Seka Sylvaine, Buriez Olivier, Périchon Jacques
Laboratoire d'Electrochimie Catalyse et Synthèse Organique, UMR CNRS 7582, Université Paris 12, 2 - 8 rue H. Dunant, 94320 Thiais, France.
Chemistry. 2003 Aug 4;9(15):3597-603. doi: 10.1002/chem.200204604.
The study of the electrochemical behavior of cobalt(II) bromide (CoBr(2)) in pure acetonitrile allowed us to demonstrate that Co(2+) is the catalyst precursor involved in the electrochemical and chemical conversions of arylhalides, ArX, to arylzinc compounds in that solvent. The reduction of Co(2+) leads to the Co(+) species, which disproportionates too rapidly to react further with aryl halides. However, the presence of zinc(II) bromide allows us to stabilize the electrogenerated cobalt(I) and to observe it on the timescale of slow cyclic voltammetry. Under such conditions, the Co(I) species has time to react with aryl halides and produce Co(III)ArX complexes that are reduced into [Co(II)ArX] by a single electron uptake at the same potential at which Co(2+) is reduced. Rate constants for the oxidative addition of ArX to Co(I) have been determined for various aryl halides and compared to the values obtained in an acetonitrile (ACN)/pyridine (9:1, v/v) mixture. It is shown that Co(I) is stabilized more by ZnBr(2) than by pyridine. A transmetallation reaction between [Co(II)ArX] and ZnBr(2) has also been observed. We finally propose a mechanism for the cobalt-catalyzed electrochemical conversion of aryl bromides into organozinc species in pure acetonitrile.