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Featured researches published by Guillaume Povie.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Radical Chain Reduction of Alkylboron Compounds with Catechols

Giorgio Villa; Guillaume Povie; Philippe Renaud

The conversion of alkylboranes to the corresponding alkanes is classically per-formed via protonolysis of alkylboranes. This simple reaction requires the use of severe reaction conditions, that is, treatment with a carboxylic acid at high temperature (>150 °C). We report here a mild radical procedure for the transformation of organoboranes to alkanes. 4-tert-Butylcatechol, a well-established radical inhibitor and antioxidant, is acting as a source of hydrogen atoms. An efficient chain reaction is observed due to the exceptional reactivity of phenoxyl radicals toward alkylboranes. The reaction has been applied to a wide range of organoboron derivatives such as B-alkylcatecholboranes, trialkylboranes, pinacolboronates, and alkylboronic acids. Furthermore, the so far elusive rate constants for the hydrogen transfer between secondary alkyl radical and catechol derivatives have been experimentally determined. Interestingly, they are less than 1 order of magnitude slower than that of tin hydride at 80 °C, making catechols particularly attractive for a wide range of transformations involving C-C bond formation.


Angewandte Chemie | 2014

Repairing the Thiol‐Ene Coupling Reaction

Guillaume Povie; Anh‐Tuan Tran; David Bonnaffé; Jacqueline Habegger; Zhaoyu Hu; Christine Le Narvor; Philippe Renaud

Thiol-ene coupling (TEC) reactions emerged as one of the most useful processes for coupling different molecular units under reaction mild conditions. However, TEC reactions involving weak CH bonds (allylic and benzylic fragments) are difficult to run and often low yielding. Mechanistic studies demonstrate that hydrogen-atom transfer processes at allylic and benzylic positions are responsible for the lack of efficiency of the radical-chain process. These competing reactions cannot be prevented, but reported herein is a method to repair the chain process by running the reaction in the presence of triethylborane and catechol. Under these reaction conditions, a unique repair mechanism leads to an efficient chain reaction, which is demonstrated with a broad range of anomeric O-allyl sugar derivatives including mono-, di-, and tetrasaccharides bearing various functionalities and protecting groups.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Catechols as Sources of Hydrogen Atoms in Radical Deiodination and Related Reactions

Guillaume Povie; Leigh Ford; Davide Pozzi; Valentin Soulard; Giorgio Villa; Philippe Renaud

When used with trialkylboranes, catechol derivatives, which are low-cost and low toxicity, are valuable hydrogen atom donors for radical chain reactions involving alkyl iodides and related radical precursors. The system 4-tert-butylcatechol/triethylborane has been used to reduce a series of secondary and tertiary iodides, a xanthate, and a thiohydroxamate ester. Catechol derivatives are right in the optimal kinetic window for synthetic applications, as demonstrated by highly efficient radical cyclizations. Cyclizations leading to the formation of quaternary centers can be performed in an all-at-once process (no slow addition of the hydrogen atom donor) at standard concentrations. The H-donor properties of catechol derivatives can be fine-tuned by changing their substitution pattern. In slow radical cyclization processes, an enhanced ratio of cyclized/uncyclized products was obtained by using 3-methoxycatechol instead of 4-tert-butylcatechol.


Journal of Organic Chemistry | 2013

Role of Equilibrium Associations on the Hydrogen Atom Transfer from the Triethylborane–Methanol Complex

Guillaume Povie; Mattia Marzorati; Peter Bigler; Philippe Renaud

The triethylborane-methanol system used in radical deoxygenation and dehalogenation processes has been investigated. Unambiguous evidence for the formation of a complex between triethylborane and methanol is provided. It was shown that the complexation process is exothermic (ΔH° ≈ -7.6 kcal mol(-1)) while being entropically disfavored (ΔS° ≈ -24 cal mol(-1) K(-1)). This study demonstrates that only very small quantities of complex (1-2%) are present in most of the reported conditions used in dehalogenation and deoxygenation processes. Recalculating the rate constant for the hydrogen transfer to a secondary alkyl radical with this concentration suggests a value in the 10(6) M(-1) s(-1) range for the complex itself, indicating a much more important activation of the O-H bond than previously thought. The importance of solvent effects is also highlighted. The formation of a larger amount of complex by the addition of methanol is accompanied by its deactivation via hydrogen bonding. These observations open new opportunitites for the future preparation of more effective hydrogen atom donors involving borane complexes.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2018

