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      Strong and Confined Acids Catalyze Asymmetric Intramolecular Hydroarylations of Unactivated Olefins with Indoles

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          Abstract

          In recent years, several organocatalytic asymmetric hydroarylations of activated, electron-poor olefins with activated, electron-rich arenes have been described. In contrast, only a few approaches that can handle unactivated, electronically neutral olefins have been reported and invariably require transition metal catalysts. Here we show how an efficient and highly enantioselective catalytic asymmetric intramolecular hydroarylation of aliphatic and aromatic olefins with indoles can be realized using strong and confined IDPi Brønsted acid catalysts. This unprecedented transformation is enabled by tertiary carbocation formation and establishes quaternary stereogenic centers in excellent enantioselectivity and with a broad substrate scope that includes an aliphatic iodide, an azide, and an alkyl boronate, which can be further elaborated into bioactive molecules.

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          Most cited references28

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          Catalytic Enantioselective Transformations Involving C-H Bond Cleavage by Transition-Metal Complexes.

          The development of new methods for the direct functionalization of unactivated C-H bonds is ushering in a paradigm shift in the field of retrosynthetic analysis. In particular, the catalytic enantioselective functionalization of C-H bonds represents a highly atom- and step-economic approach toward the generation of structural complexity. However, as a result of their ubiquity and low reactivity, controlling both the chemo- and stereoselectivity of such processes constitutes a significant challenge. Herein we comprehensively review all asymmetric transition-metal-catalyzed methodologies that are believed to proceed via an inner-sphere-type mechanism, with an emphasis on the nature of stereochemistry generation. Our analysis serves to document the considerable and rapid progress within in the field, while also highlighting limitations of current methods.
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            Chiral cyclopentadienyl ligands as stereocontrolling element in asymmetric C-H functionalization.

            Metal complexes coordinated by a single cyclopentadienyl (Cp) ligand are widely used, versatile catalysts, but their application to asymmetric reactions has been hindered by the difficulty of designing Cp substituents that effectively bias the coordination sphere. Here, we report on a class of simple C(2)-symmetric Cp derivatives that finely control the spatial arrangement of the transiently coordinated reactants around the central metal atom. Rhodium(III) complexes bearing these ligands proved to be highly enantioselective catalysts for directed carbon-hydrogen (C-H) bond functionalizations of hydroxamic acid derivatives.
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              Stronger Brønsted Acids: Recent Progress.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Am Chem Soc
                J Am Chem Soc
                ja
                jacsat
                Journal of the American Chemical Society
                American Chemical Society
                0002-7863
                1520-5126
                05 January 2021
                20 January 2021
                : 143
                : 2
                : 675-680
                Affiliations
                []Max-Planck-Institut für Kohlenforschung , Kaiser-Wilhelm-Platz 1, 45470 Mülheim an der Ruhr, Germany
                []Institute for Chemical Reaction Design and Discovery (WPI-ICReDD), Hokkaido University , Sapporo 001-0021, Japan
                Author notes
                Article
                10.1021/jacs.0c12042
                7830113
                33399449
                5fa2291f-3fe8-4e31-bdc2-f6002f4c67c9
                © 2021 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society

                This is an open access article published under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the author and source are cited.

                History
                : 17 November 2020
                Categories
                Communication
                Custom metadata
                ja0c12042
                ja0c12042

                Chemistry
                Chemistry

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