4.8 Article

Mechanism of Alcohol Oxidation by Dipicolinate Vanadium(V): Unexpected Role of Pyridine

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 132, Issue 50, Pages 17804-17816

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja105739k

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Funding

  1. Los Alamos National Laboratory LDRD [ER 20100160]
  2. NSF via the Center for Enabling New Technologies through Catalysis (CENTC)

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Dipicolinate vanadium(V) alkoxide complexes (dipic)V-v(O)(OR) (OR = isopropoxide (1), n-butanoxide (2), cyclobutanoxide (3), and alpha-tert-butylbenzylalkoxide (4)) react with pyridine to afford vanadium(IV) and 0.5 equiv of an aldehyde or ketone product. The role of pyridine in the reaction has been investigated. Both NMR and X-ray crystallography experiments indicate that pyridine coordinates to 1, which is in equilibrium with (dipic)V-v(O)((OPr)-Pr-i)(pyr) (1-Pyr). Kinetic studies of the alcohol oxidation suggest a pathway where the rate-limiting step is bimolecular and involves attack of pyridine on the C-H bond of the isopropoxide ligand of 1 or 1-Pyr. The oxidations of mechanistic probes cyclobutanol and alpha-tert-butylbenzylalcohol support a two-electron pathway proceeding through a vanadium(III) intermediate. The alcohol oxidation reaction is promoted by more basic pyridines and facilitated by electron-withdrawing substituents on the dipicolinate ligand. The involvement of base in the elementary alcohol oxidation step observed for the dipicolinate system is an unprecedented mechanism for vanadium-mediated alcohol oxidation and suggests new ways to tune reactivity and selectivity of vanadium catalysts.

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