posted on 2012-09-07, 00:00authored byMin Young Hyun, Soo Hyun Kim, Young Joo Song, Hong Gyu Lee, Young Dan Jo, Jin Hoon Kim, In Hong Hwang, Jin Young Noh, Juhye Kang, Cheal Kim
A simple catalytic system that uses commercially available
cobalt(II)
perchlorate as the catalyst and 3-chloroperoxybenzoic acid as the
oxidant was found to be very effective in the epoxidation of a variety
of olefins with high product selectivity under mild experimental conditions.
More challenging targets such as terminal aliphatic olefins were also
efficiently and selectively oxidized to the corresponding epoxides.
This catalytic system features a nearly nonradical-type and highly
stereospecific epoxidation of aliphatic olefin, fast conversion, and
high yields. Olefin epoxidation by this catalytic system is proposed
to involve a new reactive CoII–OOC(O)R species,
based on evidence from H218O-exchange experiments,
the use of peroxyphenylacetic acid as a mechanistic probe, reactivity
and Hammett studies, EPR, and ESI-mass spectrometric investigation.
However, the O–O bond of a CoII–acylperoxo
intermediate (CoII–OOC(O)R) was found to be cleaved
both heterolytically and homolytically if there is no substrate.