Steering Asymmetric Lewis Acid Catalysis Exclusively with Octahedral Metal-Centered Chirality.

Catalysts for asymmetric synthesis must be chiral. Metal-based asymmetric catalysts are typically constructed by assembling chiral ligands around a central metal. In this Account, a new class of effective chiral Lewis acid catalysts is introduced in which the octahedral metal center constitutes the exclusive source of chirality. Specifically, the here discussed class of catalysts are composed of configurationally stable, chiral-at-metal Λ-configured (left-handed propeller) or Δ-configured (right-handed propeller) iridium(III) or rhodium(III) complexes containing two bidentate cyclometalating 5-tert-butyl-2-phenylbenzoxazole (dubbed IrO and RhO) or 5-tert-butyl-2-phenylbenzothiazole (dubbed IrS and RhS) ligands in addition to two exchange-labile acetonitriles. They are synthetically accessible in an enantiomerically pure fashion through a convenient auxiliary-mediated synthesis. Such catalysts are of interest due to their intrinsic structural simplicity (only achiral ligands) and the prospect of an especially effective asymmetric induction due to the intimate contact between the chiral metal center and the metal-coordinated substrates or reagents. With respect to chiral Lewis acid catalysis, the bis-cyclometalated iridium and rhodium complexes provide excellent catalytic activities and asymmetric inductions for a variety of reactions including Michael additions, Friedel-Crafts reactions, cycloadditions, α-aminations, α-fluorinations, Mannich reactions, and a cross-dehydrogenative coupling. Mechanistically, substrates such as 2-acyl imidazoles are usually activated by two-point binding. Exceptions exist as for example for an efficient iridium-catalyzed enantioselective transfer hydrogenation of arylketones with ammonium formate, which putatively proceeds through an iridium-hydride intermediate. The bis-cyclometalated iridium complexes catalyze visible-light-induced asymmetric reactions by intertwining asymmetric catalysis and photoredox catalysis in a unique fashion. This has been applied to the visible-light-induced α-alkylation of 2-acyl imidazoles (and in some instances 2-acylpyridines) with acceptor-substituted benzyl, phenacyl, trifluoromethyl, perfluoroalkyl, and trichloromethyl groups, in addition to photoinduced oxidative α-aminoalkylations and a photoinduced stereocontrolled radical-radical coupling, each employing a single iridium complex. In all photoinduced reaction schemes, the iridium complex serves as a chiral Lewis acid catalyst and at the same time as precursor of in situ assembled photoactive species. The nature of these photoactive intermediates then determines their photochemical properties and thereby the course of the asymmetric photoredox reactions. The bis-cyclometalated rhodium complexes are also very useful for asymmetric photoredox catalysis. Less efficient photochemical properties are compensated with a more rapid ligand exchange kinetics, which permits higher turnover frequencies of the catalytic cycle. This has been applied to a visible-light-induced enantioselective radical α-amination of 2-acyl imidazoles. In this reaction, an intermediate rhodium enolate is supposed to function as a photoactivatable smart initiator to initiate and reinitiate an efficient radical chain process. If a more efficient photoactivation is required, a rhodium-based Lewis acid can be complemented with a photoredox cocatalyst, and this has been applied to efficient catalytic asymmetric alkyl radical additions to acceptor-substituted alkenes. We believe that this class of chiral-only-at-metal Lewis acid catalysts will be of significant value in the field of asymmetric synthesis, in particular in combination with visible-light-induced redox chemistry, which has already resulted in novel strategies for asymmetric synthesis of chiral molecules. Hopefully, this work will also pave the way for the development of other asymmetric catalysts featuring exclusively octahedral centrochirality.

[1]  Benjamin J. Coe,et al.  Trans-effects in octahedral transition metal complexes , 2000 .

[2]  E. Meggers,et al.  Enantioselective, Catalytic Trichloromethylation through Visible-Light-Activated Photoredox Catalysis with a Chiral Iridium Complex. , 2015, Journal of the American Chemical Society.

[3]  Davide Ravelli,et al.  Carbon-Carbon Bond Forming Reactions via Photogenerated Intermediates , 2016 .

[4]  Z. Gu,et al.  Dual Ti-Ru catalysis in the direct radical haloalkylation of N-acyl oxazolidinones. , 2011, Angewandte Chemie.

[5]  Kuldip Singh,et al.  Preparation of single enantiomers of chiral at metal bis-cyclometallated iridium complexes. , 2013, Chemical communications.

[6]  A. von Zelewsky Stereochemistry of coordination compounds. From alfred werner to the 21st century. , 2014, Chimia.

[7]  Q. Kang,et al.  Rhodium(III)/Amine Synergistically Catalyzed Enantioselective Alkylation of Aldehydes with α,β‐Unsaturated 2‐Acyl Imidazoles , 2016 .

