Publication | Open Access
Environmentally Friendly Chemoselective Oxidation of Primary Aliphatic Amines by Using a Biomimetic Electrocatalytic System
108
Citations
39
References
2007
Year
Environmental ElectrochemistryEngineeringBioelectrochemistryGreen ChemistryOrganic ChemistryFriendly OxidationChemistryBiomimetic Electrocatalytic SystemChemical EngineeringNovel OrganocatalystsOrganic ElectrochemistryO-azaquinone MediatorsMolecular ElectrochemistryPrimary Aliphatic AminesFriendly Chemoselective OxidationCatalysisAsymmetric CatalysisCatalytic SynthesisElectrochemistryEnvironmental EngineeringElectrosynthesisSynthetic Chemistry
Environmentally friendly oxidation of primary aliphatic amines to imines has been successfully achieved, under metal-free conditions, by the use of diverse electrogenerated o-azaquinone mediators. High catalytic performance, together with high chemoselectivity, were observed with electron-poor o-azaquinone catalysts generated from 2-aminoresorcinol derivatives. Similar to copper amine oxidase enzymes, these mediators exhibited lower reactivity toward alpha-branched primary amines and no reactivity toward secondary amines. In the case of 3,4-aminophenol derivatives lacking a 2-hydroxy group, the generated o-azaquinone species failed to catalyze the oxidation of the amine to the corresponding imine. Further mechanistic considerations allowed a rationalization of the crucial role of the 2-hydroxy group in converting a catalytically inert species into a highly effective biomimetic catalyst.
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