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Catalytic asymmetric C-C cross-couplings enabled by photoexcitation.

Giacomo E M CrisenzaAdriana FaraoneEugenio GandolfoDaniele MazzarellaPaolo Melchiorre
Published in: Nature chemistry (2021)
Enantioselective catalytic processes are promoted by chiral catalysts that can execute a specific mode of catalytic reactivity, channeling the chemical reaction through a certain mechanistic pathway. Here, we show how by simply using visible light we can divert the established ionic reactivity of a chiral allyl-iridium(III) complex to switch on completely new catalytic functions, enabling mechanistically unrelated radical-based enantioselective pathways. Photoexcitation provides the chiral organometallic intermediate with the ability to activate substrates via an electron-transfer manifold. This redox event unlocks an otherwise inaccessible cross-coupling mechanism, since the resulting iridium(II) centre can intercept the generated radicals and undergo a reductive elimination to forge a stereogenic centre with high stereoselectivity. This photochemical strategy enables difficult-to-realize enantioselective alkyl-alkyl cross-coupling reactions between allylic alcohols and readily available radical precursors, which are not achievable under thermal activation.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • electron transfer
  • visible light
  • crystal structure
  • capillary electrophoresis
  • cord blood
  • transition metal