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Tale of the Breslow intermediate, a central player in N-heterocyclic carbene organocatalysis: then and now.

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TLDR
The Breslow intermediate as discussed by the authors is formed by the nucleophilic addition of an NHC to a carbonyl group of a suitable electrophile, and it has been shown that a direct 1,2-proton transfer within the initial zwitterionic intermediate is energetically prohibitive and hence the participation of other species capable of promoting an assisted proton transfer is more likely.
Abstract
N-Heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) belong to the popular family of organocatalysts used in a wide range of reactions, including that for the synthesis of complex natural products and biologically active compounds. In their organocatalytic manifestation, NHCs are known to impart umpolung reactivity to aldehydes and ketones, which are then exploited in the generation of homoenolate, acyl anion, and enolate equivalents suitable for a plethora of reactions such as annulation, benzoin, Stetter, Claisen rearrangement, cycloaddition, and C–C and C–H bond functionalization reactions and so on. A common thread that runs through these NHC catalyzed reactions is the proposed involvement of an enaminol, also known as the Breslow intermediate, formed by the nucleophilic addition of an NHC to a carbonyl group of a suitable electrophile. In the emerging years of NHC catalysis, enaminol remained elusive and was largely considered a putative intermediate owing to the difficulties encountered in its isolation and characterization. However, in the last decade, synergistic efforts utilizing an array of computational and experimental techniques have helped in gaining important insights into the formation and characterization of Breslow intermediates. Computational studies have suggested that a direct 1,2-proton transfer within the initial zwitterionic intermediate, generated by the action of an NHC on the carbonyl carbon, is energetically prohibitive and hence the participation of other species capable of promoting an assisted proton transfer is more likely. The proton transfer assisted by additives (such as acids, bases, other species, or even a solvent) was found to ease the kinetics of formation of Breslow intermediates. These important details on the formation, in situ detection, isolation, and characterization of the Breslow intermediate are scattered over a series of reports spanning well over a decade, and we intend to consolidate them in this review and provide a critical assessment of these developments. Given the central role of the Breslow intermediate in organocatalytic reactions, this treatise is expected to serve as a valuable source of knowledge on the same.

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Biocatalysis making waves in organic chemistry

TL;DR: A review of the consequences of these waves of development can be found in this article , where the authors reviewed the recent developments of biocatalysis and their impact on chemical synthesis.
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Critical Assessment of the Reducing Ability of Breslow-type Derivatives and Implications for Carbene-Catalyzed Radical Reactions*.

TL;DR: In this paper, the synthesis of acyl azolium salts stemming from thiazolylidenes CNS, triazolylidees CTN, mesoionic carbenes CMIC and the generation of their corresponding radicals and enolates, covering about 60 Breslow-type derivatives.
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Dark and Light Reactions of Carbenes─Merging Carbene Transfer Reactions with N-Heterocyclic Carbene Catalysis for the Synthesis of Hydroxamic Acid Esters

TL;DR: In this paper , visible light and N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) jointly promoted multicomponent carbene transfer reactions and two kinds of important hydroxamic acid esters were obtained in good yields depending on reaction media used.
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Non-Stabilized Vinyl Anion Equivalents from Styrenes by N-Heterocyclic Carbene Catalysis and Its Use in Catalytic Nucleophilic Aromatic Substitution.

TL;DR: In this paper , a protocol for the catalytic nucleophilic activation of unactivated styrenes is reported, which enables the generation of a non-stabilized alkenyl anion equivalent as a transient intermediate.
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Unraveling the mechanism and substituent effects on the N-heterocyclic carbene-catalyzed transformation reaction of enals and imines

TL;DR: In this article , an intramolecular hydrogen bond-promoted activation of imines represents a new strategy in annulation reactions catalyzed by N-heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs).
References
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A stable crystalline carbene

TL;DR: Synthese, structure et caracterisation du (1,3-bis [1-adamantyl]-2, 3-dihydro)-2,carbenoimidazole prepare par deprotonation du chlorure de (1 3-bis] [1]- imidazolium as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

An overview of N-heterocyclic carbenes

TL;DR: A concise overview of N-heterocyclic carbenes in modern chemistry is provided, summarizing their general properties and uses and highlighting how these features are being exploited in a selection of pioneering recent studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organocatalysis by N-Heterocyclic Carbenes

TL;DR: The inversion of the classical reactivity (Umpolung) opens up new synthetic pathways in biochemical processes as nucleophilic acylations and in nature, the coenzyme thiamine (vitamin B1), a natural thiazolium salt, utilizes a catalytic variant of this concept in biochemical process as nucleophile acylation.
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