Synthesis and Size-Dependent Properties of [12], [16], and [24]Carbon Nanobelts

Guillaume Povie; Yasutomo Segawa; Taishi Nishihara; Yuhei Miyauchi; Kenichiro Itami

The synthesis and X-ray crystal structure of the first member of the carbon nanobelt family is reported. [12]Carbon nanobelt ([12]CNB) was originally obtained from a nickel-mediated reductive coupling reaction of a dodecabrominated macrocyclic precursor, albeit only in 1% yield. The present article reports on the development of this synthetic strategy and its extension to the preparation of the [16] and [24]CNB analogues. In particular, our extensive investigations on the final belt-forming, nickel-mediated reaction led to the development of a new ligand system that provides [12]CNB in up to 7% yield, contributing to the commercialization of [12]CNB. The belt structures of [12], [16], and [24]CNB were characterized by NMR, UV-vis, and Raman spectroscopy as well as mass spectrometry and X-ray crystallography. The fluorescence of the CNBs in solution displayed a remarkable dependence on the ring size, ranging from a broad red emission ([12]CNB) to a narrow-band blue emission ([24]CNB), while both features are observed for [16]CNB.


Science Advances | 2018

Radical chain repair: The hydroalkylation of polysubstituted unactivated alkenes

Guillaume Povie; Sankar Rao Suravarapu; Martin Peter Bircher; Melinda Meyer Mojzes; Samuel Rieder; Philippe Renaud

A bioinspired repair process allows to expand the synthetic scope of radical reactions. The concept of repair is widely used by nature to heal molecules such as proteins, lipids, sugars, and DNA that are damaged by hydrogen atom abstraction resulting from oxidative stress. We show that this strategy, rather undocumented in the field of synthetic organic chemistry, can be used in a radical chain reaction to enable notoriously intractable transformations. By overcoming the radical chain inhibitor properties of substituted alkenes, the radical-mediated hydroalkylation of mono-, di-, tri-, and even tetrasubstituted unactivated olefins could be performed under mild conditions. With a remarkable functional group tolerance, this reaction provides a general coupling method for the derivatization of olefin-containing natural products.


Archive | 2016

Catechol Mediated Intermolecular Carbohydrogenation of Terminal and Non-TerminalAlkenes

Sankarrao Suravarapu; Samuel Rieder; Guillaume Povie; Philippe Renaud

A few years ago, we have reported a radical chain reduction of organoboranes to alkanes with a very inexpensive 4-tert-butylcatechol under very mild conditions [1]. More recently, we have extended this procedure for the efficient deiodination of alkyl iodides with a mixture of 4-tert-butylcatechol and triethylborane [2]. Herein, we disclose that this reagent can be used for amazingly efficient carbohydrogenation of terminal and even non-terminal alkenes.


Chemical Reviews | 2014

Thiyl Radicals in Organic Synthesis

Fabrice Dénès; Mark Pichowicz; Guillaume Povie; Philippe Renaud


Science | 2017

Synthesis of a carbon nanobelt

Guillaume Povie; Yasutomo Segawa; Taishi Nishihara; Yuhei Miyauchi; Kenichiro Itami


Chemical Communications | 2010

Role of catechol in the radical reduction of B-alkylcatecholboranes in presence of methanol

Guillaume Povie; Giorgio Villa; Leigh Ford; Davide Pozzi; Carl H. Schiesser; Philippe Renaud

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Philippe Renaud

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Giorgio Villa

Scripps Research Institute

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