Anton Wiebe
University of Mainz
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Publication
Featured researches published by Anton Wiebe.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2015
Bernd Elsler; Anton Wiebe; Dieter Schollmeyer; Katrin Marie Dyballa; Robert Franke; Siegfried R. Waldvogel
Solvents such as 1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoroisopropanol (HFIP) with a high capacity for donating hydrogen bonds generate solvates that enter into selective cross-coupling reactions of aryls upon oxidation. When electric current is employed for oxidation, reagent effects can be excluded and a decoupling of nucleophilicity from oxidation potential can be achieved. The addition of water or methanol to the electrolyte allows a shift of oxidation potentials in a specific range, creating suitable systems for selective anodic cross-coupling reactions. The shift in the redox potentials depends on the substitution pattern of the substrate employed. The concept has been expanded from arene-phenol to phenol-phenol as well as phenol-aniline cross-coupling. This driving force for selectivity in oxidative coupling might also explain previous findings using HFIP and hypervalent iodine reagents.
Angewandte Chemie | 2018
Anton Wiebe; Tile Gieshoff; Sabine Möhle; Eduardo Rodrigo; Michael Zirbes; Siegfried R. Waldvogel
Abstract The direct synthetic organic use of electricity is currently experiencing a renaissance. More synthetically oriented laboratories working in this area are exploiting both novel and more traditional concepts, paving the way to broader applications of this niche technology. As only electrons serve as reagents, the generation of reagent waste is efficiently avoided. Moreover, stoichiometric reagents can be regenerated and allow a transformation to be conducted in an electrocatalytic fashion. However, the application of electroorganic transformations is more than minimizing the waste footprint, it rather gives rise to inherently safe processes, reduces the number of steps of many syntheses, allows for milder reaction conditions, provides alternative means to access desired structural entities, and creates intellectual property (IP) space. When the electricity originates from renewable resources, this surplus might be directly employed as a terminal oxidizing or reducing agent, providing an ultra‐sustainable and therefore highly attractive technique. This Review surveys recent developments in electrochemical synthesis that will influence the future of this area.
Angewandte Chemie | 2017
Anton Wiebe; Sebastian Lips; Dieter Schollmeyer; Robert Franke; Siegfried R. Waldvogel
The first electrochemical dehydrogenative C-C cross-coupling of thiophenes with phenols has been realized. This sustainable and very simple to perform anodic coupling reaction enables access to two classes of compounds of significant interest. The scope for electrochemical C-H-activating cross-coupling reactions was expanded to sulfur heterocycles. Previously, only various benzoid aromatic systems could be converted, while the application of heterocycles was not successful in the electrochemical C-H-activating cross-coupling reaction. Here, reagent- and metal-free reaction conditions offer a sustainable electrochemical pathway that provides an attractive synthetic method to a broad variety of bi- and terarylic products based on thiophenes and phenols. This method is easy to conduct in an undivided cell, is scalable, and is inherently safe. The resulting products offer applications in electronic materials or as [OSO]2- pincer-type ligands.
Angewandte Chemie | 2018
Sabine Möhle; Michael Zirbes; Eduardo Rodrigo; Tile Gieshoff; Anton Wiebe; Siegfried R. Waldvogel
Abstract The use of electricity instead of stoichiometric amounts of oxidizers or reducing agents in synthesis is very appealing for economic and ecological reasons, and represents a major driving force for research efforts in this area. To use electron transfer at the electrode for a successful transformation in organic synthesis, the intermediate radical (cation/anion) has to be stabilized. Its combination with other approaches in organic chemistry or concepts of contemporary synthesis allows the establishment of powerful synthetic methods. The aim in the 21st Century will be to use as little fossil carbon as possible and, for this reason, the use of renewable sources is becoming increasingly important. The direct conversion of renewables, which have previously mainly been incinerated, is of increasing interest. This Review surveys many of the recent seminal important developments which will determine the future of this dynamic emerging field.
Science Advances | 2017
Anton Wiebe; Barbara Riehl; Sebastian Lips; Robert Franke; Siegfried R. Waldvogel
Solvent effect enables electrosynthesis of organic compounds with strong variation of electric current at constant efficacy. Electro-organic synthesis is a powerful technique for the sustainable preparation of compounds. However, many electrosynthetic reactions require complex equipment, are limited to a very narrow current density range, or have very long reaction times; some also involve nonselective transformations and bad scalability. The robust and selective synthesis of nonsymmetric biphenols and partially protected derivatives is established by anodic C–C cross-coupling. The setup is simple, involving constant current conditions and undivided cells. Its key is a unique electrolyte system based on fluorous alcohols and mixtures, particularly 1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoroisopropanol. This allows variations of the current density of more than two orders of magnitude without decreasing selectivity or product yield. This exceptional effect is unknown for electro-organic synthesis of products that have similar oxidation potentials as the starting materials. It potentially paves the way for industrial electrolyzers with variable current consumption, which could enable the flexible use of energy surplus in the electricity supply.
Chemical Communications | 2018
Takashi Yamamoto; Barbara Riehl; Keisuke Naba; Kenshin Nakahara; Anton Wiebe; Tsuyoshi Saitoh; Siegfried R. Waldvogel; Yasuaki Einaga
A stereoselective and electrocatalytic coupling reaction of isoeugenol has been reported for the first time in a 1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoro-2-propanol (HFIP)/boron-doped diamond (BDD) electrode system. This particular C-C bond formation and diastereoselectivity is driven by a solvate interaction between the radical species and another isoeugenol molecule. Due to an electrocatalytic cycle, only understoichiometric amounts of charge are necessary. Since electric current is directly employed as the oxidant, the reaction is metal and reagent-free. In addition, the electrolysis can be conducted in a very simple undivided beaker-type cell under constant current conditions. Therefore, the protocol is easy to use, suitable for scale-up, and inherently safe.
Angewandte Chemie | 2018
Yasushi Imada; Johannes L. Röckl; Anton Wiebe; Tile Gieshoff; Dieter Schollmeyer; Kazuhiro Chiba; Robert Franke; Siegfried R. Waldvogel
A selective dehydrogenative electrochemical functionalization of benzylic positions that employs 1,1,1,3,3,3-hexafluoropropan-2-ol (HFIP) has been developed. The electrogenerated products are versatile intermediates for subsequent functionalizations as they act as masked benzylic cations that can be easily activated. Herein, we report a sustainable, scalable, and reagent- and metal-free dehydrogenative formal benzyl-aryl cross-coupling. Liberation of the benzylic cation was accomplished through the use of acid. Valuable diarylmethanes are accessible in the presence of aromatic nucleophiles. The direct application of electricity enables a safe and environmentally benign chemical transformation as oxidizers are replaced by electrons. A broad variety of different substrates and nucleophiles can be employed.
Angewandte Chemie | 2016
Sebastian Lips; Anton Wiebe; Bernd Elsler; Dieter Schollmeyer; Katrin Marie Dyballa; Robert Franke; Siegfried R. Waldvogel
Angewandte Chemie | 2016
Anton Wiebe; Dieter Schollmeyer; Katrin Marie Dyballa; Robert Franke; Siegfried R. Waldvogel
Angewandte Chemie | 2016
Anton Wiebe; Dieter Schollmeyer; Katrin Marie Dyballa; Robert Franke; Siegfried R. Waldvogel