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Pyridine electroreduction

Several metallophthalocyanines have been reported to be active toward the electroreduction of C02 in aqueous electrolyte especially when immobilized on an electrode surface.125-127 CoPc and, to a lesser extent, NiPc appear to be the most active phthalocyanine complexes in this respect. Several techniques have been used for their immobilization.128,129 In a typical experiment, controlled potential electrolysis conducted with such modified electrodes at —1.0 vs. SCE (pH 5) leads to CO as the major reduction product (rj = 60%) besides H2, although another study indicates that HCOO is mainly obtained.129 It has been more recently shown that the reduction selectivity is improved when the CoPc is incorporated in a polyvinyl pyridine membrane (ratio of CO to H2 around 6 at pH 5). This was ascribed to the nature of the membrane which is coordinative and weakly basic. The microenvironment around CoPc provided by partially protonated pyridine species was suggested to be important.130,131 The mechanism of C02 reduction on CoPc is thought to involve the initial formation of a hydride derivative followed by its reduction associated with the insertion of C02.128... [Pg.482]

Nickel-bpy and nickel-pyridine catalytic systems have been applied to numerous electroreductive reactions,202 such as synthesis of ketones by heterocoupling of acyl and benzyl halides,210,213 addition of aryl bromides to activated alkenes,212,214 synthesis of conjugated dienes, unsaturated esters, ketones, and nitriles by homo- and cross-coupling involving alkenyl halides,215 reductive polymerization of aromatic and heteroaromatic dibromides,216-221 or cleavage of the C-0 bond in allyl ethers.222... [Pg.486]

The electroreduction of deactivated pyridines or pyridinium salts affords selectively the corresponding 1,2- or 1,4-dihydropyridine derivatives according to the position of the substituents (Schemes 133 and 134) [243]. In the same experimental conditions a monoactivated pyridine is not reducible. [Pg.382]

Cobaloxime(I), electrochemically regenerated from chloro(pyridine)-cobaloxime (III) (232), has been employed as a mediator in the reductive cleavage of the C—Br bond of 2-bromoalkyl 2-alkynyl ethers (253), giving (254) through radical trapping ofthe internal olefin (Scheme 95) [390]. An interesting feature of the radical cyclization (253) (254) is the reaction in methanol, unlike the trialkyltin hydride-promoted radical reactions that need an aprotic nonpolar solvent. An improved procedure for the electroreductive radical cyclization of (253) has been attained by the combined use of cobaloxime(III) (232) and a zinc plate as a sacrificial anode in an undivided cell [391]. The procedure is advantageous in terms of the turnover of the catalyst and the convenience of the operation. [Pg.552]

TaUe 10. Electroreductive arylation of activated olefins using Ni-pyridine as catalyst... [Pg.158]

The pyridine ring is easily reduced in the form of its quaternary salts to give hexahydro derivatives by catalytic hydrogenation [446], and to tetrahydro and hexahydro derivatives by reduction with alane aluminum hydride) [447], sodium aluminum hydride [448], sodium bis 2-methoxyethoxy)aluminum hydride [448], sodium borohydride [447], potassium borohydride [449], sodium in ethanol [444, 450], and formic acid [318]. Reductions with hydrides give predominantly 1,2,5,6-tetrahydro derivatives while electroreduction and reduction with formic acid give more hexahydro derivatives [451,452]. [Pg.56]

Electroreduction of the cobalt(II) salt in a mixture of either dimethylform-amide-pyridine or acetonitrile-pyridine as solvent, often in the presence of bipyridine, produces a catalytically active cobalt(I) complex which is believed to be cobalt(I) bromide with attached bipyridine ligands (or pyridine moieties in the absence of bipyridine). As quickly as it is electrogenerated, the active catalyst reduces an aryl halide, after which the resulting aryl radical can undergo coupling with an acrylate ester [141], a different aryl halide (to form a biaryl compound) [142], an activated olefin [143], an allylic carbonate [144], an allylic acetate [144, 145], or a... [Pg.551]

The formation of arylzinc reagents can also be accomplished by using electrochemical methods. With a sacrificial zinc anode and in the presence of nickel 2,2-bipyridyl, polyfunctional zinc reagents of type 36 can be prepared in excellent yields (Scheme 14) . An electrochemical conversion of aryl halides to arylzinc compounds can also be achieved by a cobalt catalysis in DMF/pyridine mixture . The mechanism of this reaction has been carefully studied . This method can also be applied to heterocyclic compounds such as 2- or 3-chloropyridine and 2- or 3-bromothiophenes . Zinc can also be elec-trochemically activated and a mixture of zinc metal and small amounts of zinc formed by electroreduction of zinc halides are very reactive toward a-bromoesters and allylic or benzylic bromides . ... [Pg.295]

Second, the electroreduction of Co2+ (at —0.86 V/SCE) which is initially irreversible becomes reversible in the presence of zinc salts. Under these conditions, the electrogenerated Co+ species has a life-time estimated at several seconds. Consequently, it is more stable towards the disproportionation reaction than the cobalt species generated in the presence of pyridine used as ligand. [Pg.784]

In several examples the reductive halide-hydrogen exchange has been studied on a preparative scale. For example, the indirect electroreduction of 2-chloropyridine in DMF using anthracene as mediator gives pyridine in 83-86 % yield 2 . For the dehalogenation of 1-chlorohexane (80% yield), naphthalene is applied as redox catalyst. Similarly, 6-chloro-hexene yields 1-hexene (60%) and methylcyclopentane (25%), which is the product of the radical cyclization . The indirect electrochemical reduction of p- and y-bromocarboxylic esters forms coupling and elimination products besides the dehalogenated products... [Pg.46]

One should also mention the work on electroreduction of t-nitrobutane in AN, DMF, DMSO and pyridine by Corrigan and Evans [182]. The results obtained were not in agreement with the dielectric continuum theory. They explained their results by ion-pairing between the anion radical product and cations of the background electrolyte. [Pg.253]

Electroreduction of pyridine derivatives bearing carboxylic acid derivatives (117 Scheme 23) leads to a variety of products from substituent transformation through ring reduction to ring cleavage. ... [Pg.592]

Selective cathodic reduction of pyridines is a process of great industrial significanee [171]. As an example, dimethyl pyridinedicarboxylates undergo a highly selective electroreduction in methanol by use of a divided cell. The product obtained depends on the position of the substituents. Thus, the 2,3- and 2,5-dicarboxylates give the 1,2-dihydropyridines whereas the 2,6-, 3,4- and 2,4-dicarboxylates the 1,4-dihydropyridines [172]. Many other ring reductions of azines (often with dimerization as a side-reaction, see Section 6.4.3) are discussed in electrochemistry texts and reviews [116]. Attempts have been made to rationalize the herbicidal properties of dipyridinium salts in terms of their cathodic behavior [173]. [Pg.1037]


See other pages where Pyridine electroreduction is mentioned: [Pg.260]    [Pg.68]    [Pg.249]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.536]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.930]    [Pg.44]    [Pg.556]    [Pg.1052]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.430]    [Pg.269]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.68]    [Pg.595]    [Pg.1028]    [Pg.767]    [Pg.68]    [Pg.111]    [Pg.930]    [Pg.184]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.55 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.37 , Pg.183 ]




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