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Light-Driven Single-Electron Transfer Processes as an Enabling Principle in Sulfur and Selenium Multicatalysis.

Alexander BrederChristian Depken
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2019)
Cooperativity has become a mainstay in the context of multicatalytic reaction design. The combination of two or more catalysts that possess mechanistically distinct activation principles within a single chemical setting can enable bond constructions that would be impossible for any of the catalysts alone. An emerging subdomain within the field of multicatalysis is characterized by single-electron transfer processes that are sustained by the synergistic merger of sulfur or selenium organocatalysis with photoredox catalysis. From a synthetic viewpoint, such processes have tremendous value, as they can offer new and economic pathways for the concise assembly of complex molecular architectures. Thus, the aim of this Review is to highlight recent methodological progress made in this area and to contextualize representative transformations with the mechanistic underpinnings that enable these reactions.
Keyphrases
  • electron transfer
  • highly efficient
  • transition metal
  • visible light
  • cross sectional
  • metal organic framework
  • life cycle