Praveen P. Singha,
Jaya Singhb and
Vishal Srivastava*c
aDepartment of Chemistry, United College of Engineering & Research, Naini, Prayagraj, 211010, India. E-mail: ppsingh23@gmail.com
bDepartment of Chemistry, LRPG College, Sahibabad, Gaziabad, Uttar Pradesh, India
cDepartment of Chemistry, CMP Degree College, University of Allahabad, Prayagraj, 211002, Uttar Pradesh, India. E-mail: vishalgreenchem@gmail.com
First published on 13th February 2024
Correction for ‘Visible-light acridinium-based organophotoredox catalysis in late-stage synthetic applications’ by Praveen P. Singh et al., RSC Adv., 2023, 13, 10958–10986, https://doi.org/10.1039/D3RA01364B
It should be shown as below:
The plausible mechanism as proposed by Nicewicz and co-workers is depicted in Scheme 39. According to this mechanism, if “ketone first” reduction is operative, a ketyl radical 72A is formed, which can undergo a radical 5-exo-trig cyclization with the corresponding olefin to provide a carbon-centered radical 72C. Then, terminal HAT can occur to give the corresponding cyclized product 73. Alternatively, when “olefin first” reduction occurs, they proposed that the olefin radical anion 72B formed, can undergo a two-electron attack at the carbonyl to generate 72C. Subsequent HAT from either DIPEA or 1,4-CHD can trap out the corresponding cycloadduct 73.67
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