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Oxo- and Oxoperoxo-molybdenum(VI) Complexes with Aryl Hydroxamates: Synthesis, Structure, and Catalytic Uses in Highly Efficient, Selective, and Ecologically Benign Peroxidic Epoxidation of Olefins
62
Citations
25
References
2006
Year
Epoxidation Method CostComparative Epoxidation StudyEngineeringOrganic ChemistryChemistryInorganic CompoundChemical EngineeringCoordinated BmthaOrganometallic CatalysisRedox ChemistryHighly EfficientCatalytic UsesInorganic ChemistryBiochemistryCatalysisInorganic SynthesisAlkene MetathesisNatural SciencesCoordination ComplexMolecular Complex
A solution obtained by dissolving MoO3 in H2O2 reacts separately with secondary hydroxamic acids (viz., N-benzoyl N-phenyl hydroxamic acid (BPHAH), N-benzoyl N-ortho-, -meta-, -para-tolyl hydroxamic acids, (BOTHAH, BMTHAH, and BPTHAH, respectively), and N-cinnamoyl N-phenyl hydroxamic acid (CPHAH) affording [MoO(O2)(BPHA)2] (1), [MoO(O2)(BOTHA)2] (2), [MoO(O2)(BMTHA)2] (3), [MoO(O2)(BPTHA)2] (4), and [Mo(O)2(CPHA)2](5), respectively. The O and O2 are situated cis to each other in 2-4, but in each case, they are disordered and distributed over four sites. This disorder does not exist in the 6-coordinate cis dioxo complex 5, to which crude MoO(O2)(CPHA)2 (5') was converted during recrystallization. An aqueous molybdate solution readily reacts with all those hydroxamic acids producing [Mo(O)2(hydroxamate)2] (6). While 2, 3, and 4 possess a very distorted pentagonal bipyramidal structure, 5 has a distorted octahedral geometry. In the solid state, as well as in solution, 5 exists as two apparently enantiomerically related molecules differing in the orientation of the pendant phenyl rings. To emphasize that the formation and structural uniqueness of 5 compared to 1-4 is caused by the influence of the cinnamoyl residue, one compound of the 6 series, namely, [Mo(O)2(BPHA)2] (6A), was structurally characterized to prove directly that the special stereochemical properties of 5 rely on the special electronic structure of CPHA- ligand. Complexes 1-5, as well as 6, show high potential and selectivity as catalysts in the epoxidation of olefins at room temperature in the presence of NaHCO3 as a promoter and H2O2 as a terminal oxidant. A comparative epoxidation study has been performed to determine the relative efficiency of the catalysts. To make the epoxidation method cost effective, a study to optimize the use of H2O2 has also been performed. To obtain evidence in favor of our suggested mechanism to this homogeneous olefin --> epoxide conversion, it was necessary to synthesize a peroxo-rich compound, namely, [MoO(O2)2BMTHA]- (7), but the attempted synthesis culminated in the isolation of [MoO(O2)2(C6H5COO)]- (8), obviously, via the hydrolysis of coordinated BMTHA.
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