Phenols are important organic molecules because they
have found
widespread applications in many fields. Herein, an efficient and practical
approach to prepare phenols from benzoic acids via simple organic
reagents at room temperature is reported. This approach is compatible
with various functional groups and heterocycles and can be easily
scaled up. To demonstrate its synthetic utility, bioactive molecules
and unsymmetrical hexaarylbenzenes have been prepared by leveraging
this transformation as strategic steps. Mechanistic investigations
suggest that the key migration step involves a free carbocation instead
of a radical intermediate. Considering the abundance of benzoic acids
and the utility of phenols, it is anticipated that this method will
find broad applications in organic synthesis.
Amide hydrolysis is a fundamentally important transformation
in
organic chemistry. Developing hydrolysis procedures under mild conditions
with a broad substrate scope is desirable. Herein, by leveraging a
photoresponsive auxiliary o-nitroanilide, we established
a mild two-step protocol for the hydrolysis of primary and secondary
amides. This protocol is driven by visible light irradiation at room
temperature under neutral conditions, which tolerates numerous acid-
and base-sensitive functional groups. Various drugs, natural product-,
and amino acid-derived amides can be selectively hydrolyzed.
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