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Youyoung Kim

Bio: Youyoung Kim is an academic researcher from KAIST. The author has contributed to research in topics: Amination & DNA polymerase. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 9 publications receiving 1301 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This Review comprehensively highlights recent advances in intra- and intermolecular C-H amination reactions utilizing late transition metal-based catalysts using mechanistic scaffolds and types of reactions.
Abstract: Catalytic transformation of ubiquitous C–H bonds into valuable C–N bonds offers an efficient synthetic approach to construct N-functionalized molecules. Over the last few decades, transition metal catalysis has been repeatedly proven to be a powerful tool for the direct conversion of cheap hydrocarbons to synthetically versatile amino-containing compounds. This Review comprehensively highlights recent advances in intra- and intermolecular C–H amination reactions utilizing late transition metal-based catalysts. Initial discovery, mechanistic study, and additional applications were categorized on the basis of the mechanistic scaffolds and types of reactions. Reactivity and selectivity of novel systems are discussed in three sections, with each being defined by a proposed working mode.

1,481 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Ir(III)-catalyzed regioselective direct C-7 amidation of indoles in reaction with organic azides has been developed and N-pivaloylindoles were most effective in undergoing the desired amidation at room temperature over a broad range of substrates.

95 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Youyoung Kim1, Yoonsu Park1, Sukbok Chang1
TL;DR: A physical organic approach is presented to delineate the origin of regioselective amidation of N-acylindoles through Ir(III) catalysis and develop a new C2 amidation and alkenylation protocol of indoles, which affords the exclusive functionalization at the C2 position with up to >70:1 selectivity.
Abstract: Site-selective C–H functionalization is a great challenge in homogeneous transition-metal catalysis. Herein, we present a physical organic approach to delineate the origin of regioselective amidation of N-acylindoles through Ir(III) catalysis. Bulkiness of N-directing groups of indole substrates and electronics of carboxylate additives were identified as two major factors in controlling C2 and C7 selectivity, and their microscopic mechanisms were studied with DFT-based transition state analysis. Computational insights led us to interrogate a linear free energy relationship, and parametrization of molecular determinants enabled the establishment of an intuitive yet robust statistical model that correlates an extensive number of validation data points in high accuracy. This mechanistic investigation eventually allowed the development of a new C2 amidation and alkenylation protocol of indoles, which affords the exclusive functionalization at the C2 position with up to >70:1 selectivity.

40 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Youyoung Kim1, Joon Heo1, Dong-Wook Kim1, Sukbok Chang1, Sangwon Seo1 
TL;DR: A highly efficient and practical strategy is reported that enables the selective ring-opening functionalization of unstrained cyclic amines and is demonstrated by successful modification of several natural products and pharmaceutical analogues.
Abstract: Chemical synthesis based on the skeletal variation has been prolifically utilized as an attractive approach for modification of molecular properties. Given the ubiquity of unstrained cyclic amines, the ability to directly alter such motifs would grant an efficient platform to access unique chemical space. Here, we report a highly efficient and practical strategy that enables the selective ring-opening functionalization of unstrained cyclic amines. The use of difluorocarbene leads to a wide variety of multifaceted acyclic architectures, which can be further diversified to a range of distinctive homologative cyclic scaffolds. The virtue of this deconstructive strategy is demonstrated by successful modification of several natural products and pharmaceutical analogues.

34 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The tris(pentafluorophenyl)boron-catalyzed domino hydrosilylation of substrates carrying unsaturated functionalities in a proximal arrangement is presented to produce silacycles as discussed by the authors.
Abstract: The tris(pentafluorophenyl)boron-catalyzed domino hydrosilylation of substrates carrying unsaturated functionalities in a proximal arrangement is presented to produce silacycles. Excellent levels of efficiency and selectivity were achieved in the cyclization by the deliberate choice of the hydrosilane reagents. The key to successful cyclic hydrosilylation is the reactivity enhancement of the second intramolecular hydrosilylation by a proximity effect. Not only dienes but also enones, enynes, ynones and enimines readily afford medium-sized silacycles under convenient and mild conditions. The cyclization proceeds with acceptable diastereoselectivity mainly controlled by the conformational bias towards inducing additional stereogenic centers. The silacycles obtained from this reaction were converted to 1,n-diols or 1,n-amino alcohols upon oxidation, thus rendering the present cyclization a powerful tool for accessing synthetically valuable building blocks.

