ABSTRACT
Aqueous solutions containing both the strong oxidant, peroxydisulfate (S2O82-), and the strong reductant, oxalate (C2O42-), are thermodynamically unstable due to the highly exothermic homogeneous redox reaction: S2O82- + C2O42- â 2 SO42- + 2 CO2 (ΔG0 = -490 kJ/mol). However, at room temperature, this reaction does not occur to a significant extent over the time scale of a day due to its inherently slow kinetics. We demonstrate that the S2O82-/C2O42- redox reaction occurs rapidly, once initiated by the Ru(NH3)62+-mediated 1e- reduction of S2O82- to form S2O83â¢-, which rapidly undergoes bond cleavage to form SO42- and the highly oxidizing radical SO4â¢-. Theoretically, the mediated electrochemical generation of a single molecule of S2O83â¢- can initiate an autocatalytic cycle that consumes both S2O82- and C2O42- in bulk solution. Several experimental demonstrations of S2O82-/C2O42- autocatalysis are presented. Differential electrochemical mass spectrometry measurements demonstrate that CO2 is generated in solution for at least 10 min following a 30-s initiation step. Quantitative bulk electrolysis of S2O82- in solutions containing excess C2O42- is initiated by electrogeneration of immeasurably small quantities of S2O83â¢-. Capture of CO2 as BaCO3 during electrolysis additionally confirms the autocatalytic generation of CO2. First-principles density functional theory calculations, ab initio molecular dynamics simulations, and finite difference simulations of cyclic voltammetric responses are presented that support and provide additional insights into the initiation and mechanism of S2O82-/C2O42- autocatalysis. Preliminary evidence indicates that autocatalysis also results in a chemical traveling reaction front that propagates into the solution normal to the planar electrode surface.
ABSTRACT
Alcohol oxidation is an important class of reaction that is traditionally performed under harsh conditions and most often requires the use of organometallic compounds or transition metal complexes as catalysts. Here, we introduce a new electrochemical synthetic method, referred to as reductive oxidation, in which alcohol oxidation is initiated by the redox-mediated electrocatalytic reduction of peroxydisulfate to generate the highly oxidizing sulfate radical anion. Thus, and counter-intuitively, alcohol oxidation occurs as a result of an electrochemical reduction reaction. This approach provides a selective synthetic route for the oxidation of alcohols carried out under mild conditions to aldehydes, ketones, and carboxylic acids with up to 99% conversion yields. First-principles density functional theory calculations, ab initio molecular dynamics simulations, cyclic voltammetry, and finite difference simulations are presented that support and provide additional insights into the S2O82--mediated oxidation of benzyl alcohol to benzaldehyde.
Subject(s)
Alcohols , Ketones , Alcohols/chemistry , Oxidation-Reduction , Ketones/chemistry , Catalysis , Aldehydes/chemistryABSTRACT
The "magic methyl" effect, a dramatic boost in the potency of biologically active compounds from the incorporation of a single methyl group, provides a simple yet powerful strategy employed by medicinal chemists in the drug discovery process. Despite significant advances, methodologies that enable the selective C(sp3)-H methylation of structurally complex medicinal agents remain very limited. In this work, we disclose a modular, efficient, and selective strategy for the α-methylation of protected amines (i.e., amides, carbamates, and sulfonamides) by means of electrochemical oxidation. Mechanistic analysis guided our development of an improved electrochemical protocol on the basis of the classic Shono oxidation reaction, which features broad reaction scope, high functional group compatibility, and operational simplicity. Importantly, this reaction system is amenable to the late-stage functionalization of complex targets containing basic nitrogen groups that are prevalent in medicinally active agents. When combined with organozinc-mediated C-C bond formation, our protocol enabled the direct methylation of a myriad of amine derivatives including those that have previously been explored for the "magic methyl" effect. This synthesis strategy thus circumvents multistep de novo synthesis that is currently necessary to access such compounds and has the potential to accelerate drug discovery efforts.
Subject(s)
Hydrogen , MethylationABSTRACT
The site-specific oxidation of strong C(sp3)-H bonds is of uncontested utility in organic synthesis. From simplifying access to metabolites and late-stage diversification of lead compounds to truncating retrosynthetic plans, there is a growing need for new reagents and methods for achieving such a transformation in both academic and industrial circles. One main drawback of current chemical reagents is the lack of diversity with regard to structure and reactivity that prevents a combinatorial approach for rapid screening to be employed. In that regard, directed evolution still holds the greatest promise for achieving complex C-H oxidations in a variety of complex settings. Herein we present a rationally designed platform that provides a step toward this challenge using N-ammonium ylides as electrochemically driven oxidants for site-specific, chemoselective C(sp3)-H oxidation. By taking a first-principles approach guided by computation, these new mediators were identified and rapidly expanded into a library using ubiquitous building blocks and trivial synthesis techniques. The ylide-based approach to C-H oxidation exhibits tunable selectivity that is often exclusive to this class of oxidants and can be applied to real-world problems in the agricultural and pharmaceutical sectors.
Subject(s)
Ammonium Compounds/chemistry , Electrochemical Techniques , Molecular Structure , Oxidation-ReductionABSTRACT
In the present study, stable sodium plating/stripping has been achieved on a bare aluminum current collector, without any surface modifications or artificial SEI deposition. The crucial role of predeposited sodium using cyclic voltammetry on bare aluminum as a matrix for plating/stripping has been highlighted using different protocols for cycling. The predeposition strategy ensures stable and efficient cycling of sodium in anode-free sodium batteries without dendritic formations. The study highlights the difference of sodium plating/stripping in carbonate and glyme solvent electrolytes on the bare aluminum current collector. Contrary to the carbonate solvent electrolyte, the cell with the tetraglyme solvent electrolyte and sodium loading of 1 mA h/cm2 has an overpotential under 20 mV during the sodium plating/stripping cycles at 0.5 mA/cm2 for a testing period of 650 h. Overpotentials under 40 and 100 mV have been achieved at current densities up to 1 and 2 mA/cm2 for loadings up to 5 and 10 mA h/cm2, respectively, for a testing time up to 1500 h. Density functional theory simulations have been performed to obtain the solvation energies, and the highest occupied molecular orbital-lowest unoccupied molecular orbital band gap of the solvent-sodium ion complexes for the glyme solvent electrolytes and their trends have been correlated with the experimental observations.