2 resultados para Thiourea
em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
In this work, we present the first regio- and enantioselective organocatalytic nucleophilic dearomatization of activated N-alkyl pyridinium salts. In particular, N-benzyl pyridinium bromides bearing electron-withdrawing substituents at the C3 position of the pyridine ring were chosen as substrates. These compounds were easily obtained through an alkylation reaction between benzyl bromides and the corresponding 3-substituted pyridines. Then, a wide range of nucleophiles and organocatalysts was tested, providing the best results when indole, a thiourea derived from quinidine and 1-benzyl-3-nitropyridinum bromide were employed as the nucleophile, the catalyst and the pyridinium salt, respectively. Subsequently, the reaction conditions were optimised evaluating different bases, solvents, N-benzylic protecting groups, molar concentrations and temperatures. With the optimized condition in hand, the scope of the reaction with different substituted indoles was explored, affording the corresponding 1,4-dihydropyridines in good yields, regio- and enantio-selectivities. In addition, several experiments were carried out in order to understand the mechanism of the reaction, showing an unusual pathway involving a covalently bound intermediate formed by addition of the catalyst to the pyridine unit.
Resumo:
The importance of the β-amino nitroalkanes is due to their high versatility allowing a straightforward entry to a variety of nitrogen-containing chiral building blocks; furthermore obtaining them in enantiopure form allows their use in the synthesis of biologically active compounds or their utilization as chiral ligands for different uses. In this work, a reaction for obtaining enantiopure β-amino nitroalkanes through asymmetric organocatalysis has been developed. The synthetic strategy adopted for the obtainment of these compounds was based on an asymmetric reduction of β-amino nitroolefins in a transfer hydrogenation reaction, involving an Hantzsch ester as hydrogen source and a chiral thiourea as organic catalyst. After the optimization of the reaction conditions over the β-acyl-amino nitrostyrene, we tested the reaction generality over other aromatic compound and for Boc protected substrate both aromatic and aliphatic. A scale-up of the reaction was also performed.