Diastereomer-differentiating photochemistry of β-Arylbutyrophenones: Yang cyclization versus type II elimination

Singhal, Nidhi ; Koner, Apurba L. ; Mal, Prasenjit ; Venugopalan, Paloth ; Nau, Werner M. ; Narasimha Moorthy, Jarugu (2005) Diastereomer-differentiating photochemistry of β-Arylbutyrophenones: Yang cyclization versus type II elimination Journal of the American Chemical Society, 127 (41). pp. 14375-14382. ISSN 0002-7863

Full text not available from this repository.

Official URL: http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ja0523643

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja0523643

Abstract

The diastereomers of ketones 2 and 3 are shown to exhibit distinct photochemical reactivities due to conformational preferences; while the anti isomers of 2 and 3 undergo efficient Yang cyclization in 75-90% yields with a remarkable diastereoselectivity (> 90%), the syn isomers predominantly undergo Norrish Type II elimination. The differences in the product profiles of the diastereomers are consistent with a mechanistic picture involving the formation of precursor diastereomeric triplet 1,4-biradicals in which the substituents at a and β-positions stabilize the cisoid (cyclization) or transoid (elimination) geometry. The fact that such a diastereomeric relationship does indeed ensue at the triplet-excited-state itself is demonstrated via the nanosecond laser-flash photolysis of model ketones 1. The diastereomeric discrimination in the product profiles observed for ketones 2 and 3 as well as in the triplet lifetimes observed for ketones 1 can both be mechanistically traced back to different conformational preferences of the ground-state diastereomeric ketones and the intermediary 1,4-biradicals. Additionally, it emerges from the present study that the syn and anti diastereomers of ketones 2 and 3 represent two extremes of a broad range of widely examined butyrophenones, which lead to varying degrees of Yang photocyclization depending on the alkyl substitution pattern.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to American Chemical Society.
ID Code:60736
Deposited On:10 Sep 2011 11:39
Last Modified:10 Sep 2011 11:39

Repository Staff Only: item control page