Ajou University repository

Oxidative cross-coupling of thiols for S-X (X = S, N, O, P, and C) bond formation: mechanistic aspects
Citations

SCOPUS

21

Citation Export

Publication Year
2021-10-28
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Citation
Organic and Biomolecular Chemistry, Vol.19, pp.8656-8686
Mesh Keyword
Bond formationChemical oxidantsCross-couplingsMechanistic aspectsMediated reactionsOrganosulfurOxidative couplingsReactive intermediateThiyl radicalsTransition metal catalysts
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
BiochemistryPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryOrganic Chemistry
Abstract
This review focuses on the reactive intermediates (disulfides, sulfenyl halides, thiyl radicals, sulfenium cations, and metal-organosulfur species) and the mechanisms of the recently reported oxidative couplings of thiols. These intermediates are generated by chemical oxidants, transition metal catalysts, electrochemistry, and photochemistry. Chemical oxidant-mediated reactions involve radical, halogenated, or cationic intermediates, or disulfides. Transition metal-catalyzed mechanisms proposed various metal-organosulfur intermediates to elucidate the reactivity and selectivity of metal catalysts. In electro- and photooxidation, direct oxidation/reduction mechanisms of reactants at the electrode or indirect oxidation/reduction of reactants in the presence of redox catalysts have been reported. The following sections are based on the products, thiosulfonates (S-S bond), sulfenamides, sulfinamides, and sulfonamides (S-N bond), sulfinates (S-O bond), thiophosphine oxides and thiophosphates (S-P bond), and sulfides, sulfoxides, and sulfones (S-C bond) and discuss the reaction mechanisms and the above-mentioned key intermediates for product formation. The contents of this review will provide helpful information, guiding the choice of oxidative coupling conditions for the synthesis of various organosulfur compounds with high yields and selectivity.
ISSN
1477-0520
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/32325
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1039/d1ob01368h
Fulltext

Type
Review
Funding
This study was supported by the Carbon to X Program (No. 2020M3H7A1098283) and National Research Foundation Program (No. 2019R1A2C1084021) by the Ministry of Science and ICT, Republic of Korea.
Show full item record

Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Related Researcher

Jang, Hye-Young  Image
Jang, Hye-Young 장혜영
Department of Chemistry
Read More

Total Views & Downloads

File Download

  • There are no files associated with this item.