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Hydroformylation of Higher Alkenes Based on TRPTC

Hydroformylation of higher alkenes with water-soluble catalysts is difficult to achieve (cf. Section 6.1.3.2). For example, the Rh/TPPTS complex, a perfect catalyst used in the two-phase hydroformylation of propene to generate butanol in the RCH/RP process, if applied to the hydroformylation of 1-hexene only gave conversions as low as 16-22% [4]. [Pg.305]

Thermoregulated phase-transfer catalysis, however, could be successfully put into effect for the hydroformylation of higher olefins in aqueous/organic two-phase media [11], As shown in Table 2, various olefins have been converted to the corresponding aldehydes in the presence of nonionic phosphine-modified rhodium complexes as catalysts. An average turnover frequency (TOF) of 250 h-1 for 1-do-decene and 470 Ir1 for styrene have been achieved. Even the hydroformylation of oleyl alcohol, an extremely hydrophobic internal olefin, would give a yield of 72% aldehyde [19]. In comparison, no reaction occurred if Rh/TPPTS complex was used as the catalyst under the same conditions. [Pg.305]

The concept of TRPTC provides a reasonable explanation for the satisfactory catalytic reactivity of Rh/nonionic phosphine complexes in the case of the two-phase hydroformylation of higher olefins. At a temperature lower than the cloud point, a nonionic phosphine-modified rhodium catalyst would remain in the aqueous phase since the partition of the catalyst between water and a nonpolar aprotic organic solvent strongly favors the aqueous phase. On heating to a temperature higher than the cloud point, however, the catalyst loses its hydrate shell, transfers into the organic phase and then catalyzes the transformation of alkenes to aide- [Pg.306]


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