Abstract

A series of tris-aryl phosphanes, structurally designed to exist as residual enantiomers or diastereoisomers, bearing substituents differing in size and electronic properties on the aryl rings, were synthesized and characterized. Their electronic properties were evaluated on the basis of their electrochemical oxidation potential determined by voltammetry. The configurational stability of residual phosphanes, evaluated by dynamic HPLC on a chiral stationary phase or/and by dynamic (1)H and (31)P NMR spectroscopy, was found to be rather modest (barriers of about 18-20 kcal mol(-1)), much lower than that shown by the corresponding phosphane oxides (barriers of about 25-29 kcal mol(-1)). For the first time, the residual antipodes of a tris-aryl phosphane were isolated in enantiopure state and the absolute configuration assigned to them by single-crystal anomalous X-ray diffraction analysis. In this case, the racemization barrier could be calculated also by CD signal decay kinetics. A detailed computational investigation was carried out to clarify the helix reversal mechanism. Calculations indicated that the low configurational stability of tris-aryl phosphanes can be attributed to an unexpectedly easy phosphorus pyramidal inversion which, depending upon the substituents present on the blades, can occur even on the most stable of the four conformers constituting a single residual stereoisomer.

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