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Decarboxylative Halogenation of Organic Compounds

Journal

CHEMICAL REVIEWS
Volume 121, Issue 1, Pages 412-484

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrev.0c00813

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Israel Innovation Authority, KAMIN Project [69747]

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Decarboxylative halogenation is a crucial method for synthesizing organic halides by converting carboxylic acids to the corresponding organic halides. This method involves the synthesis of organic iodides, bromides, chlorides, and fluorides, providing a wide range of methods and advantages.
Decarboxylative halogenation, or halodecarboxylation, represents one of the fundamental key methods for the synthesis of ubiquitous organic halides. The method is based on conversion of carboxylic acids to the corresponding organic halides via selective cleavage of a carbon-carbon bond between the skeleton of the molecule and the carboxylic group and the liberation of carbon dioxide. In this review, we discuss and analyze major approaches for the conversion of alkanoic, alkenoic, acetylenic, and (hetero)aromatic acids to the corresponding alkyl, alkenyl, alkynyl, and (hetero)aryl halides. These methods include the preparation of families of valuable organic iodides, bromides, chlorides, and fluorides. The historic and modern methods for halodecarboxylation reactions are broadly discussed, including analysis of their advantages and drawbacks. We critically address the features, reaction selectivity, substrate scopes, and limitations of the approaches. In the available cases, mechanistic details of the reactions are presented, and the generality and uniqueness of the different mechanistic pathways are highlighted. The challenges, opportunities, and future directions in the field of decarboxylative halogenation are provided.

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