Manganese-catalyzed epoxidations of alkenes in bicarbonate solutions

被引:232
|
作者
Lane, BS [1 ]
Vogt, M [1 ]
DeRose, VJ [1 ]
Burgess, K [1 ]
机构
[1] Texas A&M Univ, Dept Chem, College Stn, TX 77842 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1021/ja025956j
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
This paper describes a method, discovered and refined by parallel screening, for the epoxidation of alkenes. It uses hydrogen peroxide as the terminal oxidant, is promoted by catalytic amounts (1.0-0.1 mol %) of manganese(2+) salts, and must be performed using at least catalytic amounts of bicarbonate buffer. Peroxymonocarbonate, HCO4-, forms in the reaction, but without manganese, minimal epoxidation activity is observed in the solvents used for this research, that is, DMF and (BuOH)-Bu-t. More than 30 d-block and f-block transition metal salts were screened for epoxidation activity under similar conditions, but the best catalyst found was MnSO4. EPR studies show that Mn2+ is initially consumed in the catalytic reaction but is regenerated toward the end of the process when presumably the hydrogen peroxide is spent, A variety of aryl-substituted, cyclic, and trialkyl-substituted alkenes were epoxidized under these conditions using 10 equiv of hydrogen peroxide, but monoalkyl-alkenes were not. To improve the substrate scope, and to increase the efficiency of hydrogen peroxide consumption, 68 diverse compounds were screened to find additives that would enhance the rate of the epoxidation reaction relative to a competing disproportionation of hydrogen peroxide. Successful additives were 6 mol % sodium acetate in the (BuOH)-Bu-i system and 4 mol % salicylic acid in the DMF system. These additives enhanced the rate of the desired epoxidation reaction by 2-3 times, Reactions performed in the presence of these additives require less hydrogen peroxide and shorter reaction times, and they enhance the yields obtained from less reactive alkene substrates. Possible mechanisms for the reaction are discussed.
引用
收藏
页码:11946 / 11954
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Manganese-catalyzed hydroarylation of multiple bonds
    Maayuri, Rajaram
    Gandeepan, Parthasarathy
    ORGANIC & BIOMOLECULAR CHEMISTRY, 2023, 21 (03) : 441 - 464
  • [32] MECHANISM OF THE MANGANESE-CATALYZED AUTOXIDATION OF DOPAMINE
    LLOYD, RV
    CHEMICAL RESEARCH IN TOXICOLOGY, 1995, 8 (01) : 111 - 116
  • [33] Manganese-catalyzed degradation of phosphonic acids
    Nowack, Bernd
    Stone, Alan T.
    ENVIRONMENTAL CHEMISTRY LETTERS, 2003, 1 (01) : 24 - 31
  • [34] Manganese-Catalyzed Hydrogenation of Esters to Alcohols
    Espinosa-Jalapa, Noel Angel
    Nerush, Alexander
    Shimon, Linda J. W.
    Leitus, Gregory
    Avram, Liat
    Ben-David, Yehoshoa
    Milstein, David
    CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL, 2017, 23 (25) : 5934 - 5938
  • [35] Manganese/bicarbonate-catalyzed epoxidation of lipophilic alkenes with hydrogen peroxide in ionic liquids
    Tong, KH
    Wong, KY
    Chan, TH
    ORGANIC LETTERS, 2003, 5 (19) : 3423 - 3425
  • [36] Manganese-Catalyzed Stereospecific Hydroxymethylation of Alkyl Tosylates
    Shenouda, Hannah
    Alexanian, Erik J.
    ORGANIC LETTERS, 2019, 21 (22) : 9268 - 9271
  • [37] Manganese-Catalyzed Direct Deoxygenation of Primary Alcohols
    Bauer, Jonathan O.
    Chakraborty, Subrata
    Milstein, David
    ACS CATALYSIS, 2017, 7 (07): : 4462 - 4466
  • [38] Homogeneous manganese-catalyzed hydrogenation and dehydrogenation reactions
    Wang, Yujie
    Wang, Mingyang
    Li, Yibiao
    Liu, Qiang
    CHEM, 2021, 7 (05): : 1180 - 1223
  • [39] Manganese-catalyzed Sonogashira coupling of aryl iodides
    Qi, Xinxin
    Jiang, Li-Bing
    Wu, Xiao-Feng
    TETRAHEDRON LETTERS, 2016, 57 (15) : 1706 - 1710
  • [40] Manganese-catalyzed asymmetric transfer hydrogenation of hydrazones
    Wang, Lixian
    Lin, Jin
    Xia, Chungu
    Sun, Wei
    JOURNAL OF CATALYSIS, 2022, 413 : 487 - 497