J

Jacob T. Edwards

Southwestern Medical Center

ORCID: 0000-0002-7585-2844

Publishes on Crystallization and Solubility Studies, X-ray Diffraction in Crystallography, Radical Photochemical Reactions. 66 papers and 4.9k citations.

66Publications
4.9kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Radicals: Reactive Intermediates with Translational Potential
Ming Yan, Julian C. Lo, Jacob T. Edwards et al.|Journal of the American Chemical Society|2016
Cited by 1.1kOpen Access

This Perspective illustrates the defining characteristics of free radical chemistry, beginning with its rich and storied history. Studies from our laboratory are discussed along with recent developments emanating from others in this burgeoning area. The practicality and chemoselectivity of radical reactions enable rapid access to molecules of relevance to drug discovery, agrochemistry, material science, and other disciplines. Thus, these reactive intermediates possess inherent translational potential, as they can be widely used to expedite scientific endeavors for the betterment of humankind.

A general alkyl-alkyl cross-coupling enabled by redox-active esters and alkylzinc reagents
Tian Qin, Josep Cornellà, Chao Li et al.|Science|2016
Cited by 738

Alkyl carboxylic acids are ubiquitous in all facets of chemical science, from natural products to polymers, and represent an ideal starting material with which to forge new connections. This study demonstrates how the same activating principles used for decades to make simple C-N (amide) bonds from carboxylic acids with loss of water can be used to make C-C bonds through coupling with dialkylzinc reagents and loss of carbon dioxide. This disconnection strategy benefits from the use of a simple, inexpensive nickel catalyst and exhibits a remarkably broad scope across a range of substrates (>70 examples).

Practical Ni-Catalyzed Aryl–Alkyl Cross-Coupling of Secondary Redox-Active Esters
Josep Cornellà, Jacob T. Edwards, Tian Qin et al.|Journal of the American Chemical Society|2016
Cited by 459Open Access

A new transformation is presented that enables chemists to couple simple alkyl carboxylic acids with aryl zinc reagents under Ni-catalysis. The success of this reaction hinges on the unique use of redox-active esters that allow one to employ such derivatives as alkyl halides surrogates. The chemistry exhibits broad substrate scope and features a high degree of practicality. The simple procedure and extremely inexpensive nature of both the substrates and pre-catalyst (NiCl2·6H2O, ca. $9.5/mol) bode well for the immediate widespread adoption of this method.

Fe-Catalyzed C–C Bond Construction from Olefins via Radicals
Julian C. Lo, Dongyoung Kim, Chung‐Mao Pan et al.|Journal of the American Chemical Society|2017
Cited by 426Open Access

This Article details the development of the iron-catalyzed conversion of olefins to radicals and their subsequent use in the construction of C-C bonds. Optimization of a reductive diene cyclization led to the development of an intermolecular cross-coupling of electronically-differentiated donor and acceptor olefins. Although the substitution on the donor olefins was initially limited to alkyl and aryl groups, additional efforts culminated in the expansion of the scope of the substitution to various heteroatom-based functionalities, providing a unified olefin reactivity. A vinyl sulfone acceptor olefin was developed, which allowed for the efficient synthesis of sulfone adducts that could be used as branch points for further diversification. Moreover, this reactivity was extended into an olefin-based Minisci reaction to functionalize heterocyclic scaffolds. Finally, mechanistic studies resulted in a more thorough understanding of the reaction, giving rise to the development of a more efficient second-generation set of olefin cross-coupling conditions.