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Chalcogen Bonding Catalysis: Tellurium, the Last Frontier?

Patrick Pale, Victor Mamane

2023Chemistry - A European Journal70 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chalcogen bonding (ChB) is the non-covalent interaction occurring between chalcogen atoms as Lewis acid sites and atoms or groups of atoms able to behave as Lewis bases through their lone pair or π electrons. Analogously to its sister halogen bonding, the high directionality of this interaction was implemented for precise structural organizations in the solid state and in solution. Regarding catalysis, ChB is now accepted as a new mode of activation as demonstrated by the increased number of examples in the last five years. In the family of ChB catalysts, those based on tellurium rapidly appeared to overcome their lighter sulfur and selenium counterparts. In this review, we highlight the Lewis acid properties of tellurium-based derivatives in solution and summarize the start-of-the-art of their applications in catalysis.

Topics & Concepts

ChalcogenTelluriumLone pairLewis acids and basesCatalysisChemistryCovalent bondSulfurHalogenHalogen bondSeleniumCrystallographyComputational chemistryOrganic chemistryMoleculeAlkylOrganoselenium and organotellurium chemistryCrystallography and molecular interactionsOrganic Chemistry Cycloaddition Reactions
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