Publication | Open Access
Fragment Coupling and the Construction of Quaternary Carbons Using Tertiary Radicals Generated From<i>tert</i>-Alkyl<i>N</i>-Phthalimidoyl Oxalates By Visible-Light Photocatalysis
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Citations
61
References
2015
Year
EngineeringSynthetic PhotochemistryOrganic ChemistryChemistryChemical EngineeringPhotoredox ProcessPhotocatalysisOrganometallic CatalysisTertiary Carbon RadicalsCross-coupling ReactionPhotochemistryMechanistic PhotochemistryRadical (Chemistry)CatalysisTertiary AlcoholFragment CouplingBiomolecular EngineeringAlkene MetathesisVisible-light PhotocatalysisTertiary Alcohols
The coupling of tertiary carbon radicals with alkene acceptors is an underdeveloped strategy for uniting complex carbon fragments and forming new quaternary carbons. The scope and limitations of a new approach for generating nucleophilic tertiary radicals from tertiary alcohols and utilizing these intermediates in fragment coupling reactions is described. In this method, the tertiary alcohol is first acylated to give the tert-alkyl N-phthalimidoyl oxalate, which in the presence of visible-light, catalytic Ru(bpy)3(PF6)2, and a reductant fragments to form the corresponding tertiary carbon radical. In addition to reductive coupling with alkenes, substitution reactions of tertiary radicals with allylic and vinylic halides is described. A mechanism for the generation of tertiary carbon radicals from tert-alkyl N-phthalimidoyl oxalates is proposed that is based on earlier pioneering investigations of Okada and Barton. Deuterium labeling and competition experiments reveal that the reductive radical coupling of tert-alkyl N-phthalimidoyl oxalates with electron-deficient alkenes is terminated by hydrogen-atom transfer.
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