Oxidative Cleavage of Alkenes by O2 with a Non-Heme Manganese Catalyst
Author(s) -
Zhiliang Huang,
Renpeng Guan,
Muralidharan Shanmugam,
Elliot L. Bennett,
Craig M. Robertson,
Adam Brookfield,
Eric J. L. McInnes,
Jianliang Xiao
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.1c05757
Subject(s) - chemistry , catalysis , bond cleavage , heme , methanol , manganese , oxidative phosphorylation , cleavage (geology) , solvent , metal , cleave , transition metal , combinatorial chemistry , organic chemistry , photochemistry , enzyme , biochemistry , geotechnical engineering , fracture (geology) , engineering
The oxidative cleavage of C═C double bonds with molecular oxygen to produce carbonyl compounds is an important transformation in chemical and pharmaceutical synthesis. In nature, enzymes containing the first-row transition metals, particularly heme and non-heme iron-dependent enzymes, readily activate O 2 and oxidatively cleave C═C bonds with exquisite precision under ambient conditions. The reaction remains challenging for synthetic chemists, however. There are only a small number of known synthetic metal catalysts that allow for the oxidative cleavage of alkenes at an atmospheric pressure of O 2 , with very few known to catalyze the cleavage of nonactivated alkenes. In this work, we describe a light-driven, Mn-catalyzed protocol for the selective oxidation of alkenes to carbonyls under 1 atm of O 2 . For the first time, aromatic as well as various nonactivated aliphatic alkenes could be oxidized to afford ketones and aldehydes under clean, mild conditions with a first row, biorelevant metal catalyst. Moreover, the protocol shows a very good functional group tolerance. Mechanistic investigation suggests that Mn-oxo species, including an asymmetric, mixed-valent bis(μ-oxo)-Mn(III,IV) complex, are involved in the oxidation, and the solvent methanol participates in O 2 activation that leads to the formation of the oxo species.
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