Cy. The complex with R′=o-Tol starts with a high S value of 200 but is rapidly changed to a second catalyst with an S value of 28. For the reduction of acetophenone to (R)-1-phenylethanol, turnover numbers of up to 5200 and ee up to 98 % were achieved. The chemotherapeutic pharmaceutical precursor (R)-(3′,5′-bis(trifluoromethyl))-1-phenylethanol is synthesized in up to 95 % ee. Several other alcohols can be prepared in greater than 90 % ee by choosing the precatalyst with the correctly matched steric properties. A hydride complex derived from the catalyst with R′=Cy is characterized by NMR spectroscopy. It is proposed that low concentration trans-hydride carbonyl complexes with the FeH parallel to the NH of the ligand are the active catalysts in all of these systems.
AB - The asymmetric transfer hydrogenation (ATH) of ketones is an efficient method for producing enantio-enriched alcohols which are used as intermediates in a variety of industrial processes. Here we report the synthesis of new iron ATH precatalysts (S,S)-[FeBr(CO)(Ph2PCH2CH2NHCHPhCHPhNC=CHCH2PR′2)][BPh4] (R′=Et, and ortho-tolyl (o-Tol)) where one of the phosphine groups is modified with small alkyl and large aryl substituents to probe the effect of this change on the activity and selectivity of the catalytic system. A simple reversible equilibrium kinetic model is used to obtain the initial TOF and the inherent enantioselectivity S=kR/kS of these catalysts along with those for the previously reported catalysts with R′=Ph and Cy for the ATH of acetophenone. With an increase in the size of the PR′2 group, the TOF goes through a maximum at PPh2 while the S value goes through a maximum of 510 at R′=Cy. The complex with R′=o-Tol starts with a high S value of 200 but is rapidly changed to a second catalyst with an S value of 28. For the reduction of acetophenone to (R)-1-phenylethanol, turnover numbers of up to 5200 and ee up to 98 % were achieved. The chemotherapeutic pharmaceutical precursor (R)-(3′,5′-bis(trifluoromethyl))-1-phenylethanol is synthesized in up to 95 % ee. Several other alcohols can be prepared in greater than 90 % ee by choosing the precatalyst with the correctly matched steric properties. A hydride complex derived from the catalyst with R′=Cy is characterized by NMR spectroscopy. It is proposed that low concentration trans-hydride carbonyl complexes with the FeH parallel to the NH of the ligand are the active catalysts in all of these systems.
KW - asymmetric transfer hydrogenation
KW - homogeneous catalysis
KW - iron catalysis
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U2 - 10.1002/ijch.201700019
DO - 10.1002/ijch.201700019
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85027838314
SN - 0021-2148
VL - 57
SP - 1204
EP - 1215
JO - Israel Journal of Chemistry
JF - Israel Journal of Chemistry
IS - 12
ER -