Base-mediated carboxylation of C-nucleophiles with CO2
Literature Information
Yanlong Luo, Wenbin Huang
Carbon dioxide (CO2) is an available, abundant, and renewable C1 resource, which could be converted into value-added chemicals. Due to its inherent thermodynamic stability and kinetic inertness, it is difficult to realize its efficient utilization. Nevertheless, many elegant strategies for the utilization of CO2 have been developed using Lewis bases, frustrated Lewis pairs, hydroxyl-containing compounds, amino-group-containing compounds or transition metal catalysis. Among them, base-mediated carboxylation of C-nucleophiles is an environmentally friendly strategy for CO2 conversion, which is operationally simple, using low-toxicity bases and economical available promoters, without the use of complex ligands or cocatalysts. This review summarizes related work on the base-mediated carboxylation of C-nucleophiles with CO2, based on the effects of nucleophiles, promoters, additives, and solvents. The types of pronucleophile are categorized as follows: hydrocarbon with C(sp3)–H, C(sp2)–H or C(sp)–H bonds, organosilanes, organotin, organoboron, and N-tosylhydrazones. Typical mechanisms and applications of these carboxylation reactions are also depicted. Moreover, mechanistic comprehension of CO2 activation and conversion at a molecular level aims to further expand the repertoire of carboxylation transformations mediated by bases.
Related Literature
IF 4.616
An aptasensing platform for simultaneous detection of multiple analytes based on the amplification of exonuclease-catalyzed target recycling and DNA concatemersIF 4.616
Proteomics applied to the authentication of fish glue: application to a 17th century artwork sampleIF 4.616
Correlation of in vitro and in vivo plasma protein binding using ultracentrifugation and UPLC-tandem mass spectrometryIF 4.616
Dependence of the direct electron transfer activity and adsorption kinetics of cytochrome c on interfacial charge propertiesIF 4.616
Monitoring of hydrogen sulfide via substrate-integrated hollow waveguide mid-infrared sensors in real-timeIF 4.616
Development of a high-throughput assay for measuring lipase activity using natural triacylglycerols coated on microtiter platesIF 4.616
Multiplexed detection of microRNAs by tuning DNA-scaffolded silver nanoclustersIF 4.616
Generation of a chemical gradient across an array of 256 cell cultures in a single chipIF 4.616
Phosphorescent sensing of Cr3+ with protein-functionalized Mn-doped ZnS quantum dotsIF 4.616
Source Journal
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry

Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry (OBC) publishes original and high impact research and reviews in organic chemistry. We welcome research that shows new or significantly improved protocols or methodologies in total synthesis, synthetic methodology or physical and theoretical organic chemistry as well as research that shows a significant advance in the organic chemistry or molecular design aspects of chemical biology, catalysis, supramolecular and macromolecular chemistry, theoretical chemistry, mechanism-oriented physical organic chemistry, medicinal chemistry or natural products. Articles published in the journal should report new work which makes a highly-significant impact in the field. Routine and incremental work is generally not suitable for publication in the journal. More details about key areas of our scope are below. In all cases authors should include in their article clear rationale for why their research has been carried out.