Kochi was born to Japanese immigrant parents on May 17, 1927, in Los Angeles, California, where he and his family had lived until he and his family were imprisoned at the Gila River War Relocation Center in 1942 just after the United States entered the Second World War and Executive Order 9066 was signed.[1] After the war, Kochi and his family returned to California and Kochi later attended UCLA.[2]
Kochi's research examined the interactions of electron donors and acceptors. One topic of his study was the nitration of benzene to give nitrobenzene. Kochi's work showed that this reaction proceeds via a complex between benzene (the donor) and nitrosonium ion (the acceptor).[4] He also contributed to many aspects of organometallic chemistry, including the discovery of Cu, Fe, and Ag-catalyzed cross-coupling processes (which preceded the discovery of the better known Pd and Ni-catalyzed versions),[5] as well as several metal-catalyzed oxidative processes.[6][7][8] At the time, these results were largely ignored by the synthetic organic chemistry community. Many decades later, interest in base metal catalysis sparked significant efforts to further develop cross-coupling reactions catalyzed by metals such as Fe in particular.[9] His research in organometallic chemistry emphasized the importance of electron-transfer processes and radical species as intermediates. Many of these results (and the results of other investigators) are summarized in a monograph.[10]
Kochi was of Japanese descent and he and his family were forcibly interned at the Gila River War Relocation Center during World War II.[1][12] He died at his home in Houston, Texas on August 9, 2008, after a brief illness.[13]
^Rosokha, S. V.; Kochi, J. K. (2008). "Fresh Look at Electron-Transfer Mechanisms via the Donor/Acceptor Bindings in the Critical Encounter Complex". Accounts of Chemical Research. 41 (5): 641–53. doi:10.1021/ar700256a. PMID18380446.
^Srinivasan, K.; Michaud, P.; Kochi, J. K. (1986). "Epoxidation of olefins with cationic (salen)manganese(III) complexes. The modulation of catalytic activity by substituents". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 108 (9): 2309–20. doi:10.1021/ja00269a029. PMID22175576.
^Fürstner, Alois; Leitner, Andreas; Méndez, María; Krause, Helga (2002-11-01). "Iron-Catalyzed Cross-Coupling Reactions". Journal of the American Chemical Society. 124 (46): 13856–13863. doi:10.1021/ja027190t. ISSN0002-7863. PMID12431116.
^Kochi, Jay K. (1978). Organometallic Mechanisms and Catalysis: The Role of Reactive Intermediates in Organic Processes. New York: Academic Press. ISBN978-0-12-418250-9.