Abstract

The reductive cleavage of chloro- and polychloroacetamides in N,N-dimethylformamide gives new insights into the nature of the in-cage ion radical cluster formed upon dissociative electron transfer. Within the family of compounds investigated, the electrochemical reduction leads to the successive expulsion of chloride ions. At each stage the electron transfer is concerted with the breaking of the C-Cl bond and acts as the rate-determining step. The reduction further leads to the formation of the corresponding carbanion with the injection of a second electron, which is in turn protonated by a weak acid added to the solution. From the joint use of cyclic voltammetric data, the sticky dissociative electron-transfer model and quantum ab initio calculations, the interaction energies within the cluster fragments (*R, Cl-) resulting from the first electron transfer to the parent RCl molecule are obtained. It is shown that the stability of these adducts, which should be viewed as an essentially electrostatic radical-ion pair, is mainly controlled by the intensity of the dipole moment of the remaining radical part and may eventually be strengthened by the formation of an intramolecular hydrogen bond, as is the case with 2-chloroacetamide.

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