Abstract
The mode that bonding metal catalyst and radical species to carbon-metal greatly enriches the diversities of radical cross coupling, while noncovalent interaction between carbon-centered radical and metal catalyst is seldom revealed, especially in the discrimination of highly similar/identical radical species. Here, we demonstrate an unprecedented cobalt-tuned π-π stacking paradigm with benzyl radical for selective C(sp3)-C(sp3) radical coupling by employing abundant methylarenes and redox-active alkyl esters as benzyl sp3 carbon radical source under noble metal-free photochemical conditions. This robust protocol enables the quickly selective bonding of structurally similar benzyl radicals for the production of secondary-quaternary, tertiary-quaternary, quaternary-quaternary, secondary-tertiary and tertiary-tertiary alkyl scaffolds for constructing high value pharmaceutical building blocks. Detailed mechanistic studies indicate that the easy-available tridentate N ligand terpyridine render the success of π-π stacking mechanism for overcoming the innate challenge of radical Csp3–Csp3 coupling.
Supplementary materials
Title
Distinguishing Similar Benzyl Radicals via Metal-Mediated Noncovalent Interactions for Csp3–Csp3 Coupling
Description
The supporting information is mainly a supplement to the content of the main text and a detailed description of the experiment, including substrate synthesis, experimental operation steps, the characterization of the compound and the corresponding NMR spectra. In addition, the instrument model and parameters used in the experiment are described.
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