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Home - Chemistry - A Fluorine-Fuelled Shortcut to Complex Molecular Cages

Chemistry

A Fluorine-Fuelled Shortcut to Complex Molecular Cages

Last updated: January 29, 2026 6:30 am
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A Fluorine-Fuelled Shortcut to Complex Molecular Cages

Chemists have unlocked a thermally driven reaction to build complex, bridged bicyclic molecules—a common structural motif in pharmaceuticals—by strategically placing fluorine atoms on alkenes. This method overcomes a long-standing “thermally forbidden” rule in organic synthesis, enabling an intramolecular [2+2] cycloaddition that efficiently creates rigid, three-dimensional scaffolds containing gem-difluoro groups.

Why it might matter to you:
This synthetic strategy provides a direct route to novel, fluorine-containing bicyclic scaffolds, which are highly relevant for probing new chemical space in drug discovery. For a medicinal chemist, it offers a practical tool to rapidly construct and evaluate three-dimensional core structures that could lead to compounds with improved metabolic stability and target binding.


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