Stereodivergent, Kinetically Controlled Isomerization of Terminal Alkenes via Nickel Catalysis

27 December 2023, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Because internal alkenes are more challenging synthetic targets than terminal alkenes, metal-catalyzed olefin mono-transposition (i.e., positional isomerization) approaches have emerged to afford valuable E- or Z- internal alkenes from their complementary terminal alkene feedstocks. However, the applicability of these methods has been hampered by lack of generality, commercial availability of precatalysts, and scalability. Here, we report a nickel-catalyzed platform for the stereodivergent E/Z-selective synthesis of internal alkenes at room temperature. Commercial reagents enable this one-carbon transposition of terminal alkenes to valuable E- or Z-internal alkenes via a Ni–H-mediated insertion/elimination mechanism. Though the mechanistic regime is the same in both systems, the underlying pathways that lead each of the active catalysts are distinct, with the Z-selective catalyst forming from comproportionation of an oxidative addition complex followed by disproportionation with substrate and the E-selective catalyst forming from protonation of the metal by the trialkylphosphonium salt additive. In each case, ligand sterics and denticity control stereochemistry and prevent over-isomerization.

Keywords

Alkene
Isomerization
Nickel
Regioselectivity
Stereoselectivity

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Supporting Info
Description
experimental procedures, analytical data for new compounds, and copies of NMR spectra
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