Description The world is chiral. Most of the molecules in it are chiral, and asymmetric synthesis is an important means by which enantiopure chiral
molecules may be obtained for study and sale. Using examples from the literature of asymmetric synthesis (more than 1300 references),
the aim of this book is to present a detailed analysis of the factors that govern stereoselectivity in organic reactions. It is important
to note that the references were each individually checked by the authors to verify relevance to the topics under discussion.
The
study of stereoselectivity has evolved from issues of diastereoselectivity, through auxiliary-based methods for the synthesis of enantiomerically
pure compounds (diastereoselectivity followed by separation and auxiliary cleavage), to asymmetric catalysis. In the latter instance,
enantiomers (not diastereomers) are the products, and highly selective reactions and modern purification techniques allow preparation
- in a single step - of chiral substances in 99% ee for many reaction types.
After an explanation of the basic physical-organic principles
of stereoselectivity, the authors provide a detailed, annotated glossary of stereochemical terms. A chapter on "Analytical Methods" provides
a critical overview of the most common methods for analysis of stereoisomers.
The authors then follow the 'tried-and-true' format
of grouping the material by reaction type. Thus, there are four chapters on carbon-carbon bond forming reactions (enolate alkylations,
organometal additions to carbonyls, aldol and Michael reactions, and cycloadditions and rearrangements), one chapter on reductions and
hydroborations (carbon-hydrogen bond forming reactions), and one on oxidations (carbon-oxygen and carbon-nitrogen bond forming reactions).
Leading references are provided to natural product synthesis that have been accomplished using a given reaction as a key step.
In
addition to tables of examples that show high selectivity, a transition state analysis is presented to explain - to the current level
of understanding - the stereoselectivity of each reaction. In one case (Cram's rule) the evolution of the current theory is detailed
from its first tentative (1952) postulate to the current Felkin-Anh-Heathcock formalism. For other reactions, only the currently accepted
rationale is presented. Examination of these rationales also exposes the weaknesses of current theories, in that they cannot always explain
the experimental observations. These shortcomings provide a challenge for future mechanistic investigations.
Audience
This book is intended for advanced undergraduate or graduate students needing a guide to the principles of asymmetric synthesis and stereoselective
reactions, and for practicing chemists seeking a similar guide or who want leading references to the primary literature. The book could
be used for a course in organic mechanisms, stereochemistry, reactions, or synthesis. It will also be a valuable reference source for
the expert.
Contents
Introduction. Why we do asymmetric synthesis. What is an asymmetric synthesis? Stereoselectivity: intraligand vs.
interligand asymmetric induction. Selectivity: kinetic and thermodynamic control. Single and double asymmetric induction. Glossary
of stereochemical terms. References.
Analytical Methods. The importance of analysis, and which method to choose. Polarimetry,
the old fashioned way. Nuclear magnetic resonance. Chromatography. Summary. References.
Enolate, Azaenolate, and Organolithium
Alkylations. Enolates and azaenolates. Chiral organolithiums. References.
1,2 and 1,4 Additions to Carbonyls.
Cram's rule: open-chain model. Cram's rule: rigid, chelate, or cyclic model. Additions using chiral catalysts or chiral nucleophiles.
Conjugate additions. References.
Aldol and Michael Additions of Allyls and Enolates. 1,2-Additions of allyl metals
and metalloids. Aldol additions. Michael additions. References.
Rearrangements and Cycloadditions. Rearrangements.
Cycloadditions. References.
Reductions and Hydroborations. Reduction of carbon-heteroatom double bonds. Reduction of
carbon-carbon bonds. Hydroborations. References.
Oxidations. Introduction and scope. Epoxidation and related reactions.
Dihydroxylations. Oxidation of enolates and enol ethers. Miscellaneous oxidations. References. Index.
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