Abstract
In this paper, we report the development of ruthenium-catalyzed hydrogenolysis of epoxides to selectively give the branched (Markovnikov) alcohol products. In contrast to previously reported catalysts, the use of Milstein’s PNN-pincer-ruthenium complex at room temperature allows the conversion of enantiomerically enriched epoxides to secondary alcohols without racemization of the product. The catalyst is effective for a range of aryl epoxides, alkyl epoxides and glycidyl ethers, and is the first homogenous system to selectively promote hydrogenolysis of glycidol to 1,2-propanediol without loss of enantiomeric purity. A detailed mechanistic study was conducted, including experimental observations of catalyst speciation under catalytically relevant conditions, comprehensive kinetic characterization of the catalytic reaction, and computational analysis via density functional theory. Heterolytic hydrogen cleavage is mediated by the ruthenium center and exogenous alkoxide base. Epoxide ring-opening occurs through opposite-side attack of the ruthenium hydride on the less-hindered epoxide carbon, giving the branched alcohol product selectively.
Supplementary materials
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Supporting Information
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Supporting Information including experimental procedures, concentration data from kinetics, derivations, DFT methods, and energies from DFT.
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DFT structures in XYZ format
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DFT structures in XYZ format, viewable using the free program Mercury.
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Transition-state animations
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Animations of the imaginary vibrational mode of all transition states calculated by DFT, in GIF format.
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