[8]  K. Skubi,et al.  Dual Catalysis Strategies in Photochemical Synthesis , 2016, Chemical reviews.

[9]  E. Meggers,et al.  Asymmetric catalysis with an inert chiral-at-metal iridium complex. , 2013, Journal of the American Chemical Society.

[10]  G. Molander,et al.  Single-electron transmetalation in organoboron cross-coupling by photoredox/nickel dual catalysis , 2014, Science.

[11]  A. Barbieri,et al.  Photochemistry and Photophysics of Coordination Compounds: Iridium , 2007 .

[12]  Hisashi Yamamoto,et al.  Development and applications of tethered bis(8-quinolinolato) metal complexes (TBOxM). , 2010, Chemical Society reviews.

[13]  P. Ceroni,et al.  Easy separation of Δ and Λ isomers of highly luminescent [Ir(III)]-cyclometalated complexes based on chiral phenol-oxazoline ancillary ligands. , 2012, Chemistry.

[14]  E. Meggers,et al.  Merger of visible light induced oxidation and enantioselective alkylation with a chiral iridium catalyst. , 2015, Chemistry.

[15]  Mark E. Scott,et al.  Enantioselective α-Trifluoromethylation of Aldehydes via Photoredox Organocatalysis. , 2010 .

[16]  M. Fontecave,et al.  Chiral-at-metal ruthenium complex as a metalloligand for asymmetric catalysis. , 2007, Inorganic chemistry.

[17]  E. Meggers,et al.  Expanding the family of bis-cyclometalated chiral-at-metal rhodium(iii) catalysts with a benzothiazole derivative. , 2016, Dalton transactions.

[18]  David A. Nicewicz,et al.  Merging Photoredox Catalysis with Organocatalysis: The Direct Asymmetric Alkylation of Aldehydes , 2008, Science.

[19]  E. Meggers,et al.  Aerobic Asymmetric Dehydrogenative Cross-Coupling between Two C(sp3)-H Groups Catalyzed by a Chiral-at-Metal Rhodium Complex. , 2015, Angewandte Chemie.

[20]  F. Zhou,et al.  Recent advances in the use of chiral metal complexes with achiral ligands for application in asymmetric catalysis , 2015 .

[21]  A. V. Zelewsky Stereochemistry of coordination compounds , 1996 .

[22]  E. Meggers,et al.  Asymmetric catalysis mediated by the ligand sphere of octahedral chiral-at-metal complexes. , 2014, Angewandte Chemie.

[23]  J. Gladysz,et al.  Phase transfer of enantiopure Werner cations into organic solvents: an overlooked family of chiral hydrogen bond donors for enantioselective catalysis. , 2008, Chemistry.

[24]  E. Meggers,et al.  Visible-Light-Activated Enantioselective Perfluoroalkylation with a Chiral Iridium Photoredox Catalyst , 2015, Synlett.

[25]  Anita C Jones,et al.  Luminescent, enantiopure, phenylatopyridine iridium-based coordination capsules. , 2012, Journal of the American Chemical Society.

[26]  E. Meggers,et al.  Chiral-at-metal octahedral iridium catalyst for the asymmetric construction of an all-carbon quaternary stereocenter. , 2013, Angewandte Chemie.

[27]  M. Thompson,et al.  Synthesis and characterization of phosphorescent cyclometalated iridium complexes. , 2001, Inorganic chemistry.

[28]  T. Bach,et al.  Enantioselective Catalysis of Photochemical Reactions , 2015 .

[29]  E. Meggers,et al.  Metal-templated enantioselective enamine/H-bonding dual activation catalysis. , 2014, Chemical communications.

[30]  Jing Zhang,et al.  Generation of Alkoxyl Radicals by Photoredox Catalysis Enables Selective C(sp(3))-H Functionalization under Mild Reaction Conditions. , 2016, Angewandte Chemie.

[31]  E. Meggers,et al.  Method for the Preparation of Nonracemic Bis-Cyclometalated Iridium(III) Complexes , 2013 .

[32]  A. Batsanov,et al.  Bright orange/red-emitting rhodium(III) and iridium(III) complexes: tridentate N^C^N-cyclometallating ligands lead to high luminescence efficiencies. , 2013, Dalton transactions.

[33]  R. Rossi,et al.  Nucleophilic substitution reactions by electron transfer. , 2003, Chemical reviews.

[34]  Armido Studer,et al.  The electron is a catalyst. , 2014, Nature chemistry.

[35]  A. Zakarian,et al.  Valence tautomerism in titanium enolates: catalytic radical haloalkylation and application in the total synthesis of neodysidenin. , 2010, Journal of the American Chemical Society.

