Identifying catalyst activation modes that exploit one-electron chemistry and overcome associated deactivation pathways will be transformative for developing first-row transition metal catalysts with performance equal or, ideally, superior to precious metals. Here we describe a zinc-activation method compatible with high-throughput reaction discovery that identified scores of cobalt-phosphine combinations for the asymmetric hydrogenation of functionalized alkenes. An optimized catalyst prepared from (R,R)-Ph-BPE (Ph-BPE, 1,2-bis[(2R,5R)-2,5-diphenylphospholano]ethane) and cobalt chloride [CoCl2·6H2O] exhibited high activity and enantioselectivity in protic media and enabled the asymmetric synthesis of the epilepsy medication levetiracetam at 200-gram scale with 0.08 mole % catalyst loading. Stoichiometric studies established that the cobalt (II) catalyst precursor (R,R)-Ph-BPECoCl2 underwent ligand displacement by methanol, and zinc promoted facile one-electron reduction to cobalt (I), which more stably bound the phosphine.
CITATION STYLE
Friedfeld, M. R., Zhong, H., Ruck, R. T., Shevlin, M., & Chirik, P. J. (2018). Cobalt-catalyzed asymmetric hydrogenation of enamides enabled by single-electron reduction. Science, 360(6391), 888–893. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aar6117
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