Direct dehydroxymethylative functionalization of alcohols offers a streamlined platform for molecular diversification but remains underdeveloped. An electrochemical platform operating under mild, metal-free conditions leverages a hydrogen atom transfer (HAT)/O2-Criegee relay to convert various alcohols (such as aliphatic, benzylic, and allylic alcohols) into one-carbon-shortened radicals, enabling dehydroxymethylative nitration, fluorosulfonylation, azidation, and phosphinoylation with broad functional-group tolerance and gram-scale practicality. Pairing the anodic radical generation with a cathodic Ni cycle further delivers C(sp2)-C(sp3) coupling, including the one-step methylation of aryl halides using ethanol as a feedstock methyl source. Mechanistic experiments (control studies and electron paramagnetic resonance/high-resolution mass spectrometry/cyclic voltammetry) support a sequence of HAT, O2 trapping, Criegee assembly, Baeyer-Villiger oxygenation, anodic decarboxylation, and radical interception and indicate mediator-first anodic gating. The platform expands access to C-N, C-SO2F, C-P, and C-C bonds directly from simple alcohols, providing a general strategy for selective editing of inert C-C bonds and late-stage diversification of biorelevant molecules.
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Yiyi Chen
Beijing Institute of Petrochemical Technology
Yi Xu
Yuncheng University
Shuangquan Zhang
Lanzhou Veterinary Research Institute
Journal of the American Chemical Society
Zhejiang University of Technology
Henan University
Changzhou University
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Chen et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69401b262d562116f28f7939 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.5c18031