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Electrochemically driven cross-electrophile coupling of alkyl halides.

Wen ZhangLingxiang LuWendy ZhangYi WangSkyler D WareJose MondragonJonas ReinNeil A StrotmanDan LehnherrKimberly A SeeSong Lin
Published in: Nature (2022)
Recent research in medicinal chemistry has suggested that there is a correlation between an increase in the fraction of sp 3 carbons-those bonded to four other atoms-in drug candidates and their improved success rate in clinical trials 1 . As such, the development of robust and selective methods for the construction of carbon(sp 3 )-carbon(sp 3 ) bonds remains a critical problem in modern organic chemistry 2 . Owing to the broad availability of alkyl halides, their direct cross-coupling-commonly known as cross-electrophile coupling-provides a promising route towards this objective 3-5 . Such transformations circumvent the preparation of carbon nucleophiles used in traditional cross-coupling reactions, as well as stability and functional-group-tolerance issues that are usually associated with these reagents. However, achieving high selectivity in carbon(sp 3 )-carbon(sp 3 ) cross-electrophile coupling remains a largely unmet challenge. Here we use electrochemistry to achieve the differential activation of alkyl halides by exploiting their disparate electronic and steric properties. Specifically, the selective cathodic reduction of a more substituted alkyl halide gives rise to a carbanion, which undergoes preferential coupling with a less substituted alkyl halide via bimolecular nucleophilic substitution to forge a new carbon-carbon bond. This protocol enables efficient cross-electrophile coupling of a variety of functionalized and unactivated alkyl electrophiles in the absence of a transition metal catalyst, and shows improved chemoselectivity compared with existing methods.
Keyphrases
  • ionic liquid
  • room temperature
  • clinical trial
  • randomized controlled trial
  • transition metal
  • emergency department
  • mass spectrometry
  • drug induced
  • adverse drug
  • solar cells
  • carbon dioxide