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Oxidase-Type C-H/C-H Coupling Using an Isoquinoline-Derived Organic Photocatalyst.

Lei ZhangBjörn PfundOliver S WengerXile Hu
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2022)
Oxidase-type oxidation is an attractive strategy in organic synthesis due to the use of O 2 as the terminal oxidant. Organic photocatalysis can effect metal-free oxidase chemistry. Nevertheless, current methods are limited in reaction scope, possibly due to the lack of suitable photocatalysts. Here we report an isoquinoline-derived diaryl ketone-type photocatalyst, which has much enhanced absorption of blue and visible light compared to conventional diaryl ketones. This photocatalyst enables dehydrogenative cross-coupling of heteroarenes with unactivated and activated alkanes as well as aldehydes using air as the oxidant. A wide range of heterocycles with various functional groups are suitable substrates. Transient absorption and excited-state quenching experiments point to an unconventional mechanism that involves an excited state "self-quenching" process to generate the N-radical cation form of the sensitizer, which subsequently abstracts a hydrogen atom from the alkane substrate to yield a reactive alkyl radical.
Keyphrases
  • visible light
  • water soluble
  • anti inflammatory
  • ionic liquid
  • electron transfer
  • hydrogen peroxide