“…Organosulfur compounds are of fundamental significance in modern synthetic and biological chemistry, especially sulfoxides, sulfones, sultines, and sultones, and play a pivotal role in the pharmaceutical, agrochemical, functional materials, and petrochemical industries. They are prominent structural motifs in numerous natural products, bioactive molecules, and pharmaceuticals, and provide crucial intermediates in organic synthesis. − Among the various hitherto developed organosulfur molecules, the structural motif of a two-carbon unit with a sulfone and sultone/sulfinate (sultine analogue) on each carbon has attracted extensive attention, because these frameworks have shown unique chemical and biological properties such as agrochemical fungicides, protease inhibitors, and materials (Figure a). − As such, the development of efficient methods that expand the available C2-linked 1,2-bis-sulfuratom components is of high demand, − and many elegant progress has been established in 1,2-dichalcogenation of carbon–carbon double bond based on visible-light photoredox catalysis, Lewis acid catalysis, and transition metal-catalyzed cross-coupling reactions by Maies, Wu, Jiang, Zhu, Wang, Bi, and others; however, their applications to the synthesis of dichalcogenated molecules typically involve disulfonylation, disulfenylation, thiosulfonylation, and sulfinylsulfonylation with prefunctionalized disulfur transfer reagents (Figure b).…”