4.8 Article

Chemoselective Electrosynthesis Using Rapid Alternating Polarity

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 143, Issue 40, Pages 16580-16588

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.1c06572

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Center for Synthetic Organic Electrochemistry [CHE-2002158]
  2. National Institutes of Health [GM-118176]

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This study demonstrates the use of a square waveform to deliver rapid alternating polarity electric current for controlling the chemoselective reduction of carbonyl compounds, showing synthetic value in classic reactivity problems like chiral auxiliary removal and cutting-edge medicinal chemistry topics such as the synthesis of PROTACs.
Challenges in the selective manipulation of functional groups (chemoselectivity) in organic synthesis have historically been overcome either by using reagents/catalysts that tunably interact with a substrate or through modification to shield undesired sites of reactivity (protecting groups). Although electrochemistry offers precise redox control to achieve unique chemoselectivity, this approach often becomes challenging in the presence of multiple redox-active functionalities. Historically, electrosynthesis has been performed almost solely by using direct current (DC). In contrast, applying alternating current (AC) has been known to change reaction outcomes considerably on an analytical scale but has rarely been strategically exploited for use in complex preparative organic synthesis. Here we show how a square waveform employed to deliver electric current-rapid alternating polarity (rAP)-enables control over reaction outcomes in the chemoselective reduction of carbonyl compounds, one of the most widely used reaction manifolds. The reactivity observed cannot be recapitulated using DC electrolysis or chemical reagents. The synthetic value brought by this new method for controlling chemoselectivity is vividly demonstrated in the context of classical reactivity problems such as chiral auxiliary removal and cutting-edge medicinal chemistry topics such as the synthesis of PROTACs.

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