Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Manganese catalyzed

Catalytic Oxidation for Straight-Chain Paraffinic Hydrocarbons. Synthetic fatty acids (SFA) are produced by Eastern European countries, Russia, and China using a manganese-catalyzed oxidation of selected paraffinic streams. The technology is based on German developments that were in use during World War II. The production volume in 1984 was estimated to be about 5.5 x ICf t/yr. The oxidation is highly exothermic and is carried out at about 105—125°C, mostly in continuous equipment. [Pg.92]

While many important details of the iron- and manganese-catalyzed reactions are yet to be explored, the common features of the corresponding mechanisms are well established and also applicable in the presence of other catalysts. Thus, the formation of the SO5, SO4 and HSO5 intermediates was reported in all of the free-radical type reactions. These species are very reactive oxidants and this explains the apparent... [Pg.440]

In conclusion, copper-manganese-catalyzed organomagnesium reagents and copper-catalyzed organomanganese reagents are a simple, efficient, and economic alternative to copper-catalyzed organomagnesium reagents and especially to... [Pg.222]

Without additives, radical formation is the main reaction in the manganese-catalyzed oxidation of alkenes and epoxide yields are poor. The heterolytic peroxide-bond-cleavage and therefore epoxide formation can be favored by using nitrogen heterocycles as cocatalysts (imidazoles, pyridines , tertiary amine Af-oxides ) acting as bases or as axial ligands on the metal catalyst. With the Mn-salen complex Mn-[AI,AI -ethylenebis(5,5 -dinitrosalicylideneaminato)], and in the presence of imidazole as cocatalyst and TBHP as oxidant, various alkenes could be epoxidized with yields between 6% and 90% (in some cases ionol was employed as additive), whereby the yields based on the amount of TBHP consumed were low (10-15%). Sterically hindered additives like 2,6-di-f-butylpyridine did not promote the epoxidation. [Pg.443]

The results obtained in the manganese-catalyzed epoxidation reactions of various olefins are shown in Table 24. [Pg.453]

TABLE 24. Manganese-catalyzed epoxidation of olefins using hydrogen peroxide as oxygen source... [Pg.454]

Taylor and Flood could show that polystyrene-bound phenylselenic acid in the presence of TBHP can catalyze the oxidation of benzylic alcohols to ketones or aldehydes in a biphasic system (polymer-TBHP/alcohol in CCI4) in good yields (69-100%) (Scheme 117) °. No overoxidation of aldehydes to carboxylic acids was observed and unactivated allylic alcohols or aliphatic alcohols were unreactive under these conditions. In 1999, Berkessel and Sklorz presented a manganese-catalyzed method for the oxidation of primary and secondary alcohols to the corresponding carboxylic acids and ketones (Scheme 118). The authors employed the Mn-tmtacn complex (Mn/168a) in the presence of sodium ascorbate as very efficient cocatalyst and 30% H2O2 as oxidant to oxidize 1-butanol to butyric acid and 2-pentanol to 2-pentanone in yields of 90% and 97%, respectively. This catalytic system shows very good catalytic activity, as can be seen from the fact that for the oxidation of 2-pentanol as little as 0.03% of the catalyst is necessary to obtain the ketone in excellent yield. [Pg.497]

In subsequent research, it turned out that two-state reactivity can also provide a concept for the understanding of oxidation reactions way beyond the scope of gas-phase ion chemistry and can actually resolve a number of existing mechanistic puzzles. In enzymatic oxidations involving cytochrome P450, for example, changes in spin multiplicity appear to act as a kind of mechanistic distributor for product formation [27-29], and in the case of manganese-catalyzed epoxidation reactions, two-state scenarios have been put forward to account for the experimentally observed stereoselectivities [30-32], Two-state reactivity is not restricted to oxidation reactions, and similar scenarios have been proposed for a number of other experimentally studied reactions of 3d metal compounds [33-37]. Moreover, two-state scenarios have recently also been involved in the chemistry of main group elements [38]. The concept of two-state reactivity developed from the four-atomic system FeO /H2... [Pg.14]

Peracetic acid decomposition kinetics in the presence of cobalt or copper acetates were studied in the same apparatus used for the manganese-catalyzed reaction. However, in these studies it was used as a batch reaction system. The reactor was charged with peracetic acid (ca. 0.5M in acetic acid) and allowed to reach the desired temperature. At this time the catalyst (in acetic acid) was added. Samples were withdrawn and quenched with potassium iodide at measured time intervals. [Pg.365]

Peracetic Acm-AcErALDEHYDE Reaction. The cobalt- and manganese-catalyzed reactions of peracetic acid with acetaldehyde were studied by a continuous flow technique (9). Peracetic acid (0.15M in acetic acid) and acetaldehyde-catalyst solutions were metered through rotameters to a mixing T (standard 0.25-inch stainless steel Swagelok T) and... [Pg.365]

Figure 1. Manganese-catalyzed decomposition of peracetic acid at 30°C. Figure 1. Manganese-catalyzed decomposition of peracetic acid at 30°C.
The cyanamides are active anticorrosive pigments which have a passivating action under alkaline conditions. The action of lead in anticorrosive pigments is discussed in Section 5.2.10.1. Heavy metal oxides, especially of iron and manganese, catalyze the conversion of cyanamide to urea even below 20 °C [5.126] ... [Pg.203]

Figure 2 Mechanistic representation of the manganese-catalyzed decarboxylation of dimethyloxaloacetic acid. Figure 2 Mechanistic representation of the manganese-catalyzed decarboxylation of dimethyloxaloacetic acid.

See other pages where Manganese catalyzed is mentioned: [Pg.201]    [Pg.201]    [Pg.203]    [Pg.204]    [Pg.205]    [Pg.207]    [Pg.482]    [Pg.482]    [Pg.186]    [Pg.167]    [Pg.197]    [Pg.438]    [Pg.295]    [Pg.548]    [Pg.314]    [Pg.542]    [Pg.442]    [Pg.445]    [Pg.285]    [Pg.442]    [Pg.443]    [Pg.445]    [Pg.369]    [Pg.318]    [Pg.374]    [Pg.379]    [Pg.186]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.87]    [Pg.122]    [Pg.164]    [Pg.164]   


SEARCH



© 2024 chempedia.info