Abstract
The metal-free, highly selective synthesis of biaryls poses a major
challenge in organic synthesis. We report the scope and mechanism of a promising
new approach to (hetero)biaryls by the photochemical fusion of aryl substituents
tethered to a traceless linker (photosplicing). Interrogating photosplicing
with varying reaction conditions and comparison of diverse synthetic probes (40
examples, including a suite of heterocycles) showed that the reaction has a
surprisingly broad scope and involves neither metals nor radicals. Quantum
chemical calculations revealed that the C–C bond is formed by an intramolecular
photochemical process that involves an excited singlet state and the traverse
of a five-membered transition state, thus warranting consistent ipso‑ipso‑coupling
fidelity. These results demonstrate that photosplicing is a unique aryl
cross-coupling method in the excited state that can be applied to synthesize a
broad range of biaryls.
Supplementary materials
Title
SI Photosplicing 20190705
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s1 irc
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