Abstract

C−H activation has emerged as one of the most efficient tools for the formation of carbon–carbon and carbon–heteroatom bonds, avoiding the use of prefunctionalized materials. In spite of tremendous progress in the field, stoichiometric quantities of toxic and/or costly chemical redox reagents, such as silver(I) or copper(II) salts, are largely required for oxidative C−H activations. Recently, electrosynthesis has experienced a remarkable renaissance that enables the use of storable, safe and waste‐free electric current as a redox equivalent. While major recent momentum was gained in electrocatalyzed C−H activations by 4d and 5d metals, user‐friendly and inexpensive nickela‐electrocatalysis has until recently proven elusive for oxidative C−H activations. Herein, the early developments of nickela‐electrocatalyzed reductive cross‐electrophile couplings as well as net‐redox‐neutral cross‐couplings are first introduced. The focus of this Minireview is, however, the recent emergence of nickel‐catalyzed electrooxidative C−H activations until April 2020.

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