Title: Asymmetric Anionic Amino Cope Adventures

Speaker: Professor Jon Njardarson, University of Arizona

Abstract: In this seminar, I will discuss how earlier investigations led us into the dormant exciting area of asymmetric anionic-amino Cope chemistry, which we have been enjoying exploring.  As part of these efforts, we have addressed how to streamline synthesis and push the limits of this reaction platform sterically and electronically, which has revealed several new reactions and promising application avenues that we are actively pursuing.  I will discuss how mechanistically different the anionic-amino Cope chemistry is from its anionic-oxy Cope variant and how we managed to navigate these differences to realize diastereoselective outcomes.  In challenging this new reaction platform on the steric frontier, we have discovered a new route to selectively make dienamide and trienamides, while on the electronic frontier we have diverted the reaction outcome with strategic fluorine and nitro group substitutions to establish new annulation routes to benzoates and chiral lactam products respectively.  Finally, I will share exciting unpublished results on how we have successfully leveraged this powerful new anionic cascade platform to form atropisomers selectively, whose success and selectivity is mechanism dependent as well as our approaches for rapidly construct complex pyridine, isoquinoline, pyrroline, pyrrole and dihydrofuran heterocyclic products.

Bio: After receiving a BS in chemistry from the University of Iceland, Jón moved to Yale University where he joined the research group of Professor, John L. Jón then moved to New York City to work in the laboratory of Professor Samuel J. Danishefsky at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center as a General Motors Cancer Research Scholar. Jón moved to Ithaca in 2004 to start his independent career at Cornell University, where he launched a research program focused on natural products and the development of new reactions. In 2010 Jón and his group moved west to Tucson where he is a professor in the Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry at the University of Arizona.

 

 

About School research seminars

Seminars cover all aspects of chemistry and molecular biosciences and are delivered by visiting national and international academics. PhD completion seminars are also incorporated into the program.

Seminars are usually held in person and occasionally via zoom. All are welcome to attend.  

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Room: 
AIBN Seminar Room