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Department of Chemistry, University College London, Christopher Ingold Laboratories, 20 Gordon Street, London WC1H OAJ, UK
E-mail: c.m.marson@ucl.ac.uk
Chem. Soc. Rev., 2012,41, 7712-7722
DOI:
10.1039/C2CS35183H
Received
21 May 2012,
First published online
24 Aug 2012
Reactions in which several components are combined in sequence, and without isolation of intermediates, are greatly sought because of the inherent molecular diversity, efficiency, and atom-economy. However, organocatalytic reactions, employing an organic catalyst to assemble products of high enantiomeric excess (a single optical isomer), are also cutting-edge methodology. This tutorial review covers the overlap of these two areas, outling the structural diversity and stereocontrol arising from one-pot combinations of at least three components, powerful approaches with great potential that minimise formation of by-products and operating costs.
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