2022
DOI: 10.26434/chemrxiv-2022-0rb4h
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Photoinduced Site-Selective C-H Functionalization by Pyridine N-oxide Based HAT Catalysts

Abstract: Readily available and facilely tunable pyridine N-oxides have been developed as effective photoinduced hydrogen-atom-transfer (HAT) catalyst for site-selective C-H functionalizations of a broad range of C-H substrates, including unactivated al-kanes. Pyridine N-oxide radicals, catalytically generated from N-oxides by photoredox catalyzed single-electron oxidation, are the key intermediate that enable effective HAT process for carbon radical generation to achieve alkylation, amination, azidation, and allylation… Show more

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“…17 Our continuous interest in developing photoredox catalyzed C−H functionalization reactions that are operationally simple, sustainable, highly efficient and selective, and allow structural fine-tuning of the catalysts led to the discovery of pyridine Noxides as organic precursors for oxygen-centered radicals that allow HAT processes (Figure 1b). 18 Although these compounds had previously been utilized as substrates in a limited number of visible light-mediated transformations, 19 their catalytic application under photoredox catalysis remained unprecedented to the best of our knowledge. Wu and coworkers first described the generation of pyridine N-oxy radicals by single electron oxidation with an acridinium photoredox catalyst.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…17 Our continuous interest in developing photoredox catalyzed C−H functionalization reactions that are operationally simple, sustainable, highly efficient and selective, and allow structural fine-tuning of the catalysts led to the discovery of pyridine Noxides as organic precursors for oxygen-centered radicals that allow HAT processes (Figure 1b). 18 Although these compounds had previously been utilized as substrates in a limited number of visible light-mediated transformations, 19 their catalytic application under photoredox catalysis remained unprecedented to the best of our knowledge. Wu and coworkers first described the generation of pyridine N-oxy radicals by single electron oxidation with an acridinium photoredox catalyst.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%