Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.118, No.14, 3479-3489, 1996
Origin of Stereochemistry in the Alpha-Amino-Acid Esters and Amides Generated from Optically-Active Zirconaaziridine Complexes
Methane elimination from ethylenebis(tetrahydroindenyl)(methyl)zirconium amides (R = alkyl or aryl, R’ = aryl) (S,S)-26 gives a mixture of epimeric zirconaaziridines 25 and 30. When zirconaaziridines with R = alkyl are trapped with ethylene carbonate as they are formed, methyl alpha-amino acid esters 16 are obtained in poor ee (+14% to -56%); the ee’s of 16 reflect the kinetic ratio of 25 to 30. When epimeric zirconaaziridines with R = alyl are allowed to equilibrate before ethylene carbonate is added, the esters 16 are obtained in > 96% ee. When epimeric zirconaaziridines with R = alkyl are allowed to equilibrate before ethylene carbonate is added, 16 is obtained in 21-97% ee. When isocyanates are added to the zirconaaziridine epimers 25 and 30, phenylglycinamides are obtained in 80-99% ee, The ee’s of the esters and amides are better when R’ is o-anisyl than when R’ is Ph. A Curtin-Hammett- Winstein-Holness analysis explains the stereochemistry in the esters and amides. When an equilibrated mixture of epimers (R = CH(2)Ph, R’ = o-anisyl) 25g and 30g is treated with increasing ethylene carbonate concentrations, the ee of the ester 16g increases from 53% to 89%. The ee of 16g at saturation with ethylene carbonate implies that K-eq (k(25g)/k(30g)) is 17.2 for the 30g --><-- 25g equilibrium. A similar result (19.0) is obtained from the de of the insertion product rac-38 when 30g --><-- 25g is treated with an excess of t-BuNCO.