Litcius/Paper detail

Electrocatalysis with Molecular Transition-Metal Complexes for Reductive Organic Synthesis

Nicolas Kaeffer, Walter Leitner

2022JACS Au56 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Electrocatalysis enables the formation or cleavage of chemical bonds by a genuine use of electrons or holes from an electrical energy input. As such, electrocatalysis offers resource-economical alternative pathways that bypass sacrificial, waste-generating reagents often required in classical thermal redox reactions. In this Perspective, we showcase the exploitation of molecular electrocatalysts for electrosynthesis, in particular for reductive conversion of organic substrates. Selected case studies illustrate that efficient molecular electrocatalysts not only are appropriate redox shuttles but also embrace the features of organometallic catalysis to facilitate and control chemical steps. From these examples, guidelines are proposed for the design of molecular electrocatalysts suited to the reduction of organic substrates. We finally expose opportunities brought by catalyzed electrosynthesis to functionalize organic backbones, namely using sustainable building blocks.

Topics & Concepts

ElectrocatalystElectrosynthesisRedoxNanotechnologyCatalysisCombinatorial chemistryReagentOrganic synthesisTransition metalChemistryMaterials scienceElectrochemistryOrganic chemistryElectrodePhysical chemistryRadical Photochemical ReactionsCO2 Reduction Techniques and CatalystsElectrochemical Analysis and Applications