Repurposing trichloroacetonitrile as a sustainable radical synthon for regiodivergent photocatalytic alkene amination
Abstract
Persistent endeavors have been dedicated to the synthesis of nitrogen-containing compounds, which hold paramount significance in biological processes and are indispensable in the realms of pharmaceuticals and advanced materials. Herein, an innovative photocatalytic radical relay strategy has been devised for the regiodivergent amination of alkenes utilizing trichloroacetonitrile (CCl3CN) as an N-centered radical precursor, diverging from its classical electrophilic reactivity. This method leveraged the inherent weakness of the N-O bond in an oxime-imidate reagent to generate electrophilic amidyl radicals via oxy-radical isomerization, without gaseous byproducts, and enabling three distinctive amination pathways: 1,2diamination, 1,4-diamination, and anti-Markovnikov hydroamination of alkenes. The CCl3 group plays a pivotal role in modulating the reactivity of amidyl radical intermediates through its electron-withdrawing effects, while also demonstrating compatibility with further functionalization via boryl radical chemistry. This work repositions a legacy electrophile as a multifaceted radical synthon, offering a general strategy for modular nitrogen incorporation in complex molecule synthesis.Green foundation1. In this study, we repurpose trichloroacetonitrile into a versatile radical synthon for the synthesis of structurally diverse nitrogencontaining compounds, addressing key challenges in traditional radical amination methodologies. 2. This strategy bypasses the formation of gaseous byproducts, a common drawback in conventional NCR generation, thereby significantly improving atom economy and operational safety. 3. This transformation operates under metal-free and photocatalytic conditions. Combined with the scalability of the reagent preparation and the use of ethyl acetate as a green solvent, this methodology offers a step-economical and environmentally benign route to valuable diamines and hydroamination products.
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