chapter 33 — stereoselective reactions of cyclic compounds...

13
Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions of cyclic compounds: Part A Reading guide: Ch. 18 Read only pages 457–474 Ch. 33 Skip section on unsaturated 6-membered rings (858–861) - Stereoselective reactions for acyclic and cyclic compounds (25 picoseconds in the life of a ketone) - 4-membered rings - 5-membered rings, and stereoselectivity in epoxidations - Enantiomers, diastereomers, and reaction selectivity - Saturated 6-membered rings: chair conformations, A-values - Equatorial vs. axial selectivity for small and large reagents

Upload: vudat

Post on 31-Jul-2018

245 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions of cyclic compounds ...web.uvic.ca/~fhof/classes/335/slides_ch33_stereoselectivity_cyclic.pdf · Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions

Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions of cyclic compounds: Part A

Reading guide: Ch. 18 Read only pages 457–474 Ch. 33 Skip section on unsaturated 6-membered rings (858–861)

- Stereoselective reactions for acyclic and cyclic compounds (25 picoseconds in the life of a ketone)

- 4-membered rings -  5-membered rings, and stereoselectivity in epoxidations -  Enantiomers, diastereomers, and reaction selectivity -  Saturated 6-membered rings: chair conformations, A-values -  Equatorial vs. axial selectivity for small and large reagents …

Page 2: Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions of cyclic compounds ...web.uvic.ca/~fhof/classes/335/slides_ch33_stereoselectivity_cyclic.pdf · Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions

Cyclic vs. Acyclic

O

Me Me Me+

OH OH

LiAlH4

attack from rear attack from front

OMe Me MeOH OHLiAlH4

+

50 50

10 90

Stereoselectivity in flexible acyclic compounds is possible, but much harder to understand… we’ll handle cyclic compounds in this chapter

Page 3: Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions of cyclic compounds ...web.uvic.ca/~fhof/classes/335/slides_ch33_stereoselectivity_cyclic.pdf · Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions

4-membered rings

MeMe

Me

O

O

OO

LDAO

OLi

O

OLi

Saturated 4-membered rings:

puckered squares

Unsaturated 4-membered rings:

essentially flat

Page 4: Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions of cyclic compounds ...web.uvic.ca/~fhof/classes/335/slides_ch33_stereoselectivity_cyclic.pdf · Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions

Reactions of unsaturated (flat) 4-membered rings

Attack of Nucleophile or Electrophile from least hindered face

O

O LDA

O

OLi

O

OBnBnBrMe Me

Me

O

O LDA

O

OLi

O

OMeMeI

Page 5: Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions of cyclic compounds ...web.uvic.ca/~fhof/classes/335/slides_ch33_stereoselectivity_cyclic.pdf · Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions

Saturated 5-membered rings: envelopes

OH

Me≤ 20 conformations

Me

OH

Me

OH

Me

OH

Page 6: Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions of cyclic compounds ...web.uvic.ca/~fhof/classes/335/slides_ch33_stereoselectivity_cyclic.pdf · Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions

Unsaturated 5-membered rings — basically flat

O

O

MeO

OMe

H

O

O

Me

O

O

MeBu

O

O

MeBu

+

MinorMajor

(±) (±)

Bu2CuLi

Page 7: Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions of cyclic compounds ...web.uvic.ca/~fhof/classes/335/slides_ch33_stereoselectivity_cyclic.pdf · Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions

Enantiomers, Diastereomers, and Stereoselectivity 1.

Racemic starting materials give racemic products

O

O

Me

O

O

Me

O

O

Me

+

Bu2CuLi

O

O

Me

O

O

MeBu Bu

O

O

MeBu

O

O

MeBu

+ +

MajorMinor MinorMajor

Marking a racemic product with (±) is used to avoid having to draw every enantiomer of a molecule with ≥ 2 stereocenters. For molecules with a single stereocenter, don’t specify the stereochemistry or use a wiggly line

Page 8: Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions of cyclic compounds ...web.uvic.ca/~fhof/classes/335/slides_ch33_stereoselectivity_cyclic.pdf · Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions

Enantiomers, Diastereomers, and Stereoselectivity 2.

Enantiopure starting materials can give enantiopure products

O

OMe2CuLi O

O

Me

O

O O

PhO

O OLi

PhO

O O

Ph

LDA Br

O

O O

Ph

Major Minor

Page 9: Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions of cyclic compounds ...web.uvic.ca/~fhof/classes/335/slides_ch33_stereoselectivity_cyclic.pdf · Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions

Enantiomers, Diastereomers, and Stereoselectivity 3.

Achiral starting materials give racemic products

OCuLi

Br

1)

2)

O

(±)

O 1) Me2CuLi2) H2O

O

Page 10: Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions of cyclic compounds ...web.uvic.ca/~fhof/classes/335/slides_ch33_stereoselectivity_cyclic.pdf · Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions

Saturated 6-membered rings (Good-old chair)

R

R ∆G

MeEti-Prt-BuOMe

COOHCOOEtPh

CNCCH

1.81.82.1

> 4.50.6

1.41.22.9

0.20.5

A-value(–∆G, kcal/mol)R

Conformational control is measured by the energy of the ring flip equilibrium, also called “A-value.”

H

R

H

H

H

H H

HR

H

H

H

H

H H

H

Page 11: Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions of cyclic compounds ...web.uvic.ca/~fhof/classes/335/slides_ch33_stereoselectivity_cyclic.pdf · Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions

“Locked” cyclohexane rings (won’t ring flip)

H

MeMe

MeMe

H

H

RR H

H H

H

Page 12: Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions of cyclic compounds ...web.uvic.ca/~fhof/classes/335/slides_ch33_stereoselectivity_cyclic.pdf · Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions

Trans-decalins are locked, but cis-decalins can ring flip!

H

H H

H

HH

H

H

H

HHH H

H

trans-decalin

cis-decalin

Page 13: Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions of cyclic compounds ...web.uvic.ca/~fhof/classes/335/slides_ch33_stereoselectivity_cyclic.pdf · Chapter 33 — Stereoselective reactions

Reactions, orbitals, and axial vs. equatorial attack

Carbonyl attack: π*

Large nucleophiles attack equatorially

O

HH

HH

Nu

Nu

Small nucleophiles attack axially