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Carboxylate breaks the arene C–H bond via a hydrogen-atom-transfer mechanism in electrochemical cobalt catalysis†

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Combined computational and experimental studies elucidated the distinctive mechanistic features of electrochemical cobalt-catalyzed C–H oxygenation. A sequential electrochemical–chemical (EC) process was identified for the formation of an amidylcobalt(iii) intermediate. The… Click to show full abstract

Combined computational and experimental studies elucidated the distinctive mechanistic features of electrochemical cobalt-catalyzed C–H oxygenation. A sequential electrochemical–chemical (EC) process was identified for the formation of an amidylcobalt(iii) intermediate. The synthesis, characterization, cyclic voltammetry studies, and stoichiometric reactions of the related amidylcobalt(iii) intermediate suggested that a second on-cycle electro-oxidation occurs on the amidylcobalt(iii) species, which leads to a formal Co(iv) intermediate. This amidylcobalt(iv) intermediate is essentially a cobalt(iii) complex with one additional single electron distributed on the coordinating heteroatoms. The radical nature of the coordinating pivalate allows the formal Co(iv) intermediate to undergo a novel carboxylate-assisted HAT mechanism to cleave the arene C–H bond, and a CMD mechanism could be excluded for a Co(iii/i) catalytic scenario. The mechanistic understanding of electrochemical cobalt-catalyzed C–H bond activation highlights the multi-tasking electro-oxidation and the underexplored reaction channels in electrochemical transition metal catalysis.

Keywords: carboxylate; electrochemical cobalt; cobalt; mechanism; arene bond

Journal Title: Chemical Science
Year Published: 2020

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