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Electrochemically activated carbon-halogen bond cleavage and C-C coupling monitored by in situ shell-isolated nanoparticle-enhanced Raman spectroscopy.

Chen-Chen JiangXiao-Chong LiJian-Ang FanJia-Ying FuXu-Nan Huang-FuJia-Jie LiJu-Fang ZhengXiao-Shun ZhouYa-Hao Wang
Published in: The Analyst (2022)
The electroreductive cleavage of carbon-halogen bonds has attracted increasing attention in both electrosynthesis and pollution remediation. Herein, by employing the in situ electrochemical shell-isolated nanoparticle-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SHINERS) technique, we have successfully investigated the electroreductive dehalogenation process of aryl halides with the thiol group on a smooth Au electrode in aqueous solution at different pH values. The obtained potential-dependent Raman spectra directly reveal a mixture of the reduction products 4,4'-biphenyldithiol (BPDT) and thiophenol (TP). The conversion ratios of the C-Cl and C-Br bonds at pH = 7 are 37% and 55%, respectively. Furthermore, quantitative analysis of the intensity variations of ν (C-Cl), ν (C-Br) and aromatic ν (CC) stretching modes suggests electroreductive dehalogenation via both direct electron transfer reduction and electrocatalytic hydrodehalogenation. Molecular evidence for the C-C cross coupling process through TP reaction with benzene free radical intermediates is found at negative potentials, which leads to the increasing selectivity of biphenyl products.
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