Visible-Light-Induced Radical Reaction of Acylsilanes through Solvent-Controlled Norrish Type I Cleavage

Abstract

The development of innovative photoinduced reactions for acylsilanes remains a significant challenge in organic synthesis, primarily due to their inherent propensity to undergo 1,2-Brook rearrangement upon photoirradiation, generating siloxycarbene intermediates. In this study, we demonstrate that the reactivity of acylsilanes under visible light can be regulated to effectively suppress the undesirable 1,2-Brook rearrangement. This control is achieved by employing polar solvents as the reaction medium during photoirradiation, strategically redirecting the reaction pathway toward Norrish type I cleavage. As a result, acylsilanes afford acyl radicals and silyl radicals, which enables the selective capture of acyl radicals by diselenides for the chemoselective synthesis of a diverse array of selenoester products.

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Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
06 Jul 2025
Accepted
07 Aug 2025
First published
08 Aug 2025

Org. Biomol. Chem., 2025, Accepted Manuscript

Visible-Light-Induced Radical Reaction of Acylsilanes through Solvent-Controlled Norrish Type I Cleavage

N. Li, W. Zhang, D. Yang, P. Wang and M. Han, Org. Biomol. Chem., 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5OB01095K

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