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Abstract
Electrochemical catalytic reductive cross couplings are powerful and sustainable methods to construct C−C bonds by using electron as the clean reductant. However, activated substrates are used in most cases. Herein, we report a general and practical electro-reductive Ni-catalytic system, realizing the electrocatalytic carboxylation of unactivated aryl chlorides and alkyl bromides with CO2. A variety of unactivated aryl bromides, iodides and sulfonates can also undergo such a reaction smoothly. Notably, we also realize the catalytic electrochemical carboxylation of aryl (pseudo)halides with CO2 avoiding the use of sacrificial electrodes. Moreover, this sustainable and economic strategy with electron as the clean reductant features mild conditions, inexpensive catalyst, safe and cheap electrodes, good functional group tolerance and broad substrate scope. Mechanistic investigations indicate that the reaction might proceed via oxidative addition of aryl halides to Ni(0) complex, the reduction of aryl-Ni(II) adduct to the Ni(I) species and following carboxylation with CO2.
Electrochemistry is a promising approach to make existing chemical protocols milder, but many simple transformations of feedstocks are still out of reach. Here, the authors transform unactivated aryl and alkyl (pseudo)halides into carboxylic acids, via nickel catalysis and electricity, using atmospheric CO2 as the carbon source.
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Details

1 Sichuan University, Key Laboratory of Green Chemistry & Technology of Ministry of Education, College of Chemistry, Chengdu, China (GRID:grid.13291.38) (ISNI:0000 0001 0807 1581)
2 Chengdu University, College of Pharmacy and Biological Engineering, Chengdu, China (GRID:grid.411292.d) (ISNI:0000 0004 1798 8975)
3 Sichuan University, Key Laboratory of Green Chemistry & Technology of Ministry of Education, College of Chemistry, Chengdu, China (GRID:grid.13291.38) (ISNI:0000 0001 0807 1581); Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, Beijing, P. R. China (GRID:grid.454727.7)