RESUMO
An iron-catalyzed photochemical sulfinamidation of hydrocarbons with N-sulfinylamines has been developed. The merger of ligand-to-metal charge transfer (LMCT) of FeCl3 with hydrogen atom transfer (HAT) process is the key for the generation of alkyl radicals from hydrocarbons, and the resultant alkyl radicals were readily trapped by N-sulfinylamines to produce structurally diverse sulfinamides. Contrary to traditional methods that inevitably use sensitive organometallic reagents and prefunctionalized substrates, our approach features simple operation and the wide availability of starting materials. Gratifyingly, the reaction is scalable, and the obtained sulfinamides can be conveniently converted to highly functionalized sulfur(VI) derivatives.
RESUMO
The synthesis of tertiary phosphines(III) has been a long-standing challenge in synthetic chemistry because of inevitable issues including harsh conditions, sensitive organometallic reagents, and prefunctionalized substrates in traditional synthesis. Herein, we report a strategically novel C(sp3)-H bond phosphorylation that enables the assembly of structurally diverse tertiary phosphines(III) from industrial phosphine(III) sources under mild photocatalytic conditions. The merger of ligand-to-metal charge transfer (LMCT) of FeCl3 with the hydrogen atom-transfer (HAT) process is the key for the generation of alkyl radicals from hydrocarbons. Strikingly, this catalytic system can be successfully applied for the polymerization of electron-deficient alkenes.
RESUMO
An unprecedented deoxygenative gem-difluorovinylation of aliphatic alcohols using α-trifluoromethyl alkenes is achieved under photocatalytic conditions. Inexpensive Ph3P acts as an efficient O-atom transfer reagent to facilitate the deoxygenation of alcohols for the generation of reactive alkyl radical species. Remarkable features of this reaction include mild conditions, simple operation and broad scope. The synthetic utility of this reaction was validated by the success of two-step one-pot reactions, scale-up synthesis and chemoselective monodeoxygenation of diols.