Premium
Fluorination and Fluoroalkylation Reactions Mediated by Hypervalent Iodine Reagents
Author(s) -
Han ZhouZhou,
Zhang ChengPan
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
advanced synthesis and catalysis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.541
H-Index - 155
eISSN - 1615-4169
pISSN - 1615-4150
DOI - 10.1002/adsc.202000750
Subject(s) - hypervalent molecule , trifluoromethylation , electrophile , chemistry , reagent , iodine , oxidizing agent , iodine compounds , fluorine , organic chemistry , organic synthesis , combinatorial chemistry , catalysis , alkyl , trifluoromethyl
This review summarizes the progress in the fluorination and fluoroalkylation of electron‐rich systems with diverse fluorine (F) and fluoroalkyl (R fn ) reagents employing hypervalent iodine compounds as initiators in the last few decades. Because of the strong electrophilicity, high oxidizing properties, low toxicity, air and moisture stability, ready availability, ease of handling, and mild reaction conditions, the hypervalent iodine reagents have been widely utilized in modern organic chemistry. In particular, the use of hypervalent iodine reagents to initiate the C−F and C−R fn (R fn =CF 2 H, CF 3 , perfluoroalkyl, OCH 2 CF 3 , SCF 3 , SeCF 3 and etc) bond formation has been increasingly developed. In these reactions, hypervalent iodine compounds behave as powerful oxidants or electrophiles and activate the fluorination/fluoroalkylation reagents, the transition‐metal catalysts, or the substrates to in situ form electrophilic or radical intermediates, which subsequently participate in fluorination, difluoromethylation, trifluoromethylation, perfluoroalkylation, trifluoroethoxylation, fluoroalkylthiolation, trifluoromethylselenolation and others under mild conditions. Although great achievements have been made in this area, they are just the initial phase and still require a wide scope for improvement. It is anticipated that this review will draw much attention from the organic chemistry community and inspire more contributions in the development of new hypervalent‐iodine‐mediated fluorination and fluoroalkylation reactions.