3769-82-2Relevant articles and documents
H2O2-mediated room temperature synthesis of 2-arylacetophenones from arylhydrazines and vinyl azides in water
Luo, Mengqiang,Zhang, Yaohong,Fang, Ping,Li, Yan,Qi, Chenze,Li, Yong,Shen, Runpu,Cheng, Kai,Wang, Hai
supporting information, p. 630 - 635 (2022/02/01)
An environmentally benign, cost-efficient and practical methodology for the room temperature synthesis of 2-arylacetophenones in water has been discovered. The facile and efficient transformation involves the oxidative radical addition of arylhydrazines with α-aryl vinyl azides in the presence of H2O2 (as a radical initiator) and PEG-800 (as a phase-transfer catalyst). From the viewpoint of green chemistry and organic synthesis, the present protocol is of great significance because of using cheap, non-toxic and readily available starting materials and reagents as well as amenability to gram-scale synthesis, which provides an attractive strategy to access 2-arylacetophenones.
Palladium-catalyzed synthesis of α-aryl acetophenones from styryl ethers and aryl diazonium saltsviaregioselective Heck arylation at room temperature
Venkatesh, Rapelly,Singh, Adesh Kumar,Lee, Yong Rok,Kandasamy, Jeyakumar
, p. 7832 - 7837 (2021/09/28)
Preparation of α-aryl acetophenones from styryl ethers and aryldiazonium salts is described. The reaction is catalyzed by palladium acetate at room temperature in the absence of ligand and base. The developed method is highly attractive in terms of reaction conditions, substrate scope, functional group tolerance and yields. Synthetic applications of the present method are demonstrated by preparing α-aryl indoles and 3-aryl isocoumarin from styryl ethers.
Porphyrins as Photoredox Catalysts in Csp2-H Arylations: Batch and Continuous Flow Approaches
De Souza, Aline A. N.,Silva, Nathalia S.,Müller, Andressa V.,Polo, André S.,Brocksom, Timothy J.,De Oliveira, Kleber T.
, p. 15077 - 15086 (2019/01/03)
We have investigated both batch and continuous flow photoarylations of enol-acetates to yield different α-arylated aldehyde and ketone building blocks by using diazonium salts as the aryl-radical source. Different porphyrins were used as SET photocatalysts, and photophysical as well as electrochemical studies were performed to rationalize the photoredox properties and suggest mechanistic insights. Notably, the most electron-deficient porphyrin (meso-tetra(pentafluorophenyl)porphyrin) shows the best photoactivity as an electron donor in the triplet excited state, which was rationalized by the redox potentials of excited states and the turnover of the porphyrins in the photocatalytic cycle. A two-step continuous protocol and multigram-scale reactions are also presented revealing a robust, cost-competitive, and easy methodology, highlighting the significant potential of porphyrins as SET photocatalysts.