Room Temperature Electro-carboxylation of Styrene and Stilbene Derivatives: A Comparative Study.
Date
2023
Authors
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
University of Glasgow
Abstract
The use of carbon dioxide as a comparatively cheap, abundant and non-toxic C-1 synthon is a topic of considerable interest and importance. The electrochemical addition of carbon dioxide across carbon–carbon double
bonds is one of the more promising of such procedures, offering the possibility to convert a range of alkene
substrates to valuable carboxylated products. However, much remains unknown about both the mechanism of
reaction and how to influence product specificity during electro-carboxylation of alkenes. Herein, we explore the
electrochemical addition of carbon dioxide (1 atm) to a range of olefinic substrates using nickel working electrodes and magnesium anodes at room temperature, producing the mono-substituted carboxylate derivatives
preferentially (with no formation of the Markovnikov isomers of these mono-substituted carboxylate derivatives
when the starting materials are non-symmetrical). These findings are rationalized using both experimental and
computational methods, suggesting that the choice of Ni as a working electrode is critical in determining the
reaction outcomes that are observed. Moreover, we also present direct evidence that a pathway whereby the
alkene substrates are first reduced at the electrode surface and then react with dissolved CO2 is operating.
Together, these results offer the potential for selective access to a range of valuable mono-carboxylic acids via the
reduction of the corresponding alkene precursors in the presence of carbon dioxide.
Description
Keywords
Electro-carboxylation, Carbon dioxide reduction, Alkene electrocarboxylation, Styrene, Stilbene, Carbon, Carbon fixation, Global warming, Electrochemistry, Electro-catalysts, Electro-organosynthesis