What is it about?
The development of practical, efficient and atom-economical methods of formation of carbon-phosphorus bonds remains a topic of considerable interest for the current synthetic organic chemistry and electrochemistry. This review summarizes selected topics from the recent publications with particular emphasis on phosphine and phosphine oxides formation from white phosphorus, chlorophosphines in electrocatalytic processes using aryl, hetaryl or perfluoroalkyl halides as reagents. This review includes selected highlights concerning recent progress in modification of catalytic systems for aromatic C-H bonds phosphonation involving metal-catalyzed ligand directed or metal-induced oxidative processes. Furthermore, a part of this review is devoted to phosphorylation of olefins with white phosphorus under reductive conditions in water-organic media. Finally, we have also documented recent advances in ferrocene C-H activation and phosphorylation.
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Why is it important?
Combining electrochemistry with homogeneous catalysis offers many interesting opportunities for the direct application to the synthesis of organophosphorus derivatives
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This page is a summary of: Eco-efficient electrocatalytic C–P bond formation, Pure and Applied Chemistry, March 2017, De Gruyter,
DOI: 10.1515/pac-2016-1001.
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