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Innate C-H trifluoromethylation of heterocycles
Edited* by Stephen L. Buchwald, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, and approved July 18, 2011 (received for review June 6, 2011)

Abstract
Direct methods for the trifluoromethylation of heteroaromatic systems are in extremely high demand in nearly every sector of chemical industry. Here we report the discovery of a general procedure using a benchtop stable trifluoromethyl radical source that functions broadly on a variety of electron deficient and rich heteroaromatic systems and demonstrates high functional group tolerance. This C-H trifluoromethylation protocol is operationally simple (avoids gaseous CF3I), scalable, proceeds at ambient temperature, can be used directly on unprotected molecules, and is demonstrated to proceed at the innately reactive positions of the substrate. The unique and orthogonal reactivity of the trifluoromethyl radical relative to aryl radicals has also been investigated on both a complex natural product and a pharmaceutical agent. Finally, preliminary data suggest that the regioselectivity of C-H trifluoromethylation can be fine-tuned simply by judicious solvent choice.
Footnotes
↵1Y.N.J. and T.B. contributed equally to this work.
- ↵2To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: pbaran{at}scripps.edu.
Author contributions: T.B., R.D.B., Y.F., I.B.S., D.G.B., and P.S.B. designed research; Y.N.J., T.B., R.D.B., Y.F., I.B.S., and S.S. performed research; Y.N.J., T.B., R.D.B., Y.F., I.B.S., S.S., D.G.B., and P.S.B. analyzed data; and T.B., R.D.B., I.B.S., D.G.B., and P.S.B. wrote the paper.
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
*This Direct Submission article had a prearranged editor.
This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1109059108/-/DCSupplemental.
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