Unraveling the mechanism of phosphine-catalyzed azetine formation and BF3-mediated ring-opening to axially chiral alkenes: a DFT study
Abstract
The recent experimental synthesis of 2-azetines and axially chiral alkenes via phosphine catalysis coupled with BF3·Et2O/Et3SiH/H2O-mediated ring-opening presents a complex mechanistic puzzle. Key questions regarding the oversimplified reaction sequence, the regioselectivity of zwitterionic intermediates, the origin of high stereocontrol, and the synergistic role of BF3 remain unresolved. Herein, we present a comprehensive DFT study that elucidates the detailed eight-step mechanism, encompassing phosphine-initiated conjugate addition, nucleophilic attack, cyclization, catalyst dissociation, BF3 activation, hydride transfer, ring-opening, and hydrolysis. Our analysis reveals that the nucleophilic addition step dictates the stereoselectivity, with the favoured pathway being stabilized by minimal conformational distortion and multiple C–H⋯O hydrogen bonds and lp⋯π interactions. Distortion/interaction analysis rationalizes the exclusive regioselectivity at the C4 site over the C2 site. Crucially, BF3 not only activates the carbonyl group to facilitate hydride transfer but also generates an acidic environment that promotes efficient N–Si bond hydrolysis. This work provides a fundamental understanding of the reaction dynamics and offers theoretical guidance for designing related cascade reactions.

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