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Search for "metal-free arylation" in Full Text gives 5 result(s) in Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry.

Recent advances in transition-metal-free arylation reactions involving hypervalent iodine salts

  • Ritu Mamgain,
  • Kokila Sakthivel and
  • Fateh V. Singh

Beilstein J. Org. Chem. 2024, 20, 2891–2920, doi:10.3762/bjoc.20.243

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  • efficiency and effectiveness as a synthetic approach. Furthermore, a transition-metal-free arylation of quinoxalines 17 and quinoxalinones 19 via aryl radicals was discussed by Li and co-workers in 2022. In this report the aryl radicals were generated by planetary ball milling of diaryliodonium salts 16 at a
  • , reductive elimination of intermediate C yields the desired sulfoxides 87 (Scheme 36). Recently, a detailed study by Thakur and group on the metal-free arylation of tetrazole-5-thiols 88, exploring various substrate scopes under optimized conditions was conducted (Scheme 37) [90]. The findings indicated a
  • concentrate on various arylation reactions involving carbon and other heteroatoms, encompassing rearrangement reactions in the absence of any metal catalyst, and summarize advancements made in the last five years. Keywords: arylation reaction; diaryliodonium salts; electrophilic arylation reagent; metal-free
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Published 13 Nov 2024

Atom-economical group-transfer reactions with hypervalent iodine compounds

  • Andreas Boelke,
  • Peter Finkbeiner and
  • Boris J. Nachtsheim

Beilstein J. Org. Chem. 2018, 14, 1263–1280, doi:10.3762/bjoc.14.108

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  • waste. Examples for their atom-economical utilization, in which at least both aryl ligands are transferred, are still rare. A general approach would involve at first a metal-catalysed or metal-free arylation step of a suitable substrate A with the diaryliodonium salt 1 to give monoarylated intermediate
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Published 30 May 2018

A survey of chiral hypervalent iodine reagents in asymmetric synthesis

  • Soumen Ghosh,
  • Suman Pradhan and
  • Indranil Chatterjee

Beilstein J. Org. Chem. 2018, 14, 1244–1262, doi:10.3762/bjoc.14.107

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  • different stereoelectronic properties by using aliphatic alcohols as a sole source of chirality [64]. Olofsson and Wirth et al. also jointly reported the synthesis of new structurally distinct chiral reagents 20 considering their interest towards asymmetric metal-free arylation [65]. In 1997, Wirth et al
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Published 30 May 2018

Imide arylation with aryl(TMP)iodonium tosylates

  • Souradeep Basu,
  • Alexander H. Sandtorv and
  • David R. Stuart

Beilstein J. Org. Chem. 2018, 14, 1034–1038, doi:10.3762/bjoc.14.90

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Published 11 May 2018

Contribution of microreactor technology and flow chemistry to the development of green and sustainable synthesis

  • Flavio Fanelli,
  • Giovanna Parisi,
  • Leonardo Degennaro and
  • Renzo Luisi

Beilstein J. Org. Chem. 2017, 13, 520–542, doi:10.3762/bjoc.13.51

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  • Ar–Csp3, Ar–Csp2 and Ar–Csp bond-forming reactions. The use of a photochemical flow reactor, consisting of a polyfluorinated tube reactor wrapped around a 500 W Hg lamp, allowed to overcome batch limitations paving the way for metal-free arylation reactions via phenyl cations. Derivatives 14a–g were
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Published 14 Mar 2017
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