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Synthetic and Theoretical Investigations of [3,3]-Sigmatropic Rearrangements and Development of Allylboration Reactions

A summary of research conducted since September 2007 at the University of Toronto in the laboratory of Professor Robert A. Batey is presented in this thesis, which is divided into four chapters. The first chapter contains a two-part introduction, where aryl- and aliphatic-Claisen rearrangements are discussed in part 1, and the nucleophilic addition of organoboron reagents to unsaturated C–N functionalities is described in part 2. Chapter 2 contains research involving synthetic and theoretical studies of aryl-Claisen rearrangements and other sigmatropic reactions. The work towards developing the lanthanide-catalyzed domino aryl-Claisen rearrangement for the synthesis of contiguous aryl–C(sp³) moieties is presented first. This is followed by computational studies involving E/Z-selectivity differences for the aryl-Claisen rearrangement, which was an issue noted for the domino aryl-Claisen reaction of a linear substrate. The mechanistic origins of E/Z-selectivity differences for the mono aryl-Claisen rearrangement, which was experimentally ambiguous for over 40 years, is resolved through computational methods. A theoretical analysis of selectivity differences for the allylic azide rearrangement is also described. The third section contains a discussion of Eu(fod)3-catalyzed aryl-Claisen rearrangements on vinyl bromide systems and preliminary studies involving application of the substrates in cross-coupling reactions, and other attempted mono- and domino sigmatropic rearrangements are presented in the fourth section. In chapter 3, the search for computational methods that can accurately predict experimental free energy of activation barriers for the aliphatic-Claisen rearrangement through benchmarking studies with a priori kinetic barrier and kinetic isotope effect data is described. Methods were found to predict new valid transition states and predict ΔG‡ values with a mean unsigned error of 0.3 kcal/mol relative to experimental values. In chapter 4, the development of new allylboration reaction is outlined, involving the double allylboration of nitriles and anhydrides, and initial studies towards the first aminoallylboration reactions of N-aluminoaldimines to form 1,2-diamines.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:TORONTO/oai:tspace.library.utoronto.ca:1807/34859
Date19 December 2012
CreatorsRamadhar, Timothy Ramesar
ContributorsBatey, Robert A.
Source SetsUniversity of Toronto
Languageen_ca
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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