Recent advancements in visible-light-driven carboxylation with carbon dioxide

Carbon dioxide as a classic C1 source has long been investigated in organic synthetic chemistry. Diverse catalytic methods for CO 2 activation have been reported over the past several decades. In this minireview, we mainly focus on detailing recent advances (since 2020) in utilizing carbon dioxide t...

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Published inChemical communications (Cambridge, England) Vol. 58; no. 67; pp. 9312 - 9327
Main Authors Mao, Ben, Wei, Jun-Sheng, Shi, Min
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Cambridge Royal Society of Chemistry 18.08.2022
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Summary:Carbon dioxide as a classic C1 source has long been investigated in organic synthetic chemistry. Diverse catalytic methods for CO 2 activation have been reported over the past several decades. In this minireview, we mainly focus on detailing recent advances (since 2020) in utilizing carbon dioxide to attain the carboxylation of organic motifs via photoredox and metallaphotoredox catalysis. This minireview highlights recent advancements within the last three years (since 2020) in visible-light-driven carboxylation of diverse organic motifs with CO 2 .
Bibliography:https://doi.org/10.1039/d2cc03380a
Ben Mao was born in 1998 in Jiangsu (P. R. China). He received his BS degree in 2021 from the East China University of Science & Technology, before joining a PhD program in the same school. He is currently a PhD candidate under the direction of Professor Min Shi.
Electronic Supplementary Information (ESI) available: Detailed experimental procedures and analytical data. See DOI
Jun-Sheng Wei was born in 1998 in Jiangxi (P. R. China). He received his BS degree in 2020 from the Yichun University, before joining a Master Program in the East China University of Science & Technology. He is currently a Postgraduate under the direction of Professor Min Shi.
Dr Min Shi was born in 1963 in Shanghai, China. He received his BS in 1984 (Institute of Chemical Engineering of East China) and PhD in 1991 (Osaka University, Japan). He gained postdoctoral research experience with Prof. Kenneth M. Nicholas at University of Oklahoma (1995-1996) and worked as an ERATO Researcher in Japan Science and Technology Corporation (JST) (1996-1998). He is currently a group leader of the State Key Laboratory of Organometallic Chemistry, Shanghai Institute of Organic Chemistry (SIOC).
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ISSN:1359-7345
1364-548X
DOI:10.1039/d2cc03380a