Seven kinds of sp(3)α-C-H activation/C-C formation reactions of alcohols and ethers have been reviewed in this tutorial review, from the viewpoint of both methodology and synthetic application, towards the efficiency, chemo-, regio- and stereoselectivity, catalytic system, substrate scope and mechanistic study. Section 2 describes radical-mediated α-C-H activation and addition/elimination of ethers with unsaturated (C=C and C[triple bond]C) species. Sections 3-8 discuss the α-C-H activation and additions of alcohols and/or ethers with unsaturated (C=C, C[triple bond]C, C=O and C=N) compounds, which involve the key processes of radical mediation, carbenoid insertion, 1,5-H-migration, oxidative dehydrogenation coupling, transfer hydrogenative coupling, and metal-mediated C=C insertion into the C-H bond.
Radical aryl migration reactions are of particular interest to the chemical community due to their potential application in radical chemistry and organic synthesis. The neophyl rearrangements used as radical clocks for examining the radical-molecular reactions have been known for decades. The combinations of these migrations with other radical reactions have provided a wide range of novel synthetic methodologies that are complementary to nucleophilic rearrangements. This review will give an overview of various types of radical aryl migrations, with an emphasis on their mechanistic studies from a historical point of view, as well as their application in tandem radical reactions.
[reaction: see text] An efficient three-component coupling of aldehyde, alkyne, and amine to generate propargylamines has been effected under microwave irradiation in water using only CuI catalyst without the noble metal cocatalyst. This method has proved to be applicable to a wide range of substrates. In addition, the preliminary experiment using (S)-proline methyl ester as a chiral source demonstrated that it could be developed to be a direct and highly diastereoselective method for construction of chiral propargylamines.
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