Classical examples of the Michael reaction are the reaction between
diethyl malonate (Michael donor) and
diethyl fumarate (Michael acceptor), that of diethyl malonate and
mesityl oxide (forming
Dimedone), that of diethyl malonate and
methyl crotonate, that of
2-nitropropane and
methyl acrylate, that of ethyl phenylcyanoacetate and
acrylonitrile and that of
nitropropane and
methyl vinyl ketone. A classic
tandem sequence of Michael and aldol additions is the
Robinson annulation.
Mukaiyama-Michael addition In the
Mukaiyama–Michael addition, the nucleophile is a
silyl enol ether and the catalyst is usually
titanium tetrachloride:
1,6-Michael reaction The 1,6-Michael reaction proceeds via nucleophilic attack on the
𝛿 carbon of an α,β-\gamma,
𝛿-diunsaturated Michael acceptor. The 1,6-addition mechanism is similar to the 1,4-addition, with one exception being the nucleophilic attack occurring at the
𝛿 carbon of the Michael acceptor. However, research shows that
organocatalysis often favours the 1,4-addition. In many syntheses where 1,6-addition was favoured, the substrate contained certain structural features. Research has shown that catalysts can also influence the
regioselectivity and
enantioselectivity of a 1,6-addition reaction. For example, the image below shows the addition of
ethylmagnesium bromide to ethyl sorbate
1 using a copper catalyst with a reversed
josiphos (
R,S)-(–)-3 ligand. This reaction produced the 1,6-addition product
2 in 0% yield, the 1,6-addition product
3 in approximately 99% yield, and the 1,4-addition product
4 in less than 2% yield. This particular catalyst and set of reaction conditions led to the mostly regioselective and enantioselective 1,6-Michael addition of ethyl sorbate
1 to product
3. == Applications ==