Anti-Friedel-Crafts alkylation via electron donor-acceptor photoinitiated autocatalysis

12 November 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The ubiquity of C–H bonds in organic molecules makes C–H functionalisation one of the most valuable synthetic transformations in organic chemistry. It provides a sustainable synthetic strategy, optimising atom and step economy by eliminating the need for functional handles, instead relying on reagent control or the substrate’s innate selectivity. C–H alkylation of electron-poor aromatic species remains a particular challenge, typically relying on functional handles to direct selectivity with either traditional palladium cross-coupling or nickel photoredox methodologies. Here we introduce a highly selective, scalable, and cost effective synthetic strategy for C–H alkylation of electron-poor aromatics, exhibiting high functional group tolerance applicable to pharmaceutical compounds. This reaction leverages an autocatalytic, electron donor-acceptor triggered, radical reaction, as confirmed by both experimental and computational analyses. Notably, it demonstrates ‘anti-Friedel-Crafts’ selectivity, consistent with theoretical predictions from Fukui indices and machine learning models on previously ‘unseen’ substrates.

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information
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Experimental procedures and computational analysis
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