TRANSITION METAL-CATALYZED C–H FUNCTIONALIZATION IN ORGANIC SYNTHESIS: MECHANISMS, SELECTIVITY CONTROL, AND GREEN CHEMISTRY APPLICATIONS
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.55640/Keywords:
C–H functionalization, C–H activation, palladium catalysis, directing groups, concerted metalation-deprotonation, rhodium catalysis, photoredox, green chemistry, atom economy, E-factor, organic synthesis, heterocyclesAbstract
Background: C–H functionalization—the direct transformation of ubiquitous C–H bonds into C–C, C–N, C–O, or C–halide bonds without pre-installed leaving groups—represents one of the most atom-economical strategies in modern organic synthesis. By eliminating multi-step prefunctionalization sequences required in classical cross-coupling, C–H activation dramatically reduces synthetic step counts, waste generation (E-factor), and production costs in pharmaceutical and fine chemical manufacturing.
Objective: To provide a concise evidence-based review of the principal mechanistic pathways of transition metal-catalyzed C–H functionalization, selectivity control strategies (directing groups, steric and electronic differentiation), sustainability metrics, and key applications in the synthesis of pharmaceuticals and natural products.
Methods: A systematic review of eight primary peer-reviewed sources—including original research articles, Nobel lecture reviews, and authoritative chemical communications published between 1993 and 2024—was conducted.
Results: Palladium-catalyzed directed C–H functionalization achieves regioselectivities > 95:5 and yields of 60–95% with catalyst loadings of 1–5 mol%. Rhodium(III)-catalyzed C–H/alkyne annulations produce heterocyclic scaffolds with atom economies of 88–97%. Iron- and copper-catalyzed C–H oxidations provide cost-effective green alternatives with E-factors of 3–8. Photoredox-assisted C–H functionalization enables reactions at ambient temperature under visible light irradiation with excellent functional group tolerance.
Conclusion: Transition metal-catalyzed C–H functionalization has matured from a mechanistic curiosity into a practical synthetic tool, offering step-economical routes to complex molecules. Integration with photoredox catalysis, earth-abundant metal systems, and continuous flow processing positions C–H activation as a cornerstone of sustainable organic synthesis.
Downloads
References
1.Trost, B. M. (1991). The atom economy—A search for synthetic efficiency. Science, 254(5037), 1471–1477. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1962206
2.Crabtree, R. H. (2004). Alkane C–H activation and functionalization with homogeneous transition metal catalysts: A century of progress—A new millennium in prospect. Journal of the Chemical Society, Dalton Transactions, (18), 3245–3251. https://doi.org/10.1039/B405890F
3.Murai, S., Kakiuchi, F., Sekine, S., Tanaka, Y., Kamatani, A., Sonoda, M., & Chatani, N. (1993). Efficient catalytic addition of aromatic carbon-hydrogen bonds to olefins. Nature, 366(6455), 529–531. https://doi.org/10.1038/366529a0
4.Campeau, L.-C., & Fagnou, K. (2011). Applications of concerted metalation-deprotonation (CMD) in synthesis, total synthesis and drug discovery research. Chemical Communications, 47(30), 8257–8260. https://doi.org/10.1039/C1CC13244C
5.Cernak, T., Dykstra, K. D., Tyagarajan, S., Vachal, P., & Krska, S. W. (2016). The medicinal chemist's toolbox for late stage functionalization of drug-like molecules. Chemical Society Reviews, 45(3), 546–576. https://doi.org/10.1039/C5CS00628G
6.Lyons, T. W., & Sanford, M. S. (2010). Palladium-catalyzed ligand-directed C–H functionalization reactions. Chemical Reviews, 110(2), 1147–1169. https://doi.org/10.1021/cr900184e
7.Zuo, Z., Ahneman, D. T., Chu, L., Terrett, J. A., Doyle, A. G., & MacMillan, D. W. C. (2014). Merging photoredox with nickel catalysis: Unconventional C(sp³)–C(sp²) bond formation. Science, 345(6195), 437–440. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1255525
8.Yoshino, T., & Glorius, F. (2022). C–H activation for heterocycle synthesis. JACS Au, 2(4), 782–797. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacsau.1c00567
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Authors retain the copyright of their manuscripts, and all Open Access articles are disseminated under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 (CC-BY), which licenses unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided that the original work is appropriately cited. The use of general descriptive names, trade names, trademarks, and so forth in this publication, even if not specifically identified, does not imply that these names are not protected by the relevant laws and regulations.

Germany
United States of America
Italy
United Kingdom
France
Canada
Uzbekistan
Japan
Republic of Korea
Australia
Spain
Switzerland
Sweden
Netherlands
China
India