Journal
GREEN CHEMISTRY
Volume 25, Issue 21, Pages 8858-8862Publisher
ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d3gc02831c
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This study presents a rhodium-catalyzed electrochemical reaction for the selective synthesis of structurally diverse hexasubstituted arenes. The method demonstrates excellent selectivity and high atom economy.
Electrochemical transition metal catalysis has been regarded as a synthetically attractive method for the construction of diverse organic frameworks because it obviates the use of chemical redox reagents. Herein, we report an elegant rhodium-catalyzed electrochemical [2 + 2 + 2] cyclotrimerization of 1,3-butadiynes for the regioselective synthesis of structurally diverse hexasubstituted arenes in an undivided cell. This methodology features excellent regioselectivity, good functional group tolerance, and high atom economy. Mechanistic studies show that the formation of five-membered C-Rh metallacycle species is crucial, and it would sequentially undergo consecutive coordination, migratory insertion and reductive elimination to deliver the desired arenes. A cooperative rhodium-catalyzed electrochemical 1,3-butadiyne [2 + 2 + 2] cyclotrimerization to selectively produce hexasubstituted arenes is presented.
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