4.7 Review

Decarboxylation-Initiated Intermolecular Carbon-Heteroatom Bond Formation

Journal

ADVANCED SYNTHESIS & CATALYSIS
Volume 363, Issue 11, Pages 2678-2722

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adsc.202100211

Keywords

Decarboxylation; C-heteroatom bond formation; Carboxylic acids; Decarboxylative coupling; Homogeneous catalysis; Heterogeneous catalysis

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy [EXC-2033 - 390677874 - RESOLV, SFB TRR88, FOR 982/1]
  2. BMBF
  3. state of NRW (Center of Solvation Science ZEMOS)
  4. Fonds der chemischen Industrie FCI
  5. Projekt DEAL

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Carboxylic acids and their derivatives play a key role in decarboxylative couplings for constructing C-C and C-heteroatom bonds, offering a complementary bond disconnection to traditional cross-coupling methods. By undergoing decarboxylation and reacting with other heteroatom electrophiles and nucleophiles, these compounds replace carboxylate groups with valuable and prevalent heteroatom functionalities.
Carboxylic acids are among the most used feedstock chemicals due to their great structural diversity and easy handling. The use of carboxylic acids and their derivatives in decarboxylative couplings has proven to be a valuable tool for the construction of C-C and C-heteroatom bonds. This synthetic strategy provides a complementary bond disconnection to traditional cross-coupling methods. In this review, we provide a comprehensive overview of decarboxylation-initiated intermolecular C-heteroatom bond formation, outlining several main mechanistic concepts combined with early examples and highlighting the achievements made in the past decade until January 2021. In these reactions, carboxylic acids and their derivatives undergo initial decarboxylation and then react with other heteroatom electrophiles and nucleophiles, thus replacing the carboxylate group with a valuable and prevalent heteroatom functionality.

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