Electrosynthesis in organic chemistry is the synthesis of chemical compounds in a electrochemical cell[1][2] The main advantage of electrosynthesis over an ordinary redox reaction is avoidance of the potential wasteful other half-reaction and the ability to precisely tune the required potential. Electrosynthesis is actively studied as a science and also has many industrial applications.
Electrosynthesis is carried out with constant potential or constant current.
Reactions
Organic oxidations take place at the anode with initial formation of radical cations as reactive intermediates. Compounds are reduced at the cathode to radical anions. The initial reaction takes place at the surface of the electrode and then the intermediates diffuse into the solution where they participate in secondary reactions.
A variation is called the non-Kolbe reaction when a heteroatom (nitrogen or oxygen) is present at the α-position. The intermediate oxonium ion is trapped by a nucleophile usually solvent.
In the so-called Crum Brown-Walker reaction an aliphatic dicarboxylic acid is oxidized forming the elongated di-acid, for example the formation of the dimethyl ester of decanedioic acid from methyl hydrogen hexanedioate[3]
Amides can be oxidized through a N-acyliminium ion which can be captured by a nucleophile:
This reaction type is called a Shono oxidation. An example is the α-methoxylation of N-carbomethoxypyrrolidine[4]
Oxidation of a carbanion can lead to a coupling reaction for instance in the electrosynthesis of the tetramethyl ester of ethanetetracarboxylic acid from the corresponding malonate ester [5]
Cathodic reductions
The cathodic hydroisomerization of activated olefins is applied industrially in the synthesis of adiponitrile from 2 equivalents of acrylonitrile:
^The application of cathodic reductions and anodic oxidations in the synthesis of complex molecules Jeffrey B. Sperry and Dennis L. Wright Chem. Soc. Rev., 2006, 35, 605 - 621, doi:10.1039/b512308a
^Topics in current chemistry. Electrochemistry, Vol. 3 (Topics in Current Chemistry, Vol. 148) E. Steckhan (Ed), Springer, NY 1988.