17 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This Review comprehensively highlights recent advances in intra- and intermolecular C-H amination reactions utilizing late transition metal-based catalysts using mechanistic scaffolds and types of reactions.
Abstract: Catalytic transformation of ubiquitous C–H bonds into valuable C–N bonds offers an efficient synthetic approach to construct N-functionalized molecules. Over the last few decades, transition metal catalysis has been repeatedly proven to be a powerful tool for the direct conversion of cheap hydrocarbons to synthetically versatile amino-containing compounds. This Review comprehensively highlights recent advances in intra- and intermolecular C–H amination reactions utilizing late transition metal-based catalysts. Initial discovery, mechanistic study, and additional applications were categorized on the basis of the mechanistic scaffolds and types of reactions. Reactivity and selectivity of novel systems are discussed in three sections, with each being defined by a proposed working mode.

1,481 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comprehensive overview on first row transition metal catalysts for C-H activation until summer 2018 is provided.
Abstract: C–H activation has surfaced as an increasingly powerful tool for molecular sciences, with notable applications to material sciences, crop protection, drug discovery, and pharmaceutical industries, among others. Despite major advances, the vast majority of these C–H functionalizations required precious 4d or 5d transition metal catalysts. Given the cost-effective and sustainable nature of earth-abundant first row transition metals, the development of less toxic, inexpensive 3d metal catalysts for C–H activation has gained considerable recent momentum as a significantly more environmentally-benign and economically-attractive alternative. Herein, we provide a comprehensive overview on first row transition metal catalysts for C–H activation until summer 2018.

1,417 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This Perspective highlights some of the most pressing challenges to be overcome from the industrial viewpoint — such as the development of reactions tolerating specific functionalities — and encourages stronger industry–academia relationships.
Abstract: Despite decades of ground-breaking research in academia, organic synthesis is still a rate-limiting factor in drug-discovery projects. Here we present some current challenges in synthetic organic chemistry from the perspective of the pharmaceutical industry and highlight problematic steps that, if overcome, would find extensive application in the discovery of transformational medicines. Significant synthesis challenges arise from the fact that drug molecules typically contain amines and N-heterocycles, as well as unprotected polar groups. There is also a need for new reactions that enable non-traditional disconnections, more C-H bond activation and late-stage functionalization, as well as stereoselectively substituted aliphatic heterocyclic ring synthesis, C-X or C-C bond formation. We also emphasize that syntheses compatible with biomacromolecules will find increasing use, while new technologies such as machine-assisted approaches and artificial intelligence for synthesis planning have the potential to dramatically accelerate the drug-discovery process. We believe that increasing collaboration between academic and industrial chemists is crucial to address the challenges outlined here.

761 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review provides an overview on the use of anodic electrochemical methods for expediting the development of carbon-hydrogen functionalization and carbon-nitrogen bond formation strategies and aims to provide inspiration for future synthetic applications in the field of electrosynthesis.
Abstract: Conventional methods for carrying out carbon–hydrogen functionalization and carbon–nitrogen bond formation are typically conducted at elevated temperatures, and rely on expensive catalysts as well as the use of stoichiometric, and perhaps toxic, oxidants. In this regard, electrochemical synthesis has recently been recognized as a sustainable and scalable strategy for the construction of challenging carbon–carbon and carbon–heteroatom bonds. Here, electrosynthesis has proven to be an environmentally benign, highly effective and versatile platform for achieving a wide range of nonclassical bond disconnections via generation of radical intermediates under mild reaction conditions. This review provides an overview on the use of anodic electrochemical methods for expediting the development of carbon–hydrogen functionalization and carbon–nitrogen bond formation strategies. Emphasis is placed on methodology development and mechanistic insight and aims to provide inspiration for future synthetic applications in the field of electrosynthesis.

626 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that electrochemical C-H activation has been identified as a more efficient strategy that exploits storable electricity in place of byproduct-generating chemical reagents.
Abstract: C–H activation has emerged as a transformative tool in molecular synthesis, but until recently oxidative C–H activations have largely involved the use of stoichiometric amounts of expensive and toxic metal oxidants, compromising the overall sustainable nature of C–H activation chemistry. In sharp contrast, electrochemical C–H activation has been identified as a more efficient strategy that exploits storable electricity in place of byproduct-generating chemical reagents. Thus, transition-metal catalysts were shown to enable versatile C–H activation reactions in a sustainable manner. While palladium catalysis set the stage for C(sp2)–H and C(sp3)–H functionalizations by N-containing directing groups, rhodium and ruthenium catalysts allowed the use of weakly coordinating amides and acids. In contrast to these precious 4d transition metals, the recent year has witnessed the emergence of versatile cobalt catalysts for C–H oxygenations, C–H nitrogenations, and C–C-forming [4+2] alkyne annulations. Thereby, the ...

445 citations