[36]  M. Sibi,et al.  Practical and Efficient Enantioselective Conjugate Radical Additions , 1997 .

[37]  M. Kärkäs,et al.  Photochemical Approaches to Complex Chemotypes: Applications in Natural Product Synthesis , 2016, Chemical reviews.

[38]  E. Meggers Asymmetric Catalysis Activated by Visible Light , 2015 .

[39]  M. Fontecave,et al.  Chiral-at-Metal Complexes as Asymmetric Catalysts , 2007 .

[40]  M. Akita,et al.  Visible Light‐Induced Selective Generation of Radicals from Organoborates by Photoredox Catalysis , 2012 .

[41]  Seann P. Mulcahy,et al.  Chiral-auxiliary-mediated asymmetric synthesis of tris-heteroleptic ruthenium polypyridyl complexes. , 2009, Journal of the American Chemical Society.

[42]  E. Meggers,et al.  Catalytic Asymmetric Csp3 -H Functionalization under Photoredox Conditions by Radical Translocation and Stereocontrolled Alkene Addition. , 2016, Angewandte Chemie.

[43]  E. Meggers,et al.  Chiral-at-metal iridium complex for efficient enantioselective transfer hydrogenation of ketones. , 2016, Chemical communications.

[44]  Megan A. Cismesia,et al.  Characterizing chain processes in visible light photoredox catalysis , 2015, Chemical science.

[45]  R. Webster,et al.  Asymmetric Catalysis with Organic Azides and Diazo Compounds Initiated by Photoinduced Electron Transfer. , 2016, Journal of the American Chemical Society.

[46]  E. Meggers,et al.  Asymmetric Friedel—Crafts Alkylation of Indoles with 2-Nitro-3-arylacrylates Catalyzed by a Metal-Templated Hydrogen Bonding Catalyst. , 2015 .

[47]  O. Wiest,et al.  Metal-Templated Design: Enantioselective Hydrogen-Bond-Driven Catalysis Requiring Only Parts-per-Million Catalyst Loading. , 2016, Journal of the American Chemical Society.

[48]  Klaus Harms,et al.  Asymmetric photoredox transition-metal catalysis activated by visible light , 2014, Nature.

[49]  Zhan Lu,et al.  Catalytic enantioselective organic transformations via visible light photocatalysis , 2015 .

[50]  Peng‐Fei Xu,et al.  Catalytic Enantioselective α-Fluorination of 2-Acyl Imidazoles via Iridium Complexes. , 2016, Chemistry, an Asian journal.

[51]  E. Meggers,et al.  Chiral-auxiliary-mediated asymmetric synthesis of ruthenium polypyridyl complexes. , 2013, Accounts of chemical research.

[52]  M. Fontecave,et al.  "Chiral-at-Metal" octahedral ruthenium(II) complexes with achiral ligands: a new type of enantioselective catalyst. , 2003, Inorganic chemistry.

[53]  E. Meggers,et al.  Metal-templated chiral Brønsted base organocatalysis , 2014, Nature Communications.

[54]  E. Meggers,et al.  Proline and α‐Methylproline as Chiral Auxiliaries for the Synthesis of Enantiopure Bis‐Cyclometalated Iridium(III) Complexes , 2016 .

[55]  E. Meggers,et al.  Asymmetric Radical-Radical Cross-Coupling through Visible-Light-Activated Iridium Catalysis. , 2016, Angewandte Chemie.

[56]  E. Meggers,et al.  Catalytic, Enantioselective Addition of Alkyl Radicals to Alkenes via Visible-Light-Activated Photoredox Catalysis with a Chiral Rhodium Complex. , 2016, Journal of the American Chemical Society.

[57]  E. Meggers,et al.  Asymmetric Friedel–Crafts alkylation of indoles with 2-nitro-3-arylacrylates catalyzed by a metal-templated hydrogen bonding catalyst , 2015 .

[58]  E. Meggers,et al.  Asymmetric Synthesis of Hydrocarbazoles Catalyzed by an Octahedral Chiral-at-Rhodium Lewis Acid. , 2015, Chemistry, an Asian journal.

[59]  David A. Nicewicz,et al.  Organic Photoredox Catalysis , 2016 .

[60]  F. Glorius,et al.  Dual Catalysis Sees the Light: Combining Photoredox with Organo‐, Acid, and Transition‐Metal Catalysis , 2014 .

[61]  B. Ye,et al.  Asymmetric Synthesis of Enantiomerically Pure Mono- and Binuclear Bis(cyclometalated) Iridium(III) Complexes. , 2016, Inorganic chemistry.

[62]  S. Zard Recent progress in the generation and use of nitrogen-centred radicals. , 2008, Chemical Society reviews.