Abstract

A flow-through four-electrode EPR spectroelectrochemical cell was developed which allowed the observation of silyl radical formation in apparently multielectron electrochemical processes, in which these species could not be detected directly because of the high driving force of their further reduction/oxidation leading to non-paramagnetic products. Silyl radicals thus generated were characterized by spin trapping with alpha-phenyl-N-tert-butyl nitrone (PBN), intramolecular spin trapping or by direct detection. The overall multielectron process is realized in the first, generating, compartment of the cell and the ionic species formed are then transformed into the corresponding radicals in the second compartment via a one-electron redox process in the opposite direction, e.g. two-electron reductions of Ph(3)SiCl or Et(3)SiCl followed by one-electron oxidation of the resulting Ph(3)Si(-) or Et(3)Si(-) anions (+2e/-e process). These radical species were then identified as their secondary paramagnetic products or by their spin trapping with PBN. Using (2-[cyclohex-3-enyl]ethyl)dimethyl chlorosilane in this process, the formation of the silicon-centered radical and its intramolecular addition across the internal double bond were evidenced by spin trapping. The reduction of electrophilic silicon intermediates issued from the oxidation of Ph(3)SiSiPh(3) (-2e/+2e process) resulted in Ph(3)Si* radicals trapped with PBN. The reduction of the electrochemically prepared persistent dication of a stable disilene, thiatetrasilacyclopentene, allowed generation of a disilene cation radical characterized by EPR.

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