A. Cornia et al., ELECTRON-TRANSFER IN THE REACTIONS OF ORGANIC TRICHLOROMETHYL DERIVATIVES WITH IRON(II) CHLORIDE, Perkin transactions. 2, (10), 1993, pp. 1847-1853
Reduction of trichloromethyl derivatives RCCl3 [1, R = Ph;2, R = PhC(O
); 3, R = EtOC(O)] with iron(II) chloride in acetonitrile, has been st
udied in order to examine the mechanism of the electron transfer (ET)
process and the reactions of the radicals formed. Substrates 1-3 affor
ded different product compositions and the cause was identified as dif
ferences in the reactivity of radicals which is substantially of two t
ypes: reductive coupling and proton abstraction after further reductio
n to a carbanion coordinated to the metal ion. Compound 1 gave only co
upling products, compound 2 only hydrogenated products and compound 3
a mixture of coupling and hydrogenated products depending on experimen
tal conditions. Proton abstraction by the carbanion was found to occur
from water molecules, which should be present in the coordination she
ll of the metal ion, and not from the solvent. The different behaviour
of compounds 1-3 is attributed to the presence of substituents which
are able to stabilize the radical and carbanionic intermediates. Rate
constants at different temperatures were measured and the activation p
arameters calculated. The three substrates differ only slightly in rea
ction rates, in the order 1 > 2 > 3. Activation enthalpies are very cl
ose to each other and this agrees with the almost equal values of C-Cl
bond dissociation energies of compounds 1-3, empirically determined.
Large, negative entropies of activation were found, suggesting that an
ordered activation complex should be formed in order that electron tr
ansfer from the metal ion to the organic halide can take place.