Buck L. H. Taylor
University of California, Los Angeles
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Featured researches published by Buck L. H. Taylor.
Chemical Science | 2014
Hasnain A. Malik; Buck L. H. Taylor; John Kerrigan; Jonathan E. Grob; K. N. Houk; J. Du Bois; Lawrence G. Hamann; Andrew Patterson
We outline a strategy to enable non-directed Pd(II)-catalyzed C-H functionalization in the presence of Lewis basic heterocycles. In a high-throughput screen of two Pd-catalyzed C-H acetoxylation reactions, addition of a variety of N-containing heterocycles is found to cause low product conversion. A pyridine-containing test substrate is selected as representative of heterocyclic scaffolds that are hypothesized to cause catalyst arrest. We pursue two approaches in parallel that allow product conversion in this representative system: Lewis acids are found to be effective in situ blocking groups for the Lewis basic site, and a pre-formed pyridine N-oxide is shown to enable high yield of allylic C-H acetoxylation. Computational studies with density functional theory (M06) of binding affinities of selected heterocycles to Pd(OAc)2 provide an inverse correlation of the computed heterocycle-Pd(OAc)2 binding affinities with the experimental conversions to products. Additionally, 1H NMR binding studies provide experimental support for theoretical calculations.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2011
Buck L. H. Taylor; Elizabeth R. Jarvo
Deuterium-labeled alkylborane reagents 2a and 2b were prepared and subjected to cross-coupling reactions in the presence of a nickel catalyst. NMR analysis of the products indicates that transmetalation from boron to nickel proceeds with retention of configuration. These results demonstrate that alkylnickel intermediates are configurationally stable under Suzuki cross-coupling conditions.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Shuoqing Zhang; Buck L. H. Taylor; Chong-Lei Ji; Yuan Gao; Michael R. Harris; Luke E. Hanna; Elizabeth R. Jarvo; K. N. Houk; Xin Hong
Nickel catalysts have shown unique ligand control of stereoselectivity in the Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling of boronates with benzylic pivalates and derivatives involving C(sp3)-O cleavage. The SIMes ligand (1,3-dimesityl-4,5-dihydroimidazol-2-ylidene) produces the stereochemically inverted C-C coupling product, while the tricyclohexylphosphine (PCy3) ligand delivers the retained stereochemistry. We have explored the mechanism and origins of the ligand-controlled stereoselectivity with density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The oxidative addition determines the stereoselectivity with two competing transition states, an SN2 back-side attack type transition state that inverts the benzylic stereogenic center and a concerted oxidative addition through a cyclic transition state, which provides stereoretention. The key difference between the two transition states is the substrate-nickel-ligand angle distortion; the ligand controls the selectivity by differentiating the ease of this angle distortion. For the PCy3 ligand, the nickel-ligand interaction involves mainly σ-donation, which does not require a significant energy penalty for the angle distortion. The facile angle distortion with PCy3 ligand allows the favorable cyclic oxidative addition transition state, leading to the stereoretention. For the SIMes ligand, the extra d-p back-donation from nickel to the coordinating carbene increases the rigidity of the nickel-ligand bond, and the corresponding angle distortion is more difficult. This makes the concerted cyclic oxidative addition unfavorable with SIMes ligand, and the back-side SN2-type oxidative addition delivers the stereoinversion.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016
Shao-Xiong Luo; Jeffrey S. Cannon; Buck L. H. Taylor; Keary M. Engle; K. N. Houk; Robert H. Grubbs
Olefin metathesis reactions with 3E-1,3-dienes using Z-selective cyclometalated ruthenium benzylidene catalysts are described. In particular, a procedure for employing 3E-1,3-dienes in Z-selective homodimerization and cross-metathesis with terminal alkenes is detailed. The reaction takes advantage of the pronounced chemoselectivity of a recently reported ruthenium-based catalyst containing a cyclometalated NHC ligand for terminal alkenes in the presence of internal E-alkenes. A wide array of commonly encountered functional groups can be tolerated, and only a small excess (1.5 equiv) of the diene coupling partner is required to achieve high yields of the desired internal E,Z-diene cross-metathesis product. Computational studies have been performed to elucidate the reaction mechanism. The computations are consistent with a diene-first pathway. The reaction can be used to quickly assemble structurally complex targets. The power of this cross-metathesis reaction is demonstrated by the concise syntheses of two insect pheromones.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Lizhen Fang; Tyler G. Saint‐Denis; Buck L. H. Taylor; Seth Ahlquist; Kai Hong; Saisai Liu; Lili Han; K. N. Houk; Jin-Quan Yu
A conformationally flexible template for the meta-C-H olefination of benzoic acids was designed through both experimental and computational efforts. The newly designed template favors a silver-palladium heterodimer low barrier transition state, and demonstrates that it is feasible to lengthen templates so as to achieve meta-selectivity when the distance between the functional handle of the native substrate and target C-H bond decreases. Analysis of the ortho-, meta-, and para-C-H cleavage transition states determined that the new template conformation optimizes the interaction between the nitrile and palladium-silver dimer in the meta-transition state, enabling palladium to cleave meta-C-H bonds with moderate-to-good yields and generally high regioselectivity. Regioselectivity is governed exclusively by the template, and kinetic experiments reveal that there is a 4-fold increase in rate in the presence of monoprotected amino acid ligands. Using a Boltzmann distribution of all accessible C-H activation transition states, it is possible to computationally predict meta-selectivity in a number of investigated templates with reasonable accuracy. Structural and distortion energies reported may be used for the further development of templates for meta-C-H activation of hitherto unexplored arene substrates.
Chemical Science | 2015
Cornelia L. Boeser; Jeffrey C. Holder; Buck L. H. Taylor; K. N. Houk; Brian M. Stoltz; Richard N. Zare
Synlett | 2011
Buck L. H. Taylor; Elizabeth R. Jarvo
Handbook of Metathesis, Set | 2015
Peng Liu; Buck L. H. Taylor; Jesus Garcia‐Lopez; K. N. Houk
Organometallics | 2018
Tonia S. Ahmed; Jessica M. Grandner; Buck L. H. Taylor; Myles B. Herbert; K. N. Houk; Robert H. Grubbs
Archive | 2016
Shao-Xiong Luo; Keary M. Engle; Peng Liu; Xiaofei Dong; Buck L. H. Taylor; Michael K. Takase; K. N. Houk; Robert H. Grubbs