Abstract

The chiral benzylic alcohols 1-6 were prepared and subjected to S(N)1-type displacement reactions with various arene nucleophiles in acidic medium. Under optimized conditions (HBF(4).OEt(2), CH(2)Cl(2), -78 degrees C --> r.t.) the corresponding 1,1-diarylalkanes 11-18 and 20 were obtained in good chemical yields (48-99%). The facial diastereoselectivity of the reaction is high (d.r. = 91/9-97/3) when the substrate bears a stereogenic carbon center -CHtBuMe in the alpha-position to the electrophilic carbon atom. If the starting material was enantiomerically pure, no significant racemization was observed (94% ee --> 92% ee). The reactions proceed stereoconvergently as demonstrated by the conversion of the separated diastereoisomers syn-1a and anti-1a in separate reactions to the same product syn-11 (d.r. = 97/3). Further evidence for long-lived chiral benzylic carbocations as reaction intermediates was obtained from NMR studies in superacidic medium. The chiral cation 24 was generated in SO(2)ClF as the solvent at -70 degrees C employing SbF(5) as the Lewis acid and characterized by its (1)H and (13)C NMR spectra. NOE measurements suggest a preferred conformation in which the diastereotopic faces of the cation are differentiated by the two carbon substituents R and Me at the stereogenic carbon center in the alpha-position. The hypothesis is further supported by the observation that the diastereoselectivity of the substitution reaction decreases if the bulky tert-butyl (R = tBu) substituent in the substrate 1a is replaced by a smaller ethyl group (2a, R = Et).

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