Recent Advances in Light-Induced Direct Decarboxylative Halogenation Catalyzed by Earth-abundant Metals and Organic Photocatalysts

Abstract

In recent decades, carboxylic acids have emerged as attractive radical precursors owing to their non-toxic nature, stability, low cost, and widespread availability. Through favorable radical decarboxylation processes, carbon dioxide is seamlessly eliminated as a traceless byproduct, enabling the generation of nucleophilic carbon radicals with high efficiency. This strategy facilitates functional group transformations and the construction of high-value molecules with exceptional chemoselectivity and regioselectivity. This review summarizes recent progress in the direct utilization of carboxylic acids as convenient radical precursors for the synthesis of halides via photoinduced decarboxylative halogenation, catalyzed by earth-abundant metals and organic photocatalysts . Additionally, the review highlights the prevailing challenges, emerging opportunities, and future directions in the field of decarboxylative halogenation.

Article information

Article type
Review Article
Submitted
31 Dec 2025
Accepted
12 Mar 2026
First published
13 Mar 2026

Chem. Commun., 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Recent Advances in Light-Induced Direct Decarboxylative Halogenation Catalyzed by Earth-abundant Metals and Organic Photocatalysts

Z. Zeng, Y. Huang, J. Wen and P. Hu, Chem. Commun., 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5CC07425H

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