Abstract
The direct coupling of alkene feedstocks with aldehydes represents an expedient approach to the generation of new and structurally diverse C(sp3)-hybridized alcohols that are primed for elaborated into privileged architectures. Despite their abundance, current disconnection strategies enabling the direct coupling of carbon-carbon π-bonds and aldehydes remain challenging because contemporary methods are often limited by substrate or functional group tolerance, and compatibility in complex molecular environments. Here, we report a coupling between simple alkenes, heteroarenes and unactivated aliphatic aldehydes via an electrochemically induced reductive activation of C–C π bonds. The cornerstone of this approach is the discovery of a rapid alternating polarity (rAP) electrolysis to access and direct, highly reactive radical anion intermediates derived from conjugated alkenes and heterocyclic compounds. Our developed catalyst-free protocol enables direct access to new, and structurally diverse C(sp3)-hybridized alcohol products. This is achieved by the controlled reduction of conjugated alkenes and the C2–C3 π-bond in heteroarenes via an unprecedented reductive dearomative functionalization for heterocyclic compounds. Experimental mechanistic studies demonstrate that rAP electrolysis is necessary for the controlled generation of radical anion intermediates and promotes a kinetically biased single-electron reduction of the C–C π-bonds over aldehydes. Overall, this technology provides a versatile approach to the reductive coupling of olefin and heterocycle feedstocks with aliphatic aldehydes, offering straightforward access to diverse C(sp3)-rich oxygenated scaffolds.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supporting Information - Electroinduced Reductive and Dearomative Alkene-Aldehyde Coupling
Description
Experimental and compound characterisation data.
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Graphic
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ToC Graphic
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