Highly Efficient and Selective Epoxidation of Alkenes by Photochemical Oxygenation Sensitized by a Ruthenium(II) Porphyrin with Water as Both Electron and Oxygen Donor
- 19 April 2003
- journal article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of the American Chemical Society
- Vol. 125 (19) , 5734-5740
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ja0295218
Abstract
Visible light irradiation of a reaction mixture of carbonyl-coordinated tetra(2,4,6-trimethyl)phenylporphyrinatoruthenium(II) (Ru(II)TMP(CO)) as a photosensitizer, hexachloroplatinate(IV) as an electron acceptor, and an alkene in alkaline aqueous acetonitrile induces selective epoxidation of the alkene with high quantum yield (Phi = 0.6, selectivity = 94.4% for cyclohexene and Phi = 0.4, selectivity = 99.7% for norbornene) under degassed conditions. The oxygen atom of the epoxide was confirmed to come from a water molecule by an experiment with H(2)(18)O. cis-Stilbene was converted into its epoxide, cis-stilbeneoxide, without forming trans-stilbeneoxide. trans-Stilbene, however, did not exhibit any reactivity. Under neutral conditions, an efficient buildup of the cation radical of Ru(II)TMP(CO) was observed at the early stage of the photoreaction, while an addition of hydroxide ion caused a rapid reaction with the cation radical to promote the reaction with reversion to the starting Ru(II)TMP(CO). A possible involvement of a higher oxidized state of Ru such as Ru(IV), Ru(V), Ru(VI) through a dismutation of the Ru(III) species was excluded by an experiment with Ru(VI)TMP(O)(2). Decarbonylation of the Ru complex was also proven to be invalid. A reaction mechanism involving an electron transfer from the excited triplet state of Ru(II)TMP(CO) to hexachloroplatinate(IV) and subsequent formation of OH(-)-coordinated Ru(III) species, leading to an oxo-ruthenium complex as the key intermediate of the photochemical epoxidation, was postulated.Keywords
This publication has 67 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Mechanistic Investigation of Alkene Epoxidation by Sterically Encumbered trans-Dioxoruthenium(VI) PorphyrinsThe Journal of Organic Chemistry, 1999
- Photochemical P-450 Oxygenation of Cyclohexene with Water Sensitized by Dihydroxy-Coordinated (Tetraphenylporphyrinato)antimony(V) HexafluorophosphateJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1997
- Preparation, characterization and reaction of the first dioxoruthenium(VI) complexes of chiral picket-fence porphyrinsJournal of the Chemical Society, Chemical Communications, 1994
- Photochemical Electron Transfer from Hydroxide Ion to the Excited Triplet State of Tetraphenylporphyrinatoantimony(V) upon Visible Light Irradiation in Aqueous AcetonitrileChemistry Letters, 1993
- Water oxidation by .mu.-oxobis[bis(bipyridine)oxoruthenium(V)](4+). An oxygen-labeling studyInorganic Chemistry, 1990
- Metalloporphyrin-sensitized photooxidation of water to oxygen on the surface of colloidal iridium oxides: photochemical and pulse radiolytic studiesThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1989
- Redox Pathways: Applications in CatalysisJournal of the Electrochemical Society, 1984
- Photosensitised reduction of water to hydrogen using water-soluble zinc porphyrinsJournal of the Chemical Society, Faraday Transactions 2: Molecular and Chemical Physics, 1981
- Reversible binding of dioxygen to ruthenium(II) porphyrinsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1978
- Photochemistry of Biologically Important Transition Metal Complexes. II. Carbonylpiperidinetetraphenylporphine Complexes of Iron(II) and Ruthenium(II)Berichte der Bunsengesellschaft für physikalische Chemie, 1976