Reductive Rearrangement of Tetraphenyldiphosphine Disulfide To Trigger the Bisthiophosphinylation of Alkenes and Alkynes.
Yuki SatoMisaki NishimuraShin-Ichi KawaguchiAkihiro NomotoAkiya OgawaPublished in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2019)
The facile synthesis of organophosphorus compounds is of great importance for the development of new synthetic methods by using air-stable sources of phosphorus. In this respect, a synthetic method that is based on a reductive rearrangement and is capable of converting air-stable pentavalent phosphorus compounds into reactive trivalent phosphorus compounds is a powerful tool. Tetraphenyldiphosphine disulfide, which is a shelf-stable solid, was the focus of this study, and it was shown to undergo reductive rearrangement to trigger the bisthiophosphinylation of a variety of alkenes, such as terminal, cyclic, internal, and branched alkenes, 1,3-dienes, and terminal alkynes when exposed to light without any catalyst, base, or additive.