“…These expedient and gentle reaction conditions, coupled with the formation of relatively unreactive sulfate byproducts, have resulted in a new wave of sulfuryl fluoride-mediated synthetic methods that couple multiple transformations in a single pot. , The majority of reports of one-pot reactions have focused on alcohols using alkyl and aryl fluorosulfate intermediates, as these can be readily formed, yet are typically sufficiently stable to allow for a second transformation. , An emerging area is the SO 2 F 2 -mediated activation of carboxylic acids ( 1 , Scheme ) for nucleophilic acyl substitutions (NAS). While valuable synthetic advances have been made, , these SO 2 F 2 -mediated NAS reactions have a limited nucleophile scope because the single addition conditions rely on minimizing the rate of the undesired reaction between the nucleophile ( 2 ) and SO 2 F 2 ( k 2 ) compared to carboxylate activation ( k 1 ). A more general SO 2 F 2 -mediated NAS strategy would involve using the same concept that was successfully employed in alcohol activation, in which an intermediate is rapidly formed, is stable under the reaction conditions, and is sufficiently reactive for a subsequent NAS.…”