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Strategies for the Photocatalytic Generation of Carbanion Equivalents for Reductant-Free C–C Bond Formations

[Image: see text] The use of photocatalysis in organic chemistry has encountered a surge of novel transformations since the start of the 21st century. The majority of these transformations are driven by the generation and subsequent reaction of radicals, owing to the intrinsic property of common pho...

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Autores principales: Donabauer, Karsten, König, Burkhard
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2020
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7871440/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33325678
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.0c00620
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author Donabauer, Karsten
König, Burkhard
author_facet Donabauer, Karsten
König, Burkhard
author_sort Donabauer, Karsten
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] The use of photocatalysis in organic chemistry has encountered a surge of novel transformations since the start of the 21st century. The majority of these transformations are driven by the generation and subsequent reaction of radicals, owing to the intrinsic property of common photocatalysts to transfer single electrons from their excited state. While this is a powerful and elegant method to develop novel transformations, several research groups recently sought to further extend the toolbox of photocatalysis into the realm of polar ionic reactivity by the formation of cationic as well as anionic key reaction intermediates to furnish a desired product. Our group became especially interested in the photocatalytic formation of anionic carbon nucleophiles, as the overall transformation resembles classical organometallic reactions like Grignard, Barbier, and Reformatsky reactions, which are ubiquitous in organic synthesis with broad applications especially in the formation of valuable C–C bonds. Although these classical reactions are frequently applied, their use still bears certain disadvantages; one is the necessity of an (over)stoichiometric amount of a reducing metal. The reducing, low-valent, metal is solely applied to activate the starting material to form the organometallic carbanion synthon, while the final reaction product does generally not contain a metal species. Hence, a stoichiometric amount of metal salt is bound to be generated at the end of each reaction, diminishing the atom economy. The use of visible light as mild and traceless activation agent to drive chemical reactions can be a means to arrive at a more atom economic transformation, as a reducing metal source is avoided. Beyond this, the vast pool of photocatalytic activation methods offers the potential to employ easily available starting materials, as simple as unfunctionalized alkanes, to open novel and more facile retrosynthetic pathways. However, as mentioned above, photocatalysis is dominated by open-shell radical reactivity. With neutral radicals showing an intrinsically different reactivity than ionic species, novel strategies to form intermediates expressing a polar behavior need to be developed in order to achieve this goal. In the last couple of years, several methods toward this aim have been reported by our group and others. This Account aims to give an overview of the different existing strategies to photocatalytically form carbon centered anions or equivalents of those in order to form C–C bonds. As the main concept is to omit a stoichiometric reductant source (like a low-valent metal in classical organometallic reactions), only redox-neutral and reductant-free transformations were taken into closer consideration. We present selected examples of important strategies and try to illustrate the intentions and concepts behind the methods developed by our group and others.
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spelling pubmed-78714402021-02-10 Strategies for the Photocatalytic Generation of Carbanion Equivalents for Reductant-Free C–C Bond Formations Donabauer, Karsten König, Burkhard Acc Chem Res [Image: see text] The use of photocatalysis in organic chemistry has encountered a surge of novel transformations since the start of the 21st century. The majority of these transformations are driven by the generation and subsequent reaction of radicals, owing to the intrinsic property of common photocatalysts to transfer single electrons from their excited state. While this is a powerful and elegant method to develop novel transformations, several research groups recently sought to further extend the toolbox of photocatalysis into the realm of polar ionic reactivity by the formation of cationic as well as anionic key reaction intermediates to furnish a desired product. Our group became especially interested in the photocatalytic formation of anionic carbon nucleophiles, as the overall transformation resembles classical organometallic reactions like Grignard, Barbier, and Reformatsky reactions, which are ubiquitous in organic synthesis with broad applications especially in the formation of valuable C–C bonds. Although these classical reactions are frequently applied, their use still bears certain disadvantages; one is the necessity of an (over)stoichiometric amount of a reducing metal. The reducing, low-valent, metal is solely applied to activate the starting material to form the organometallic carbanion synthon, while the final reaction product does generally not contain a metal species. Hence, a stoichiometric amount of metal salt is bound to be generated at the end of each reaction, diminishing the atom economy. The use of visible light as mild and traceless activation agent to drive chemical reactions can be a means to arrive at a more atom economic transformation, as a reducing metal source is avoided. Beyond this, the vast pool of photocatalytic activation methods offers the potential to employ easily available starting materials, as simple as unfunctionalized alkanes, to open novel and more facile retrosynthetic pathways. However, as mentioned above, photocatalysis is dominated by open-shell radical reactivity. With neutral radicals showing an intrinsically different reactivity than ionic species, novel strategies to form intermediates expressing a polar behavior need to be developed in order to achieve this goal. In the last couple of years, several methods toward this aim have been reported by our group and others. This Account aims to give an overview of the different existing strategies to photocatalytically form carbon centered anions or equivalents of those in order to form C–C bonds. As the main concept is to omit a stoichiometric reductant source (like a low-valent metal in classical organometallic reactions), only redox-neutral and reductant-free transformations were taken into closer consideration. We present selected examples of important strategies and try to illustrate the intentions and concepts behind the methods developed by our group and others. American Chemical Society 2020-12-16 2021-01-05 /pmc/articles/PMC7871440/ /pubmed/33325678 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.0c00620 Text en © 2020 American Chemical Society Made available through a Creative Commons CC-BY-NC-ND License (http://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_ccbyncnd_termsofuse.html)
spellingShingle Donabauer, Karsten
König, Burkhard
Strategies for the Photocatalytic Generation of Carbanion Equivalents for Reductant-Free C–C Bond Formations
title Strategies for the Photocatalytic Generation of Carbanion Equivalents for Reductant-Free C–C Bond Formations
title_full Strategies for the Photocatalytic Generation of Carbanion Equivalents for Reductant-Free C–C Bond Formations
title_fullStr Strategies for the Photocatalytic Generation of Carbanion Equivalents for Reductant-Free C–C Bond Formations
title_full_unstemmed Strategies for the Photocatalytic Generation of Carbanion Equivalents for Reductant-Free C–C Bond Formations
title_short Strategies for the Photocatalytic Generation of Carbanion Equivalents for Reductant-Free C–C Bond Formations
title_sort strategies for the photocatalytic generation of carbanion equivalents for reductant-free c–c bond formations
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7871440/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33325678
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.0c00620
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