Thioethers, often found in pharmaceuticals
and natural
compounds,
typically involve metal cross-coupling reactions, high temperatures,
and the use of disagreeable thiols for their synthesis. Here we present
a straightforward, thiol-free organocatalytic protocol that uses mild
conditions to stitch together inexpensive alcohols and aryl chlorides,
yielding a diverse array of aryl alkyl thioethers. Central to this
approach was the discovery that tetramethylthiourea can serve as a
simple sulfur source upon intercepting photochemically generated aryl
radicals. To form radicals, we used a readily available indole thiolate
organocatalyst that, when excited with 405 nm light, gained a strongly
reducing power, enabling the activation of typically unreactive aryl
chlorides via single-electron transfer. Radical trapping by the thiourea,
followed by an alcohol attack via a polar path, resulted in the formation
of thioether products