Potassium trifluoroborates have gained significant utility as coupling partners in organic synthesis, particularly in the Suzuki-Miyaura coupling reaction. Recently, they have also been used as radical precursors under oxidative conditions to generate carbon-centered radicals. These versatile reagents have found new applications in photoredox catalysis, including radical substitution, conjugate addition reactions, and transition metal dual catalysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent advances in photocatalysis have enabled radical methods with complementary chemoselectivity to established two electron bond forming approaches. While this radical strategy has previously been limited to substrates with favorable redox potentials, Brønsted/Lewis acid activation has emerged as a means of facilitating otherwise difficult reductions. We report herein our investigations into the Lewis acid-promoted redox activation of -ketocarbonyls in a model photocatalytic radical alkylation reaction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStereoselective manipulations at the C1 anomeric position of saccharides are one of the central goals of preparative carbohydrate chemistry. Historically, the majority of reactions forming a bond with anomeric carbon has focused on reactions of nucleophiles with saccharide donors equipped with a leaving group. Here, we describe a novel approach to stereoselective synthesis of C-aryl glycosides capitalizing on the highly stereospecific reaction of anomeric nucleophiles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe demonstrate that configurationally stable anomeric stannanes undergo a stereospecific cross-coupling reaction with aromatic halides in the presence of a palladium catalyst with exceptionally high levels of stereocontrol. In addition to a broad substrate scope (>40 examples), this reaction eliminates critical problems inherent to nucleophilic displacement methods and is applicable to (hetero)aromatics, peptides, pharmaceuticals, common monosaccharides, and saccharides containing free hydroxyl groups.
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