posted on 2019-01-24, 00:00authored byYong Lik Chang, Takehiko Sasaki, Jordi Ribas-Ariño, Masahiko Machida, Motoyuki Shiga
Dehydration
of biomass-derived polyalcohols has recently drawn
attention in green chemistry as a prototype of selective reactions
controllable in hot water or hot carbonated water, without any use
of organic solvents or metal catalysts. Here, we report a free-energy
analysis based on first-principles metadynamics and blue-moon ensemble
simulations to understand the mechanism of competing intramolecular
dehydration reactions of 1,2,5-pentanetriol in hot acidic water. The
simulations consistently predict that the most dominant mechanism
is the proton-assisted SN2 process, where the protonation
of the hydroxyl group by water and the C–O bond breaking and
formation occur in a single step. However the free-energy barriers
are different between the reaction paths: those leading to five-membered
ether products, tetrahydrofurfuryl alcohol (THFA), are few kcal/mol
lower than those leading to six-membered ether products, 3-hydroxytetrahydropyran
(3-HTHP). A slight difference is seen in the timing of the protonation
of the hydroxyl group of THFA and 3-HTHP on their reaction pathways.
The detailed mechanism found from the simulations shows how the reaction
paths are selective in hot water and why the reaction rates are accelerated
in acidic environments, thus giving a clear explanation of experimental
findings for a broad class of competing dehydration processes of polyalcohols.