Abstract
Construction of carbon–carbon bonds is one of the most essential tools in chemical synthesis. In the previously
established cross-coupling reactions, pre-functionalized starting materials are employed usually in the form of arylor alkyl (pseudo)halides or their metallated derivatives. However, direct use of arenes and alkanes via a twofold
oxidative C–H bond activation strategy to access chemoselective C(sp2
)‒C(sp3
) cross-couplings is highly
challenging due to the low reactivity of carbon–hydrogen (C–H) bonds and the difficulty in suppressing side
reactions such as homocouplings. Herein, we present a copper-catalyzed cross-dehydrogenative coupling of perfluoroarenes with alkanes. Mechanistic information was obtained by combining experimental and computational
studies to suggest that the optimal diketimine copper catalyst system plays a dual role to activate both sp3 and sp2
C‒H bonds.