Riehl Paul S, Richardson Alistair D, Sakamoto Tatsuhiro, Reid Jolene P, Schindler Corinna S
Willard Henry Dow Laboratory, Department of Chemistry, University of Michigan 930 North University Avenue Ann Arbor Michigan 48109 USA
Department of Chemistry, University of British Columbia 2036 Main Mall Vancouver British Columbia V6T 1Z1 Canada
Chem Sci. 2021 Oct 4;12(42):14133-14142. doi: 10.1039/d1sc03741b. eCollection 2021 Nov 3.
Enantiodivergence is an important concept in asymmetric catalysis that enables access to both enantiomers of a product relying on the same chiral source as reagent. This strategy is particularly appealing as an alternate approach when only one enantiomer of the required chiral ligand is readily accessible but both enantiomers of the product are desired. Despite the potential significance, general catalytic methods to effectively reverse enantioselectivity by changing an achiral reaction parameter remain underdeveloped. Herein we report our studies focused on elucidating the origin of metal-controlled enantioselectivity reversal in Lewis acid-catalysed Michael additions. Rigorous experimental and computational investigations reveal that specific Lewis and Brønsted acid interactions between the substrate and ligand change depending on the ionic radius of the metal catalyst, and are key factors responsible for the observed enantiodivergence. This holds potential to further our understanding of and facilitate the design of future enantiodivergent transformations.