Visible-Light-Mediated Vicinal Dihalogenation of Unsaturated C-C Bonds Using Dual-Functional Group Transfer Reagents.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
November 20, 2024
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Author
Kissling, Mathias |
Subject(s)
Series
Journal of the American Chemical Society
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1520-5126
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
39498866
Description
The growing demand for chemical production continues to drive the development of sustainable and efficient methods for introducing molecular complexity. In this context, the exploration of unconventional functional group transfer reagents (FGTRs) has led to significant advancements in practical and atom-efficient synthetic protocols. Aiming to advance the field of valuable organic synthesis, herein we report the successful development of carbon-based, bench-stable, modular, and inexpensive reagents implemented in dual halogen transfer to unsaturated hydrocarbons via photocatalytic activation of reagents based on a radical-polar crossover mechanism. This method beneficially enables vicinal dichlorination, dibromination, and bromo-chlorination reactions of olefins, offering practical alternatives to the use of toxic binary halogens. Detailed mechanistic studies, combining experimental, spectroscopic, and theoretical investigations, revealed a distinctive photocatalytic single-electron transfer reduction of FGTR. This process triggers mesolytic carbon-halogen bond cleavage, followed by a radical 1,2-halide rearrangement, leading to the continuous generation of dihalogen species in the reaction medium. The wide applicability of the developed protocol is demonstrated through an extensive scope of unsaturated molecules, including additional operations on strain-release dihalogenation.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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giri-et-al-2024-visible-light-mediated-vicinal-dihalogenation-of-unsaturated-c-c-bonds-using-dual-functional-group.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 3.93 MB | Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) | published |