The rhodium(III)-catalyzed intermolecular C7-thiolation and selenation of indolines with disulfides and diselenides were developed. This protocol relies on the use of a removable pyrimidyl directing group to access valuable C-7 functionalized indoline scaffolds with ample substrate scope and broad functional group tolerance.
We predict three novel phases of the carbon nitride (CN) bilayer, denoted α-C2N2, β-C2N2 and γ-C4N4, respectively. All of them consist of two CN sheets connected by C-C covalent bonds. The phonon dispersions reveal that all these phases are dynamically stable, because no imaginary frequency is present. The transition pathway between α-C2N2 and β-C2N2 is investigated, which involves bond-breaking and bond-reforming between C and N. This conversion is difficult, since the activation energy barrier is 1.90 eV per unit cell, high enough to prevent the transformation at room temperature. Electronic structure calculations show that all three phases are semiconductors with indirect band gaps of 3.76/5.22 eV, 4.23/5.75 eV and 2.06/3.53 eV, respectively, by PBE/HSE calculation. The β-C2N2 has the widest band gap among the three phases. All three bilayers can become metallic under tensile strain, and the indirect gap of γ-C4N4 can turn into a direct one. γ-C4N4 can become an anisotropic Dirac semimetal under uniaxial tensile strain. Anisotropic Dirac cones with high Fermi velocity of the order of 105 m/s appear under 12% strain. Our results suggest that the three two-dimensional materials have potential applications in electronics, semiconductors, optics and spintronics.
A novel method to synthesize racemic
ferrocene[1,2-c]pyridine-3(4H)-ones
via Pd-catalyzed direct dehydrogenative
annulations of ferrocenecarboxamides with internal alkynes in air
has been developed. Both alkyl and aryl ferrocenecarboxamides can
be applied as effective substrates.
A sulfoxonium ylide directed C–H activation/alkynylsulfone annulation approach for the step-economical assembly of C3-sulfone substituted naphthols with high regioselectivity.
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