Catalytic enantioselective amination of alcohols by the use of borrowing hydrogen methodology: cooperative catalysis by iridium and a chiral phosphoric acid
- PMID: 24459057
- DOI: 10.1002/anie.201307789
Catalytic enantioselective amination of alcohols by the use of borrowing hydrogen methodology: cooperative catalysis by iridium and a chiral phosphoric acid
Abstract
The catalytic asymmetric reduction of ketimines has been explored extensively for the synthesis of chiral amines, with reductants ranging from Hantzsch esters, silanes, and formic acid to H2 gas. Alternatively, the amination of alcohols by the use of borrowing hydrogen methodology has proven a highly atom economical and green method for the production of amines without an external reductant, as the alcohol substrate serves as the H2 donor. A catalytic enantioselective variant of this process for the synthesis of chiral amines, however, was not known. We have examined various transition-metal complexes supported by chiral ligands known for asymmetric hydrogenation reactions, in combination with chiral Brønsted acids, which proved essential for the formation of the imine intermediate and the transfer-hydrogenation step. Our studies led to an asymmetric amination of alcohols to provide access to a wide range of chiral amines with good to excellent enantioselectivity.
Keywords: amination; borrowing hydrogen methodology; enantioselectivity; hydrogenation; tandem catalysis.
Copyright © 2014 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.
Comment in
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Advances in asymmetric borrowing hydrogen catalysis.ChemSusChem. 2014 Sep;7(9):2411-3. doi: 10.1002/cssc.201402320. Epub 2014 May 30. ChemSusChem. 2014. PMID: 24889988 Review. No abstract available.
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