Scalable and safe synthetic organic electroreduction inspired by Li-ion battery chemistry

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Abstract

Reductive electrosynthesis has faced long-standing challenges in applications to complex organic substrates at scale. Here, we show how decades of research in lithium-ion battery materials, electrolytes, and additives can serve as an inspiration for achieving practically scalable reductive electrosynthetic conditions for the Birch reduction. Specifically, we demonstrate that using a sacrificial anode material (magnesium or aluminum), combined with a cheap, nontoxic, and water-soluble proton source (dimethylurea), and an overcharge protectant inspired by battery technology [tris(pyrrolidino)phosphoramide] can allow for multigram-scale synthesis of pharmaceutically relevant building blocks. We show how these conditions have a very high level of functional-group tolerance relative to classical electrochemical and chemical dissolving-metal reductions. Finally, we demonstrate that the same electrochemical conditions can be applied to other dissolving metal-type reductive transformations, including McMurry couplings, reductive ketone deoxygenations, and epoxide openings.

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APA

Peters, B. K., Rodriguez, K. X., Reisberg, S. H., Beil, S. B., Hickey, D. P., Kawamata, Y., … Baran, P. S. (2019). Scalable and safe synthetic organic electroreduction inspired by Li-ion battery chemistry. Science, 363(6429), 838–845. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aav5606

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