Abstract
The chiral ligand 1,1'-bi-2-naphthol (BINOL) has been succesfully immobilized on polystyrene. Several dendritic and non-dendritic BINOL derivatives (3, and 13-17), bearing at least two polymerizable styryl groups, were prepared and fully characterized. Suspension copolymerization of the MOM- or TIPS-protected cross-linking BINOL ligands (MOM = methyloxymethyl, TIPS = triisopropylsilyl) with styrene, cleavage of the protecting-groups, and loading with a Lewis-acid afforded catalytically active polystyrene-supported BINOLates. The polymer-bound BINOLs p-3, and p-13-p-16 were tested in the Ti-BINOLate-mediated addition of Et2Zn to PhCHO. The enantioselectivities (up to 93%) and conversions obtained with the polymer-bound catalysts were in most cases identical (within experimental error) to those obtained with the unsubstituted 1,1'-bi-2-naphthol and with the non-polymerized BINOL cross-linkers under homogeneous conditions. Special focus was put on the reusability of the supported catalyst: the polymer-beads were used in up to 20 consecutive catalytic runs, with the best polymers showing no or only minor loss of selectivity. BINOL-polymers p-17, obtained by copolymerization of a 3,3'-distyryl-substituted BINOL 17a with styrene, were used in the BINOL. AlMe-mediated cycloaddition of diphenyl nitrone with alkyl vinyl ethers. In all cases the exo/endo selectivity (> or =92:8) and the enantioselectivities with which the exo-cycloadducts were formed (> or =95%) correspond to those observed in the homogeneous reactions. A dendritically cross-linked BINOL-polymer was also employed in the Ti-BINOLate-mediated cyanosilylation of pivalaldehyde. The enantiopurity of the cyanohydrine obtained in the first run was as high as in the homogeneous reaction (72%); surprisingly the catalytic performance of the supported catalyst increased steadily during the first catalytic cycles to reach 83%. Thus, cross-linking BINOLs can be succesfully incorporated into a polystyrene matrix (without racemization!) to give polymer-bound BINOL ligands that give excellent performance over many catalytic cycles with catalytic activities comparable with those of soluble analogues.
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