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Sofia J. M. Nordin

Bio: Sofia J. M. Nordin is an academic researcher from Uppsala University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transfer hydrogenation & Noyori asymmetric hydrogenation. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 10 publications receiving 487 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The mechanism of the Ru(arene)(amino alcohol)-catalyzed transfer hydrogenation of ketones using isopropyl alcohol as the hydrogen source has been studied by means of hybrid density functional methods as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: The mechanism of the Ru(arene)(amino alcohol)-catalyzed transfer hydrogenation of ketones using isopropyl alcohol as the hydrogen source has been studied by means of hybrid density functional methods (B3PW91). Three mechanistic alternatives were evaluated, and it was shown that the reaction takes place via a six-membered transition state, where a metal-bound hydride and a proton of a coordinated amine are transferred simultaneously to the ketone. Further calculations provided a general rationale for the rate of the reaction by comparison of steric effects in the ground and transition states of the ruthenium hydride complex. It was found that the TS has a strong preference for planarity, and this in turn is dependent on the conformational behavior of the O,N-linkage of the amino alcohol ligand. Finally, a general model, rationalizing the enantioselectivity of the reaction, was developed. Experimental studies of both rate and enantioselectivity were used in order to support the computational results.

273 citations

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TL;DR: A new generation of 2-aza-norbornyl amino alcohol ligands for the catalytic transfer hydrogenation reaction of aromatic ketones was synthesized and excellent enantioselectivity, up to 99 % ee, was obtained.
Abstract: Remote dipole effects as a means to accelrate ru (aminoalcohol)-catalyzed transfer hydrogenation of ketones

98 citations

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TL;DR: 2-Azanorbornyl-derived amino alcohols were prepared and evaluated as ligands in the Ru(II)-catalyzed asymmetric transfer hydrogenation of aromatic ketones to improve selectivity and rate, and the structure of the ligand was optimized.
Abstract: 2-Azanorbornyl alcohols: Very efficient Ligands for Ruthenium-Catalyzed Asymmetric Transfer Hydrogenation of Aromatic Ketones. D. A

86 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: New Expedient Route to Both Enantiomers of Nonproteinogenic a-Amino Acid Derivatives from the Unsaturated 2-Aza-Bicyclo Moiety is reported.
Abstract: New Expedient Route to Both Enantiomers of Nonproteinogenic a-Amino Acid Derivatives from the Unsaturated 2-Aza-Bicyclo Moiety

35 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a highly diastereoselective reaction of 2-azanorbornyl enolates with electrophiles has been studied, where the products are formed in good yields and with diastoreoselectivities above 95%.

6 citations


Cited by
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TL;DR: The newly devised [RuCl(2)(phosphane)(2)(1,2-diamine)] complexes are excellent precatalysts for homogeneous hydrogenation of simple ketones which lack any functionality capable of interacting with the metal center.
Abstract: Hydrogenation is a core technology in chemical synthesis. High rates and selectivities are attainable only by the coordination of structurally well-designed catalysts and suitable reaction conditions. The newly devised [RuCl(2)(phosphane)(2)(1,2-diamine)] complexes are excellent precatalysts for homogeneous hydrogenation of simple ketones which lack any functionality capable of interacting with the metal center. This catalyst system allows for the preferential reduction of a C=O function over a coexisting C=C linkage in a 2-propanol solution containing an alkaline base. The hydrogenation tolerates many substituents including F, Cl, Br, I, CF(3), OCH(3), OCH(2)C(6)H(5), COOCH(CH(3))(2), NO(2), NH(2), and NRCOR as well as various electron-rich and -deficient heterocycles. Furthermore, stereoselectivity is easily controlled by the electronic and steric properties (bulkiness and chirality) of the ligands as well as the reaction conditions. Diastereoselectivities observed in the catalytic hydrogenation of cyclic and acyclic ketones with the standard triphenylphosphane/ethylenediamine combination compare well with the best conventional hydride reductions. The use of appropriate chiral diphosphanes, particularly BINAP compounds, and chiral diamines results in rapid and productive asymmetric hydrogenation of a range of aromatic and heteroaromatic ketones and gives a consistently high enantioselectivity. Certain amino and alkoxy ketones can be used as substrates. Cyclic and acyclic alpha,beta-unsaturated ketones can be converted into chiral allyl alcohols of high enantiomeric purity. Hydrogenation of configurationally labile ketones allows for the dynamic kinetic discrimination of diastereomers, epimers, and enantiomers. This new method shows promise in the practical synthesis of a wide variety of chiral alcohols from achiral and chiral ketone substrates. Its versatility is manifested by the asymmetric synthesis of some biologically significant chiral compounds. The high rate and carbonyl selectivity are based on nonclassical metal-ligand bifunctional catalysis involving an 18-electron amino ruthenium hydride complex and a 16-electron amido ruthenium species.

1,630 citations

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1,307 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, the authors classified the catalytic cycles for the H2-hydrogenation (H) and transfer hydrogenation (T) of CO and cN bonds catalyzed by over 100 ruthenium hydride complexes in organic and aqueous media.

1,151 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this tutorial review the most significant advances recently achieved in the stereoselective reduction of unsaturated organic compounds catalyzed by homogeneous transition metal complexes are critically reviewed.
Abstract: Hydrogen transfer reduction processes are attracting increasing interest from synthetic chemists in view of their operational simplicity and high selectivity. In this tutorial review the most significant advances recently achieved in the stereoselective reduction of unsaturated organic compounds catalyzed by homogeneous transition metal complexes are critically reviewed. A sharp growth of the synthetic applications of this technique in the synthesis of fine chemicals is predictable as the use of transition metal catalyzed reactions will become more familiar to synthetic chemists.

986 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this tutorial review recent mechanistic studies on transition metal-catalyzed hydrogen transfer reactions are discussed and an important question is whether the substrate coordinates to the metal (inner-sphere hydrogen transfer) or if there is a direct concerted transfer of hydrogen from the metal to substrate (outer-spheres hydrogen transfer).
Abstract: In this tutorial review recent mechanistic studies on transition metal-catalyzed hydrogen transfer reactions are discussed. A common feature of these reactions is that they involve metal hydrides, which may be monohydrides or dihydrides. An important question is whether the substrate coordinates to the metal (inner-sphere hydrogen transfer) or if there is a direct concerted transfer of hydrogen from the metal to substrate (outer-sphere hydrogen transfer). Both experimental and theoretical studies are reviewed.

958 citations