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Alkylperoxo complexes oxidation catalysts

Chiral epoxides are important intermediates in organic synthesis. A benchmark classic in the area of asymmetric catalytic oxidation is the Sharpless epoxidation of allylic alcohols in which a complex of titanium and tartrate salt is the active catalyst [273]. Its success is due to its ease of execution and the ready availability of reagents. A wide variety of primary allylic alcohols are epoxidized in >90% optical yield and 70-90% chemical yield using tert-butyl hydroperoxide as the oxygen donor and titanium-isopropoxide-diethyltartrate (DET) as the catalyst (Fig. 4.97). In order for this reaction to be catalytic, the exclusion of water is absolutely essential. This is achieved by adding 3 A or 4 A molecular sieves. The catalytic cycle is identical to that for titanium epoxidations discussed above (see Fig. 4.20) and the actual catalytic species is believed to be a 2 2 titanium(IV) tartrate dimer (see Fig. 4.98). The key step is the preferential transfer of oxygen from a coordinated alkylperoxo moiety to one enantioface of a coordinated allylic alcohol. For further information the reader is referred to the many reviews that have been written on this reaction [274, 275]. [Pg.196]


See other pages where Alkylperoxo complexes oxidation catalysts is mentioned: [Pg.81]    [Pg.1074]    [Pg.1074]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.7178]    [Pg.7207]    [Pg.7210]    [Pg.7214]    [Pg.354]    [Pg.292]    [Pg.292]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.6 , Pg.347 , Pg.348 , Pg.349 ]




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