Matthew J. Cook
Queen's University Belfast
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Publication
Featured researches published by Matthew J. Cook.
Organic Letters | 2013
Jun Chen; Matthew J. Cook
A highly efficient palladium catalyzed decarboxylative allylic rearrangement of alloc indoles has been developed. This can also be combined with a Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling reaction in a single pot transformation. Substituted alloc groups and benzylic variants have also been demonstrated alongside promising initial results on the enantioselective variant.
Chemical Communications | 2011
Mark McLaughlin; Matthew J. Cook
A highly regioselective hydrosilylation of propargylic alcohols has been developed using an in situ prepared PtCl(2)/XPhos catalyst system. The reaction is tolerant of many functional groups and exhibits excellent regio and geometric selectivity.
Green Chemistry | 2012
James C. A. Flanagan; Laura M. Dornan; Mark McLaughlin; Niall G. McCreanor; Matthew J. Cook; Mark J. Muldoon
N-Heterocycles can be prepared using alcohol oxidation as a key synthetic step. Herein we report studies exploring the potential of Cu/TEMPO as an aerobic oxidation catalyst for the synthesis of substituted indoles and quinolines.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2012
Mark McLaughlin; Matthew J. Cook
A one-pot isomerization-Claisen protocol has been developed for the synthesis of highly substituted allylsilanes. Monosilylated divinyl ethers can be isomerized using a cationic iridium(I) catalyst followed by a thermal Claisen rearrangement to provide the allylsilanes in excellent yields and diastereoselectivities.
Organic Letters | 2015
Mark McLaughlin; Catherine A. McAdam; Matthew J. Cook
A rapid and stereodefined synthesis of MIDA-boryl vinylsilanes has been achieved through the hydrosilylation of an alkynylboronic ester. The E products which contain a silyl and boryl group can be selectively cross-coupled in a two-step bidirectional sequence to provide a rapid and high-yielding synthesis of complex styrenes.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2015
Jolene Reid; Catherine A. McAdam; Adam J. S. Johnston; Matthew N. Grayson; Jonathan M. Goodman; Matthew J. Cook
Two base-mediated cascade rearrangement reactions of diallyl ethers were developed leading to selective [2,3]-Wittig-oxy-Cope and isomerization-Claisen rearrangements. Both diaryl and arylsilyl-substituted 1,3-substituted propenyl substrates were examined, and each exhibits unique reactivity and different reaction pathways. Detailed mechanistic and computational analysis was conducted, which demonstrated that the role of the base and solvent was key to the reactivity and selectivity observed. Crossover experiments also suggest that these reactions proceed with a certain degree of dissociation, and the mechanistic pathway is highly complex with multiple competing routes.
Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2014
Sanjay W. Chavhan; Catherine A. McAdam; Matthew J. Cook
A rhenium-catalyzed N-selective allylic amination reaction of N-hydroxycarbamates has been developed. This reaction occurs with excellent N/O selectivity and with complete carbon selectivity on the allylic system. The reaction is tolerant of many functional groups and also proceeds with N-hydroxysulfonamides and hydroxamic acids.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2014
Sanjay W. Chavhan; Matthew J. Cook
A highly regioselective allylic substitution of β-silyl allylic alcohols has been achieved that provides the branched isomer as a single product. This high level of regiocontrol is achieved through the use of a vinyl silane group that can perform a Hiyama coupling providing 1,3-disubstituted allylic amines. An unusual oxidative fragmentation product was also observed at elevated temperature that appears to proceed by a Fleming-Tamao-type oxidation-elimination pathway.
Chemical Communications | 2014
Mark McLaughlin; Matthew J. Cook
The highly syn-selective hydrosilylation of allylic alcohols was developed which, following oxidation, provided 1,3 alcohols containing two contiguous stereocentres. Through judicious choice of silane the complementary anti-selective hydrosilylation was also developed. This protocol was applied to the synthesis of an all syn polyketide stereotriad.
Organic chemistry frontiers | 2015
Catherine A. McAdam; Mark McLaughlin; Matthew J. Cook
A high yielding and robust protocol for the stereodefined synthesis of 1,3-dienes has been established through a hydrosilylation–Hiyama coupling strategy. In all cases the products were formed as single E,E isomers and conditions are tolerant of a wide range of functional groups not compatible with other methods.