15 research outputs found
New Structural and Geodynamic Coastal Jeffara Model (Southern Tunisia) and Engineering Implications
Geoeconomic Interest Versus Environmental and Health Issues of the Mineralogical Assemblage of Sebkha Oum El Khialate, Southeastern Tunisia
Geometry and structural evolution of Lorbeus diapir, northwestern Tunisia: polyphase diapirism of the North African inverted passive margin
New Micropaleontological Record (Foraminifera and Ostracoda) from the Late Glacial and Holocene in Salinas del Bebedero, San Luis, Argentina: A Paleoenvironmental Interpretation
Style and timing of tectonic deformation across the Bou Arada-El Fahs troughs system, Northeast Tunisia: integration in the structural evolution of Atlas fold and thrust belt
Paleogeographic and geodynamic Miocene evolution of the Tunisian Tell (Numidian and Post-Numidian Successions): bearing with the Maghrebian Chain
Stable gold(III) catalysts by oxidative addition of a carbon–carbon bond
Whereas low-valent late transition metal catalysis has become indispensible for chemical synthesis, homogeneous high-valent transition metal catalysis is underdeveloped, mainly due to the reactivity of high-valent transition metal complexes and the challenges associated with synthesizing them. In this manuscript, we report a mild carbon-carbon bond cleavage reaction by a Au(I) complex that generates a stable Au(III) cationic complex. Complementary to the well-established soft and carbophilic Au(I) catalyst, this Au(III) complex exhibits hard, oxophilic Lewis acidity. This is exemplified by catalytic activation of α,β-unsaturated aldehydes towards selective conjugate additions as well as activation of an unsaturated aldehyde-allene for a [2 + 2] cycloaddition reaction. The origin of the regioselectivity and catalytic activity was elucidated by X-ray crystallographic analysis of an isolated Au(III)-activated cinnamaldehyde intermediate. The concepts revealed in this study provide a strategy for accessing high-valent transition metal catalysis from readily available precursors. Transition metal catalysis has been developed into an efficient and selective strategy for organic transformations in modern chemistry. Low-valent late transition metal complexe
